• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Organização central na geração de ajustes posturais reativos em idosos / Central organization in the generation of reactive postural adjustments in the elderly

Silva, Marina Brito 25 September 2013 (has links)
Estudos prévios têm mostrado que a resposta postural automática pode ser influenciada por processamentos corticais associados com aprendizagem, experiência prévia e dica prévia. No entanto, pouco se sabe sobre como as respostas posturais de idosos são moduladas através de diferentes informações contextuais. O presente estudo objetivou investigar como a combinação de diferentes informações de contexto, dadas por experiência com tentativas prévias e dicas sobre aspectos temporais e espaciais de uma perturbação iminente, modulam respostas reativas em indivíduos idosos em comparação a adultos jovens. A tarefa consistiu em manter a postura ereta em resposta à rotação da base de suporte nos sentidos de dorsi ou plantiflexão do tornozelo, com amplitude e velocidade fixas. No Experimento 1 adultos jovens e idosos foram submetidos a quatro condições experimentais, resultantes da combinação de dica por indicação visual do sentido de rotação e de sequência de rotações, as quais eram feitas de forma aleatória ou repetitiva. No Experimento 2 foram oferecidas dicas sobre direção e/ou tempo de rotação da plataforma. Os resultados indicaram séries de tentativas com mesma direção de rotação induziram menor oscilação do centro de pressão e menor ativação muscular, enquanto que séries aleatórias induziram menor latência de ativação muscular. Dica temporal induziu latências mais curtas de ativação muscular, e dica sobre direção de perturbação induziu respostas musculares de menor magnitude (efeito observado apenas no Experimento 1). Não foi observado efeito diferencial de dicas entre os grupos etários. Os resultados sugerem que informações contextuais modulam respostas posturais reativas, e que o controle postural em indivíduos idosos é beneficiado por informações contextuais de forma similar a adultos jovens / Previous studies have shown that automatic postural responses can be influenced by cortical processing associated with learning, prior experience, and precue. However, scarce behavioral evidence has been provided about how postural responses are modulated by different contextual information in the elderly. The present investigation aimed at evaluating how different contextual information through prior experience and precueing about direction and/or time of basis of support rotation modulate reactive postural responses of elderly. The task consisted of recovering stable upright body balance in response to rotation of the support basis, inducing dorsi or plantar flexion with fixed amplitude and velocity. In Experiment 1 young and elderly people performed four experimental conditions resulting from combination of visual precue about direction of rotation and prior experience through repetitive or random sequences of trials. In Experiment 2 participants were provided with precueing about direction and/or time of platform rotation. Results showed that series of trials with the same direction of rotation induced decreased center of pressure oscillation and muscular activation, whereas random series induced shorter latencies of muscular activation. Precueing about time of platform rotation induced shorter latencies of muscular activation, and precueing about direction of rotation induced decreased muscular activation (effect observed in Experiment 1 only). No differential effect of precueing was observed between age groups. Results suggest that contextual information modulates reactive postural responses, and that elderlys reactive postural responses are benefited by contextual cues in a similar way as young adults responses
2

Organização central na geração de ajustes posturais reativos em idosos / Central organization in the generation of reactive postural adjustments in the elderly

Marina Brito Silva 25 September 2013 (has links)
Estudos prévios têm mostrado que a resposta postural automática pode ser influenciada por processamentos corticais associados com aprendizagem, experiência prévia e dica prévia. No entanto, pouco se sabe sobre como as respostas posturais de idosos são moduladas através de diferentes informações contextuais. O presente estudo objetivou investigar como a combinação de diferentes informações de contexto, dadas por experiência com tentativas prévias e dicas sobre aspectos temporais e espaciais de uma perturbação iminente, modulam respostas reativas em indivíduos idosos em comparação a adultos jovens. A tarefa consistiu em manter a postura ereta em resposta à rotação da base de suporte nos sentidos de dorsi ou plantiflexão do tornozelo, com amplitude e velocidade fixas. No Experimento 1 adultos jovens e idosos foram submetidos a quatro condições experimentais, resultantes da combinação de dica por indicação visual do sentido de rotação e de sequência de rotações, as quais eram feitas de forma aleatória ou repetitiva. No Experimento 2 foram oferecidas dicas sobre direção e/ou tempo de rotação da plataforma. Os resultados indicaram séries de tentativas com mesma direção de rotação induziram menor oscilação do centro de pressão e menor ativação muscular, enquanto que séries aleatórias induziram menor latência de ativação muscular. Dica temporal induziu latências mais curtas de ativação muscular, e dica sobre direção de perturbação induziu respostas musculares de menor magnitude (efeito observado apenas no Experimento 1). Não foi observado efeito diferencial de dicas entre os grupos etários. Os resultados sugerem que informações contextuais modulam respostas posturais reativas, e que o controle postural em indivíduos idosos é beneficiado por informações contextuais de forma similar a adultos jovens / Previous studies have shown that automatic postural responses can be influenced by cortical processing associated with learning, prior experience, and precue. However, scarce behavioral evidence has been provided about how postural responses are modulated by different contextual information in the elderly. The present investigation aimed at evaluating how different contextual information through prior experience and precueing about direction and/or time of basis of support rotation modulate reactive postural responses of elderly. The task consisted of recovering stable upright body balance in response to rotation of the support basis, inducing dorsi or plantar flexion with fixed amplitude and velocity. In Experiment 1 young and elderly people performed four experimental conditions resulting from combination of visual precue about direction of rotation and prior experience through repetitive or random sequences of trials. In Experiment 2 participants were provided with precueing about direction and/or time of platform rotation. Results showed that series of trials with the same direction of rotation induced decreased center of pressure oscillation and muscular activation, whereas random series induced shorter latencies of muscular activation. Precueing about time of platform rotation induced shorter latencies of muscular activation, and precueing about direction of rotation induced decreased muscular activation (effect observed in Experiment 1 only). No differential effect of precueing was observed between age groups. Results suggest that contextual information modulates reactive postural responses, and that elderlys reactive postural responses are benefited by contextual cues in a similar way as young adults responses
3

