scholarly journals The Reported Use of Tongue-Ties and Nosebands in Thoroughbred and Standardbred Horse Racing—A Pilot Study

Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 622
Author(s):  
Dominic Weller ◽  
Samantha Franklin ◽  
Peter White ◽  
Glenn Shea ◽  
Kate Fenner ◽  
...  

This article reports on the results of a survey of racehorse trainers (n = 112) outlining the reasons for tongue-tie (TT) and noseband (NB) use by Thoroughbred trainers (TBTs) (n = 72) and Standardbred trainers (SBTs) (n = 40). The study also investigated the reported effectiveness of TTs and possible complications arising from their use. Tongue-tie use was reported by 62.5% (n = 70) of racehorse trainers. The reasons for TT use varied between TBTs and SBTs. For TBTs, the most common reason for TT use was to prevent or reduce airway obstruction (72.3%, n = 34), followed closely by to prevent or reduce airway noise (55.3%, n = 16). Standardbred trainers assigned equal importance for TT use [to prevent or reduce airway obstruction (69.6%, n = 16) and to prevent the horse from moving its tongue over the bit (69.6%, n = 16)]. Tongue-ties were considered significantly less effective at improving performance than at reducing airway obstruction and preventing the tongue from moving over the bit (t = −2.700, p = 0.0007). For respondents who used both TTs and NBs, there was a mild to moderate positive association between the reasons for using TTs and NBs. Of the 70 TT-using respondents, 51.4% (n = 36) recorded having encountered either a physical or behavioural complication due to TT use, with redness/bruising of the tongue (20.0%, n = 14) being the most common physical complication reported. Duration of use influenced the risk of observing complications. The likelihood of a respondent reporting a behavioural complication due to TT use increased with every minute of reported application and a nine-minute increment in application period doubled the odds of a respondent reporting a complication. Tightness was a risk factor for physical complications: Checking TT tightness by noting the tongue as not moving was associated with increased reporting of physical complications (OR = 6.59; CI 1.1–67.5). This pilot study provides some insight into how and why TTs are applied by some racehorse trainers, and the potential risks associated with their use. A further study of a larger cohort is recommended because these results are valid for only the 112 trainers who responded and cannot be generalized to the equine industry.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roi Tschernichovsky ◽  
Lior H Katz ◽  
Estela Derazne ◽  
Matan Ben-Zion Berliner ◽  
Maya Simchoni ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Gliomas manifest in a variety of histological phenotypes with varying aggressiveness. The etiology of glioma remains largely unknown. Taller stature in adulthood has been linked with glioma risk. The aim of this study was to discern whether this association can be detected in adolescence. Methods The cohort included 2,223,168 adolescents between the ages of 16-19. Anthropometric measurements were collected at baseline. Incident cases of glioma were extracted from the Israel National Cancer Registry over a follow-up period spanning 47,635,745 person-years. Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the hazard ratio for glioma and glioma subtypes according to height, body mass index (BMI) and sex. Results 1,195 patients were diagnosed with glioma during the study period. Mean(SD) age at diagnosis was 38.1 (11.7) years. Taller adolescent height (per 10cm increase) was positively associated with the risk for glioma of any type (HR 1.15; p=0.002). The association was retained in subgroup analyses for low-grade glioma (HR 1.17; p=0.031), high-grade glioma (HR 1.15; p=0.025), oligodendroglioma (HR 1.31; p=0.015), astrocytoma (HR 1.12; p=0.049), and a category of presumed IDH-mutated glioma (HR 1.17; p=0.013). There was a trend towards a positive association between height and glioblastoma, however this had borderline statistical significance (HR: 1.15; p=0.07). After stratification of the cohort by sex, height remained a risk factor for men, but not for women. Conclusions The previously - established association between taller stature in adulthood and glioma risk can be traced back to adolescence. The magnitude of association differs by glioma subtype.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
J Zatloukal ◽  
MRP Markus ◽  
R Ewert ◽  
S Glaeser ◽  
N Friedrich ◽  
...  

