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1.
Am J Physiol ; 273(6 Pt 3): S2-13, 1997 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9435741

ABSTRACT

Students seek active learning experiences that can rapidly impart relevant information in the most convenient way possible. Computer-assisted education can now use the resources of the World Wide Web to convey the important characteristics of events as elemental as the physical properties of osmotically active particles in the cell and as complex as the nerve action potential or the integrative behavior of the intact organism. We have designed laboratory exercises that introduce first-year medical students to membrane and action potentials, as well as the more complex example of integrative physiology, using the dynamic properties of computer simulations. Two specific examples are presented. The first presents the physical laws that apply to osmotic, chemical, and electrical gradients, leading to the development of the concept of membrane potentials; this module concludes with the simulation of the ability of the sodium-potassium pump to establish chemical gradients and maintain cell volume. The second module simulates the action potential according to the Hodgkin-Huxley model, illustrating the concepts of threshold, inactivation, refractory period, and accommodation. Students can access these resources during the scheduled laboratories or on their own time via our Web site on the Internet (http./(/)phys-main.umsmed.edu) by using the World Wide Web protocol. Accurate version control is possible because one valid, but easily edited, copy of the labs exists at the Web site. A common graphical interface is possible through the use of the Hypertext mark-up language. Platform independence is possible through the logical and arithmetic calculations inherent to graphical browsers and the Javascript computer language. The initial success of this program indicates that medical education can be very effective both by the use of accurate simulations and by the existence of a universally accessible Internet resource.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks , Computer-Assisted Instruction , Electrochemistry/education , Electrophysiology/education , Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Humans , Software
2.
J Hirnforsch ; 30(6): 645-69, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2628485

ABSTRACT

The brains were dissected from a total of 1225 fishes representing 737 species, 310 genera and 113 families of tropical and subtropical teleosts. Each fish was weighed before brain dissection, and each brain weighed after its removal. The encephalization coefficient k was determined for each fish from a quadratic formula; to conveniently compare brain size of one species with that of another, we used an encephalization index so that an encephalization index of 100 is the average for all the species investigated. The encephalization indices for the families of fishes studied varied from 7 for the Moringuidae to 233 for the Coryphaenidae. There is no strong correlation in relative brain size with phylogenetic position. Although there is a general trend for the more highly evolved fishes to have larger brains, this is partially obscured by some high values in certain primitive groups and low ones in the more advanced. Elongate fishes have lower encephalization indices in general. This may in part be related to low phylogenetic position of most elongate species (anguilliform fishes, for example), in part to the greater relative body weight due to the longer vertebral column (and usually more numerous fin rays as as well), and to their usual mode of swimming by lateral undulations of the body (the most primitive type of aquatic locomotion--one in which the spinal cord plays a major role). No difference could be noted in the encephalization indices of herbivorous families of fishes compared to carnivorous ones. Within a genus, among medium to large-size fishes, those species of larger size tend to have lower encephalization indices. This may be related to larger fishes having less to fear of predators. Fishes which in some passive way avoid predation have low indices in general. This is particularly true of benthic species which conceal themselves by flattened form, fleshy protuberances or protective coloration, or which bury in the sediment or take refuge in burrows. Also correlated with low indices is some form of predator deterence such as production of skin toxins, presence of venomous spines or ability to enlarge the body by inflation. Fishes which have more than a single sense highly developed exhibit a larger relative brain size than those with only one well developed sense. Fishes which live in a complex community of high species diversity, such as a coral reef, have higher indices, in general, than those which dwell on mud and sand flat. Pelagic fishes, such as scombrids and carangids, are among those with the highest indices.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Brain/anatomy & histology , Fishes/anatomy & histology , Animals , Brain/physiology , Feeding Behavior , Fishes/physiology , Locomotion , Organ Size , Species Specificity
3.
Arch Otolaryngol ; 110(8): 512-4, 1984 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6378158

ABSTRACT

One hundred fifty-two children were enrolled in a randomized, controlled clinical trial of the efficacy of phenylephrine hydrochloride nose drops or nasal spray in hastening the resolution of middle ear effusion. Children with persistent effusion were recruited for the study during a return visit two weeks after an episode of acute otitis media. Forty-six patients (30%) dropped out of the study, many because they failed to tolerate the medication, especially the nose drops. Another 27 (18%) had to be excluded because of intercurrent illness or systemic drug therapy. Among those children completing the study, rates of clinical and tympanometric cure during the following four weeks were similar in the drug and placebo groups. In view of the absence of documented clinical efficacy and the practical difficulties inherent in their administration, topical decongestants appear to have a limited role, if any, in treating children with persistent effusion.


