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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 586: 372-389, 2017 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28228237

ABSTRACT

At the catchment scale, a complex mosaic of environmental, hydrogeological and physicochemical characteristics combine to regulate the distribution of groundwater and stream nitrate (NO3-). The efficiency of NO3- removal (via denitrification) versus the ratio of accumulated reaction products, dinitrogen (excess N2) & nitrous oxide (N2O), remains poorly understood. Groundwater was investigated in two well drained agricultural catchments (10km2) in Ireland with contrasting subsurface lithologies (sandstone vs. slate) and landuse. Denitrification capacity was assessed by measuring concentration and distribution patterns of nitrogen (N) species, aquifer hydrogeochemistry, stable isotope signatures and aquifer hydraulic properties. A hierarchy of scale whereby physical factors including agronomy, water table elevation and permeability determined the hydrogeochemical signature of the aquifers was observed. This hydrogeochemical signature acted as the dominant control on denitrification reaction progress. High permeability, aerobic conditions and a lack of bacterial energy sources in the slate catchment resulted in low denitrification reaction progress (0-32%), high NO3- and comparatively low N2O emission factors (EF5g1). In the sandstone catchment denitrification progress ranged from 4 to 94% and was highly dependent on permeability, water table elevation, dissolved oxygen concentration solid phase bacterial energy sources. Denitrification of NO3- to N2 occurred in anaerobic conditions, while at intermediate dissolved oxygen; N2O was the dominant reaction product. EF5g1 (mean: 0.0018) in the denitrifying sandstone catchment was 32% less than the IPCC default. The denitrification observations across catchments were supported by stable isotope signatures. Stream NO3- occurrence was 32% lower in the sandstone catchment even though N loading was substantially higher than the slate catchment.

2.
J Am Soc Echocardiogr ; 14(10): 1036-8, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11593211

ABSTRACT

The pulmonary artery is typically seen on transthoracic echocardiography in its longitudinal axis. Therefore, short axis views of the pulmonic valve leaflets are not generally obtained, and the distinction between tricuspid and bicuspid pulmonic valves is difficult or impossible. Bicuspid pulmonic valve is one cause of pulmonic stenosis, which is especially common in tetralogy of Fallot. Presented here are 2 patients in whom the orientation of the pulmonary artery was unusual, and the pulmonic valve was seen en face. The first patient had tetralogy of Fallot and a bicuspid pulmonic valve. The severe obstruction to right ventricular outflow was infundibular. The second patient had severe stenosis of a tricuspid pulmonic valve, which was treated with balloon valvuloplasty. These unusual views of the pulmonic valve leaflets were obtained because of anterior displacement of the pulmonary artery, and precise anatomic delineation of the problem in each case was possible with transthoracic echocardiography.


Subject(s)
Pulmonary Artery/abnormalities , Pulmonary Valve Stenosis/diagnostic imaging , Tricuspid Valve Stenosis/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Echocardiography , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pulmonary Valve Stenosis/surgery , Tetralogy of Fallot/diagnostic imaging , Tetralogy of Fallot/surgery , Tricuspid Valve Stenosis/surgery
3.
Int J Health Care Qual Assur ; 9(3): 4-10, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10158425

ABSTRACT

Locality management devolves the responsibility for the delivery of community health and social services to ¿localities¿ of some 25,000-30,000 people. States that unit general managers wanted to measure the clients' perception of the quality of the service provided. Research resource constraints limited the study to the elderly in receipt of at least one statutory service and the carers. Describes how a survey of 410 elderly people was carried out by interview in their place of residence and a postal survey of carers based on the same criteria was conducted which yielded 221 usable responses. Analyses show considerable variability within the two groups across the criteria with informational needs scoring least well by a considerable margin in both. Comparing scores between the two groups shows that carers were much less satisfied than the elderly clients with scores in general being about 30 points lower for all criteria.


Subject(s)
Community Health Services/standards , Consumer Behavior/statistics & numerical data , Health Services for the Aged/standards , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Social Work/standards , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Caregivers , Humans , Northern Ireland , Quality Assurance, Health Care , State Medicine/standards , Surveys and Questionnaires
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