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1.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 19(2)2024 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38211351

ABSTRACT

Scyphomedusae are widespread in the oceans and their swimming has provided valuable insights into the hydrodynamics of animal propulsion. Most of this research has focused on symmetrical, linear swimming. However, in nature, medusae typically swim circuitous, nonlinear paths involving frequent turns. Here we describe swimming turns by the scyphomedusaAurelia auritaduring which asymmetric bell margin motions produce rotation around a linearly translating body center. These jellyfish 'skid' through turns and the degree of asynchrony between opposite bell margins is an approximate predictor of turn magnitude during a pulsation cycle. The underlying neuromechanical organization of bell contraction contributes substantially to asynchronous bell motions and inserts a stochastic rotational component into the directionality of scyphomedusan swimming. These mechanics are important for natural populations because asynchronous bell contraction patterns are commonin situand result in frequent turns by naturally swimming medusae.


Subject(s)
Scyphozoa , Swimming , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Motion , Hydrodynamics
2.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 15(1): 015002, 2019 11 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31509804

ABSTRACT

Understanding the hydrodynamics of self-propelled organisms is critical to evaluate the role of migrating zooplankton aggregations in sustaining marine ecosystems via the transport of nutrients and mixing of fluid properties. Analysis of transport and mixing during swimming is thus essential to assess whether biomixing is a relevant source of kinetic energy in the upper ocean. In this study, dilute swarms of the ephyral Aurelia aurita were simulated under different configurations to analyze the effects of inter-organism spacing and structure of a migrating aggregation on fluid transport. By using velocimetry data instead of numerically simulated velocity fields, our study integrates the effects of the near- and far-field flows. Lagrangian analysis of simulated fluid particles, both in homogeneous and stratified fluid, shows that the near-field flow ultimately dictates fluid dispersion. The discrepancy between our results and predictions made using low-order models (both in idealized fluid and within the Stokes limit) highlights the need to correctly represent the near-field flow resulting from swimming kinematics and organism morphology. Derived vertical stirring coefficients for all cases suggest that even in the limit of dilute aggregations, self-propelled organisms can play an important role in transporting fluid against density gradients.


Subject(s)
Animal Migration , Motion , Scyphozoa/physiology , Water Movements , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Computer Simulation , Ecosystem , Hydrodynamics , Models, Biological , Rheology , Swimming
3.
B-ENT ; 12(1): 9-16, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27097388

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: PROBLEM/OBJECTIVES: Epistaxis is the most common manifestation of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT); it is present in >90% of HHT patients > 45 years old. Depending on severity, treatment consists of managing bleeding via medical and surgical methods. The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of endonasal surgical arterial cauterization to treat chronic epistaxis in patients with HHT who are no longer responding to first-line therapies. METHODOLOGY: Five patients were included in our study. The day before surgery, all patients underwent devascularization embolization of the external carotid arterial branches involved in nasal bleeding. The primary efficacy endpoint of treatment was assessed by the Epistaxis Severity Score (ESS), which was systematically evaluated preoperatively in our department, as well as every 3 months postoperatively. Data were collected retrospectively from the medical records of patients. RESULTS: Endonasal surgical arterial cauterization was associated with a ≥ 50% reduction in the ESS up to 9 months postoperatively. In one of our patients, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage occurred intraoperatively during cauterization of the posterior ethmoid artery. Closure of the dural skull base defect was successfully performed intraoperatively. DISCUSSION: Although our results are preliminary and included few patients, they support a role for endonasal surgical arterial cauterization as a second-line treatment method for chronic epistaxis in patients with HHT.


Subject(s)
Carotid Artery, Internal/surgery , Cautery/methods , Embolization, Therapeutic/methods , Epistaxis/therapy , Telangiectasia, Hereditary Hemorrhagic/therapy , Aged , Angiography, Digital Subtraction , Carotid Artery, Internal/diagnostic imaging , Chronic Disease , Cohort Studies , Epistaxis/etiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Recurrence , Retrospective Studies , Telangiectasia, Hereditary Hemorrhagic/complications , Telangiectasia, Hereditary Hemorrhagic/diagnostic imaging
4.
Rev Med Brux ; 31(3): 181-4, 2010.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20687446

ABSTRACT

Meckel's Diverticulum (MD) is the most frequent congenital anomaly of the ileum. However, its clinical manifestations in adult patients are rare. In this paper, we report cases with two different mechanisms of small intestine obstruction due to MD and we discuss diagnosis and management of these symptomatic lesions in adult patients.