Subject(s)
Otitis Media with Effusion/drug therapy , Otitis Media/drug therapy , Phenylephrine/therapeutic use , Acute Disease , Administration, Topical , Child , Child, Preschool , Clinical Trials as Topic , Humans , Infant , Phenylephrine/administration & dosage , Random Allocation
8.
Pediatrics ; 63(3): 483-5, 1979 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-440849

ABSTRACT

One hundred four preschool-age patients in a private pediatric practice were treated prospectively during colds with either decongestant-antihistamine or placebo to determine if the decongestant-antihistamine mixture was effective in the prevention of otitis media. Each child received a standard dosage of the study medicine according to a double-blind, crossover design. Otitis media was diagnosed on the basis of clinical criteria. Fifteen (6.4%) of 234 colds treated with placebo and 14 (5.8%) of 241 colds treated with the study drug were followed by otitis. The decongestant-antihistamine mixture was not useful in preventing development of otitis media in children with colds.


Subject(s)
Brompheniramine/therapeutic use , Common Cold/drug therapy , Otitis Media/prevention & control , Phenylpropanolamine/therapeutic use , Pyridines/therapeutic use , Child, Preschool , Drug Therapy, Combination , Humans , Infant , Otitis Media/diagnosis
12.
J Neurophysiol ; 39(2): 370-83, 1976 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-943474

ABSTRACT

Tremor of the extended third digit and bipolar surface and needle electromyograms of the extensor digitorum were recorded from six healthy volunteers for the purpose of elucidating the motor-unit activity responsible for the 8- to 12-Hz component of physiological finger tremor. Tremor was measured with a force transducer during steady voluntary contractions of approximately 200-250 g. The surface EMGs were full-wave rectified and low-pass filtered (-3 dB at 21 Hz), producing the envelope of the surface EMG (the demodulated EMG). Spectral analyses of simultaneous tremor and demodulated EMG records were performed. In four of six subjects, a pronounced 8- to 12-Hz amplitude modulation in the surface EMG was present, and coherency analysis demonstrated that this modulation was strongly correlated with the well-known 8- to 12-Hz tremor. In two subjects this amplitude modulation and tremor were barely detectable, despite the sensitive recording and analysis techniques used in this study. Spectral analysis was performed on 43 motor-unit spike trains. Twenty-two spike trains, having mean firing frequencies in the range of 10-22 spikes/s, produced statistically significant spectral peaks at 8-12 Hz, in addition to the expected spectral peaks at the mean firing frequencies. Of the 22 8- to 12-Hz-producing motor units, 12 had mean firing frequencies in the range of 17-22 spikes/s and exhibited the greatest 8- to 12-Hz activities of all motor units recorded. These motor units displayed transient sequences of double discharges in which interspike intervals (ISIS) of approximately 8-30 ms alternated with ISIS of 60-90 ms, thus producing an 8- to 12-Hz spectral peak. Adjacent ISIS of these motor units were correlated in the range of -0.5 to -0.9. Coherency analyses demonstrated that the 8- to 12-Hz activities of these motor units were correlated with the 8- to 12-Hz finger tremor and surface EMG modulation. The remaining 10 8- to 12-Hz-producing motor units had mean firing frequencies in the range of 10-17 spike/s. Although these motor units did not display the intense double-discharge firing pattern of the more rapidly firing motor units, a tendency toward action potential grouping was present and resulted in 8- to 12-Hz spectral activities which were correlated with the tremor and surface EMG modulation. .. ..


Subject(s)
Muscles/physiopathology , Tremor/physiopathology , Adult , Electromyography , Female , Fingers , Humans , Male , Mathematics
13.
Science ; 181(4095): 169-70, 1973 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17746627

ABSTRACT

The maximum length of 36.5 feet (11.1 meters) attributed to the white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) by Günther and others is a mistake. Examination of the jaws and teeth of the specimen referred to by Günther and comparison with the jaws of white sharks of known length revealed a length of about 17 feet ( approximately 5 meters). The largest white shark reliably measured was a 21-foot (6.4-meter) individual from Cuba. Bites on whale carcasses found off southern Australia suggest that white sharks as long as 25 or 26 feet (7 (1/2) or 8 meters) exist today. The size of extinct Carcharodon has also been grossly exaggerated. Based on a projection of a curve of tooth size of Recent Carcharodon carcharias, the largest fossil Carcharodon were about 43 feet ( approximately 13 meters) long.

15.
J Appl Physiol ; 34(3): 390-5, 1973 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4688133
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