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): German Federal Ministry of Education & Research (BMBF) Introduction According to the WHO 17.9 million people die because of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) each year, being the 3rd leading cause of death worldwide. Low cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is an important risk factor for CVD. Recent research showed that long-chain unsaturated ceramides are associated with higher risk of cardiovascular events, thus identifying ceramides as a potential novel and independent risk factor. However, not all ceramides are equal. We previously showed beneficial effects of very-long-chain ceramides (i.e. C24:0 and C24:0/C16:0 ratio) with higher concentrations being inversely associated with all-cause mortality and CVD events. Purpose We would like to investigate, if ceramides mediated their effects on developing CVD by affecting CRF. Therefore, we explored the association of three specific ceramides (C16:0, C22:0 and C24:0) and their ratios with different parameters of CRF. Methods We used data of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-1) from North Germany (N: 1,247/men: 583, median age: 50.8 years/women: 664, median age: 50.2 years). Ceramides and CRF were assessed by LC/MS assay and symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing, respectively. VO2peak, VO2@AT, Wmax and respective indexing per kg body weight were used as outcomes. We used sex-stratified, multiple adjusted linear regression models. Participants with asthma, chronic lung disease, LVEF < 40% and cancer were excluded. Results In men, a 1-unit higher C24:0/C16:0 ratio was associated with higher VO2peak/kg (0.199 ml/min/kg [95% CI: 0.032, 0.365], P = 0.019), Wmax (1.368 W [0.033, 2.404], P = 0.010) and Wmax/kg (0.018 W/kg [0.007, 0.029], P = 0.002). In addition, a 1 µg/ml higher C24:0 concentration was related to greater Wmax/kg (0.054 W/kg [0.009, 0.099], P = 0.018). In women, a 1-unit greater C24:0/C16:0 ratio was associated with greater VO2peak (8.603 ml/min [0.019, 17.013], P = 0.045), VO2peak/kg (0.186 ml/min/kg [0.054, 0.319], P = 0.006), VO2@AT/kg (0.136 ml/min/kg [0.040, 0.231], P = 0.005) as well as higher Wmax/kg (0.015 W/kg [0.004, 0.026], P = 0.007). Furthermore, a 1 µg/ml higher C16:0 concentration was related to lower Wmax (-55.447 W [-101.775, -9.119], P = 0.019) and Wmax/kg (-0.736 W/kg [-1.341, -0.130], P = 0.017). Conclusions We report sex-specific associations between ceramides and CRF. In women, C24:0/C16:0 ratio was associated with more CRF parameters than in men. Furthermore, the single species C16:0 was significantly associated with lower maximal power in women only, whereas in men the single species C24:0 was significantly associated with higher maximal power. The positive association of the C24:0/C16:0 ratio with maximal CRF capacity is in agreement with previous findings of beneficial effects on the risk for CVD events and mortality. Future studies should explore the reason for different sex-specific ceramide profiles and whether ceramides are causally mediating their effects on CVD through CRF.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 2646
Author(s):  
Saeid Abbasian

The following study is the first Swedish study on Halal tourism in Sweden. The purpose of this exploratory research is to get insight into the perception of Halal tourism in Sweden among representatives of tourism stakeholders. The overall methodology approach in this research is qualitative, consisting of 25 qualitative questionnaires, 21 short letters, four follow-up interviews, and a web observation, and content analysis was employed. The results indicate that there is a low knowledge of Halal tourism in Sweden including Swedish tourism industry. The concept is very challenging, and profits are low. It might result in problem scenarios such as detrimental effects on non-Halal tourism, cultural difficulties and increased risk of xenophobia, anti-Islamism, and tension in the society. There is low interest for Sweden among Muslim tourists as the interest and priority for Halal tourism is rather low from Swedish tourism industry. Despite Halal tourism’s importance internationally, these representatives are rather cautious and doubtful about promotion of Sweden towards this niche. Still, a majority seems to be positive to a lighter version of Muslim-friendly tourism with secular/moderate Muslims as a target group.


Physiology ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 252-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy M. Jonk ◽  
Alfons J. H. M. Houben ◽  
Renate T. de Jongh ◽  
Erik H. Serné ◽  
Nicoloaas C. Schaper ◽  
...  

Obesity is an important risk factor for insulin resistance and hypertension and plays a central role in the metabolic syndrome. Insight into the pathophysiology of this syndrome may lead to new treatments. This paper has reviewed the evidence for an important role for the microcirculation as a possible link between obesity, insulin resistance and hypertension.


BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S274-S275
Author(s):  
Fizah Muratib ◽  
Yuya Mizuno ◽  
Ines Carreira Figueiredo ◽  
Oliver Howes ◽  
Tiago Reis Marques

