Faculty Opinions recommendation of Intermittent hypoxia: a low-risk research tool with therapeutic value in humans.

Author(s):  
Frank L Powell
2015 ◽  
Vol 118 (5) ◽  
pp. 520-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason H. Mateika ◽  
Mohamad El-Chami ◽  
David Shaheen ◽  
Blake Ivers

Intermittent hypoxia has generally been perceived as a high-risk stimulus, particularly in the field of sleep medicine, because it is thought to initiate detrimental cardiovascular, respiratory, cognitive, and metabolic outcomes. In contrast, the link between intermittent hypoxia and beneficial outcomes has received less attention, perhaps because it is not universally understood that outcome measures following exposure to intermittent hypoxia may be linked to the administered dose. The present review is designed to emphasize the less recognized beneficial outcomes associated with intermittent hypoxia. The review will consider the role intermittent hypoxia has in cardiovascular and autonomic adaptations, respiratory motor plasticity, and cognitive function. Each section will highlight the literature that contributed to the belief that intermittent hypoxia leads primarily to detrimental outcomes. The second segment of each section will consider the possible risks associated with experimentally rather than naturally induced intermittent hypoxia. Finally, the body of literature indicating that intermittent hypoxia initiates primarily beneficial outcomes will be considered. The overarching theme of the review is that the use of intermittent hypoxia in research investigations, coupled with reasonable safeguards, should be encouraged because of the potential benefits linked to the administration of a variety of low-risk intermittent hypoxia protocols.


2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 183-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Parker

Current regulations do not allow most low-risk research using patient records without patient consent. One of the main reasons adduced for this is that such research constitutes an unacceptable breach of confidentiality. By contrast, it is argued in this paper that it may, on occasion, be acceptable for confidentiality to be breached according to all three of the major ethical justifications for respecting patient confidentiality. In practice, the arguments against allowing research using patient records are usually grounded in claims about the link between confidentiality and respect for patient autonomy rather than legitimate patient expectations. Patients may have good reason to expect, or come to expect, that their records will be used without their consent for low-risk research, under certain conditions. Where this is the case, such expectations provide reasonable grounds for considering such research to be ethical.


2015 ◽  
Vol 203 (8) ◽  
pp. 324-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merin V Pariyadan ◽  
Elizabeth D Hotham ◽  
Sean Turner ◽  
Sanjay Garg
Keyword(s):  
Low Risk ◽  

2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. S4-S5
Author(s):  
Michael Velec ◽  
Jyot Patel ◽  
Joshua Torchia ◽  
Elen Moyo ◽  
Tara Rosewall ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Megan S. Wright

This chapter comments on the use of ethnographic methods to assess prospective research participants’ capacity to consent to research. While repurposing ethnography provides a valuable tool to assess consent capacity for persons with chronic mental illness by observing such persons in different settings and over a period of time, which can provide a fuller picture of capacity, there are limitations to this use. First, in some jurisdictions, an ethics review board may not permit a researcher to engage in ethnography without the consent of those being observed, which means this method would not be of use. Second, a researcher may not have appropriate methodological training to employ this method of assessing consent capacity. Third, the method may be limited to institutional settings. Finally, this method may only be appropriate for low-risk research.


2003 ◽  
Vol 119 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 183-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
George E. Jaskiw ◽  
Tim E. Blumer ◽  
Rolando Gutierrez-Esteinou ◽  
Herbert Y. Meltzer ◽  
Vickie Steele ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Willem H.J. Andersen

Electron microscope design, and particularly the design of the imaging system, has reached a high degree of perfection. Present objective lenses perform up to their theoretical limit, while the whole imaging system, consisting of three or four lenses, provides very wide ranges of magnification and diffraction camera length with virtually no distortion of the image. Evolution of the electron microscope in to a routine research tool in which objects of steadily increasing thickness are investigated, has made it necessary for the designer to pay special attention to the chromatic aberrations of the magnification system (as distinct from the chromatic aberration of the objective lens). These chromatic aberrations cause edge un-sharpness of the image due to electrons which have suffered energy losses in the object.There exist two kinds of chromatic aberration of the magnification system; the chromatic change of magnification, characterized by the coefficient Cm, and the chromatic change of rotation given by Cp.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document