Caractérisation des lymphocytes T CD4 spécifiques au VIH chez les donneurs non-infectés

Daigneault, Audrey 08 1900 (has links)
Les réponses des cellules T CD4 (Thelper, TH) jouent un rôle clé dans l'immunité antivirale. Cependant, celles générées par l'infection au VIH et les vaccins candidats sont variables. Des données chez la souris et l'humain suggèrent que des réponses TH antivirales peuvent être générées avant l'exposition à l'antigène spécifique par réaction croisée avec d'autres microorganismes et influencer les réponses TH ultérieures. Les réponses TH au VIH chez des individus séronégatifs seront investiguées et comparées à celles de sujets infectés. Une haute prévalence de réponses TH prolifératives au VIH a été observée chez des sujets VIH-. Gag montre une légère prédominance sur les autres protéines du VIH Env, Nef et Pol (33% des donneurs VIH- ont une réponse contre Gag >1% par test CFSE), mais qui diffère de l’immunodominance observée chez les donneurs VIH+. Malgré les réponses prolifératives plus petites chez les donneurs VIH-, des lignées cellulaires de TH spécifiques pour Gag ou Env ont pu être générées. Un marquage intracellulaire a validé leur spécificité et leurs fonctions montrant des réponses dominées par l'expression de TNF et CD40L comparativement à celles dérivées de donneurs VIH+ produisant beaucoup d’IFN-γ. L’affinité antigénique varie chez les sujets VIH-, mais peut être améliorée chez certains donneurs en optimisant la présentation antigénique. Une cartographie d’épitopes pour Env gp41 à identifier des épitopes reconnus par les TH. Les résultats montrent la présence de TH spécifiques au VIH chez une proportion de donneurs séronégatifs. Ces cellules pourraient influencer le développement de réponses vaccinales et spécifique au VIH durant l’infection aiguë. / CD4+ T cell (Thelper, TH) responses play a key role in antiviral immunity. However, HIV-specific TH responses generated either by infection or by vaccine candidates are highly variable. Studies in mice and humans suggest that antiviral TH responses can be generated before exposure to the specific viral pathogen through cross-reactivity with other microorganisms These pre-existing responses may influence development of TH responses upon pathogen or immunogen exposure. We investigated HIV-specific TH responses in HIV-uninfected individuals (UD) and compared them to those of HIV-infected donors (HI). The prevalence of HIV-specific proliferative TH responses in UD was surprisingly high: 33% of UD had a robust Gag response >1% by CFSE assay. While Gag was more frequently targeted than the alternative HIV proteins Env, Nef and Pol, we did not observe the strong Gag immunodominance pattern seen in HI. Proliferative responses were overall lower in UD than HI, but strong expansion was occasionally observed. We derived Gag- and Env-specific short-term TH cell lines from UD and used intracellular staining to confirm their specificity and functions. TNF-α and CD40L dominated TH responses in UD lines, contrasting with HI lines that were robust IFN- producers. Functional affinity in UD was variable and could be improved in some subjects by optimization of antigen presentation. Gp41 epitope mapping identified peptides recognized by TH from UD. The results show that functional HIV-specific CD4 T cells exist in a substantial proportion of UD. Such pre-existing CD4 T cell could impact development of virus-specific TH responses at the time of acute HIV infection and influence responses to vaccine candidates.

Page generated in 0.1018 seconds