AimsSchizophrenia is notoriously becoming one of the world's most debilitating mental disorders, affecting 1 in 100 people. There is increasing evidence that neuroinflammation plays a part in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders; microglial activity acting as a marker for neuroinflammatory reactions in the brain. Furthermore, cannabis is an illicit substance that also evokes a similar response in the neuroimmune activity. This project explores how cannabis exposure influences an elevation in neuroinflammatory responses through TSPO levels, and whether this information can help us determine if cannabis use and increased TSPO levels can be associated with a risk factor for developing psychosis.Method55 participants (36 males and 19 females) were recruited from the community by the IRIS (Inflammatory Reaction in Schizophrenia) team at the IoPPN, King's College London, from which 34 patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and 21 healthy controls took part in the study. The eligible participants underwent clinical assessments and PET scanning, from which cannabis use history and PET data were collected. Participant neuroinflammatory levels are represented by [18F]DPA-714 volume and different regions of grey matter in the brain were analysed through multivariate analyses, the confounding variables being age and TSPO genotype.ResultA statistically significant association is shown between participants who have had exposure to cannabis and participants who have not had any exposure in their lifetime. The differences across the prioritised brain regions of interest were robust, the association appearing more apparent and statistically significant in the total (p = .00) and temporal grey matter (p = .00) regions of the brain. This may suggest that cannabis exposure influences the [18F]DPA-714 VT in the significant regions of interest. However, a negative association is seen with current use, the quantity of use, and the frequency of use.ConclusionThe initial findings for cannabis exposure show us a positive association with increased TSPO levels, however, limitations must be taken into account. Although we cannot readily establish that elevated TSPO levels in cannabis users can presently act as a risk factor marker for developing psychosis from this particular study, we can utilise this data to continue our research in disclosing a new system to predict the occurrence of psychosis.


Author(s):  
Parikshit Ashok Muley ◽  
Dalia A. Biswas ◽  
Avinash Taksande

Background: Diabetes is a chronic metabolic abnormality due to either decreased secretion of insulin or decreased tissue sensitivity of insulin resulting in elevated blood glucose. Most common complication of diabetes is peripheral neuropathy. In this research project, we will be conducting a pilot study to observe the effect of glycaemic control on physiological functioning of nerve with the help of neurophysiological parameters, independent of duration of diabetes. Objectives: To investigate relationship of quality of glycemic control & severity of neurological changes. To find out whether glycemic control acts as an independent risk factor for progression of diabetic neuropathy despite the duration of diabetes. To validate the HBA1C at 10 for future longitudinal study to understand the association between glycemic control & progression of neuropathy. Methodology: 60 type II diabetic patients visiting diabetic OPD (Medicine) will participate in the study. The patients will be divided in to 2 groups of Group number 1 with (30 subjects) HBA1C < 10 and Group number 2 having (30 subjects) HBA1C >10. Electrodiagnostic study will be conducted on motor (tibial nerve) and sensory (sural nerve) will be performed in Neurophysiology lab. Neurophysiological parameters data of two groups will be analysed and compared. Expected Results: The pilot study will help to find out whether glycaemic control acts as a separate risk factor for progression of diabetic neuropathy despite duration of diabetes. Conclusion: This pilot study will help to establish the association between quality of glycaemic control and severity of neurological changes. Also, this will help to validate the HBA1C at 10 for further longitudinal study to know whether poor diabetes control is an independent risk factor associated to the severity of neuropathy in type II diabetes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Urša Kogovšek ◽  
Boris Kovač ◽  
Katarina Babnik

Nanotechnology is a science field that includes research and applications carriedout in the sphere of below 100 nanometers. Nanofood is the result of the usageof nanotechnology in food production, processing, and packaging. The paperpresents results of a pilot study on perceptions of nanotechnology and its use infood production. A questionnaire was developed for the purpose of the study thatmeasured knowledge, perceptions and attitudes towards nanotechnology andnanoproducts in general and in food industry. The results of the analysissuggested lack of knowledge about nanotechnology and its utilisation in foodproduction. Motivation of respondents to purchase nanoproducts is low, mostlydue to perceptions of possible changes in food caused by the use ofnanotechnology. The respondents are aware of their poor understanding ofnanotechnology and perceive potential risks related to the utilisation ofnanotechnology. Education of consumers in relation to nanotechnology and itsutilisation in manucaturing, especially in food production, is a necessary step infuture development of this field.


RMD Open ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. e000342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sevim Barbasso Helmers ◽  
Xia Jiang ◽  
David Pettersson ◽  
Anna-Lis Wikman ◽  
Pia Axelman ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Donovan

I study the role of accounting and financial reporting in entrepreneurial finance by examining whether financial statement disclosure increases capital raised through equity crowdfunding. On average, I find a positive association between financial reporting and capital raised, suggesting that accounting reduces information asymmetry with potential investors. Additionally, the importance of financial reporting in equity crowdfunding varies predictably in the cross-section. Specifically, financial reporting is associated with greater capital raised when the firm has longer historical operations, during periods of higher macroeconomic uncertainty, and when complemented by detailed shareholder agreements. Finally, using a mediation analysis, I find evidence that financial reporting is indirectly associated with better ex post performance by increasing the likelihood of raising capital. These results provide insight into the role of financial reporting in entrepreneurial finance and inform the ongoing debate over regulation and disclosure in the equity crowdfunding market. This paper was accepted by Brian Bushee, accounting.


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