Subject(s)
Intestinal Obstruction/etiology , Intestine, Small/surgery , Meckel Diverticulum/complications , Abdominal Pain/etiology , Adult , Humans , Intestinal Obstruction/surgery , Male , Meckel Diverticulum/surgery
5.
J Exp Biol ; 213(Pt 8): 1217-25, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20348332

ABSTRACT

It is generally accepted that animal-fluid interactions have shaped the evolution of animals that swim and fly. However, the functional ecological advantages associated with those adaptations are currently difficult to predict on the basis of measurements of the animal-fluid interactions. We report the identification of a robust, fluid dynamic correlate of distinct ecological functions in seven jellyfish species that represent a broad range of morphologies and foraging modes. Since the comparative study is based on properties of the vortex wake--specifically, a fluid dynamical concept called optimal vortex formation--and not on details of animal morphology or phylogeny, we propose that higher organisms can also be understood in terms of these fluid dynamic organizing principles. This enables a quantitative, physically based understanding of how alterations in the fluid dynamics of aquatic and aerial animals throughout their evolution can result in distinct ecological functions.


Subject(s)
Cnidaria , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Rheology , Swimming , Water , Animals , Biological Evolution , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cnidaria/anatomy & histology , Cnidaria/physiology , Models, Biological
6.
Biol Lett ; 6(3): 389-93, 2010 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20335200

ABSTRACT

Locomotion and feeding in marine animals are intimately linked to the flow dynamics created by specialized body parts. This interaction is of particular importance during ontogeny, when changes in behaviour and scale challenge the organism with shifts in fluid regimes and altered functionality. Previous studies have indicated that Scyphozoan jellyfish ontogeny accommodates the changes in fluid dynamics associated with increasing body dimensions and velocities during development. However, in addition to scale and behaviour that-to a certain degree-underlie the control of the animal, flow dynamics are also dependent on external factors such as temperature. Here, we show phenotypic plasticity in juvenile Aurelia aurita medusae, where morphogenesis is adapted to altered fluid regimes imposed by changes in ambient temperature. In particular, differential proportional growth was found to compensate for temperature-dependent changes in viscous effects, enabling the animal to use adhering water boundary layers as 'paddles'-and thus economize tissue-at low temperatures, while switching to tissue-dominated propulsion at higher temperatures where the boundary layer thickness is insufficient to serve for paddling. This effect was predicted by a model of animal-fluid interaction and confirmed empirically by flow-field visualization and assays of propulsion efficiency.


Subject(s)
Scyphozoa/physiology , Swimming/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Models, Biological , Morphogenesis/physiology , Phenotype , Scyphozoa/anatomy & histology , Scyphozoa/growth & development , Temperature , Viscosity
7.
Biol Bull ; 217(3): 283-91, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20040752

ABSTRACT

Scyphomedusae undergo a predictable ontogenetic transition from a conserved, universal larval form to a diverse array of adult morphologies. This transition entails a change in bell morphology from a highly discontinuous ephyral form, with deep clefts separating eight discrete lappets, to a continuous solid umbrella-like adult form. We used a combination of kinematic, modeling, and flow visualization techniques to examine the function of the medusan bell throughout the developmental changes of the scyphomedusa Aurelia aurita. We found that flow around swimming ephyrae and their lappets was relatively viscous (1 < Re < 10) and, as a result, ephyral lappets were surrounded by thick, overlapping boundary layers that occluded flow through the gaps between lappets. As medusae grew, their fluid environment became increasingly influenced by inertial forces (10 < Re < 10,000) and, simultaneously, clefts between the lappets were replaced by organic tissue. Hence, although the bell undergoes a structural transition from discontinuous (lappets with gaps) to continuous (solid bell) surfaces during development, all developmental stages maintain functionally continuous paddling surfaces. This developmental pattern enables ephyrae to efficiently allocate tissue to bell diameter increase via lappet growth, while minimizing tissue allocation to inter-lappet spaces that maintain paddle function due to boundary layer overlap.


Subject(s)
Scyphozoa/anatomy & histology , Scyphozoa/growth & development , Animal Structures/anatomy & histology , Animal Structures/physiology , Animals
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