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  • 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.
91

CLINICAL AND ANALYTICAL STUDIES IN POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN SYMPTOMATIC OF DRY EYE

Srinivasan, Sruthi January 2008 (has links)
Introduction Menopause which is defined as a permanent physiological, or natural, cessation of menstrual cycle, plays an important role in the development of ocular surface dryness symptoms and there is an increased prevalence of dry eye in women, especially those aged over 50. Despite the high prevalence of dry eye in post-menopausal women (PMW), very few studies have been undertaken to understand dry eye disease in a group of PMW who are not on Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT). Studies in the past on PMW have primarily focused on the relationship between HRT and dry eye. Hence, a series of studies were undertaken to understand the clinical aspects of dry eye and their relationship to a variety of tear film components, in a group of PMW with and without symptoms of dry eye. The specific aims of each chapter were as follows: • Chapter 4: To characterize symptoms of dry eye using questionnaires, namely Ocular Surface Disease Index Questionnaire© (OSDI) and the Indiana Dry Eye Questionnaire (DEQ). • Chapter 5: To characterize clinical signs and symptoms in participants who present with and without symptoms of dry eye. • Chapter 6: To compare tear osmolality and ferning patterns in participants with and without dry eye symptoms. • Chapter 7: To investigate the potential relationship between subjective symptoms and clinical signs with tear film lipocalin and lysozyme concentrations in participants with and without dry eye symptoms. • Chapter 8: To optimize a technique for the isolation of total RNA (ribo nucleic acid) and total protein derived from conjunctival epithelial cells collected via conjunctival impression cytology (CIC). • Chapter 9: To quantify the expression of MUC1 (mucin1) and MUC16 (mucin16) mRNA and protein and to investigate the potential relationship between mucin expression and tear film breakup time in a group of participants with and without dry eye symptoms. Methods • Chapter 4: Participants were categorized as being symptomatic or asymptomatic of dry eye based on their response to the OSDI questionnaire. These results were then compared to the DEQ, which has questions related to the frequency of ocular surface symptoms and their diurnal intensity. • Chapter 5: Non invasive tear breakup time (NITBUT) was evaluated using the ALCON Eyemap®. Tear volume was assessed using the Phenol Red Thread (PRT) test and bulbar conjunctival hyperemia was measured using objective (SpectraScan PR650© Spectrophotometer) and subjective (slit lamp) methods. • Chapter 6: Tears were collected via capillary tube. A freezing point depression osmometer was used to measure the osmolality of the tear film. The tear ferning test was performed and evaluated for the quality of ferning, based on the Rolando grading system. • Chapter 7: Tears were collected via capillary tube and an eye wash method. Tear lysozyme and lipocalin concentrations were determined via Western blotting. • Chapter 8: CIC was collected using either Millipore (MP) or Poly Ether Sulfone (PES) membranes. RNA and protein isolation was performed using two different RNA isolation techniques. Two methods of protein isolation from CIC discs were evaluated. RT-PCR of mRNA for MUC1 and western blotting of lipoxygenase type 2 protein (LOX2) was performed to confirm the collection of intact RNA and total protein respectively. • Chapter 9: Tears were collected via capillary tube and an eye wash method. CIC was collected using MP membrane. Expression of MUC1 and MUC16 mRNA was assessed via real time PCR. Expression of both membrane-bound and soluble MUC1 and MUC16 were quantified via Western blotting. Results • Chapter 4: The OSDI total score and sub scores for the Non Dry Eye (NDE) and Dry Eye (DE) groups were significantly different (NDE =7.43 ± 7.71 vs DE = 24.87 ± 13.89; p<0.001). The DEQ scores showed that the DE group exhibited a higher frequency and intensity of symptoms than the NDE group, which worsened as the day progressed (p<0.001). • Chapter 5: The DE group exhibited a significantly shorter NITBUT (5.3 ± 1.7 vs 7.0 ± 2.7 secs; p=0.0012). Tear volume was significantly lower for the DE group (19.3 ± 5.1mm vs. 16.3 ± 5.6mm; p=0.031). Bulbar hyperemia was significantly higher in the DE group for both objective (u’ = 0.285 ± 0.006 vs. 0.282 ± 0.006; p=0.005) and subjective techniques (48.4 ± 10.0 vs 40.6 ± 10.4; p=0.0011). • Chapter 6: Osmolality values in DE individuals were significantly higher than the NDE (328.1 ± 20.8 vs. 315.1 ± 11.3 mOsm/kg; p = 0.02). There was a significant difference between the DE and NDE participants for the ferning patterns (p = 0.019). No significant correlation between tear osmolality and tear ferning was noted (DE: r = 0.12; p > 0.05, NDE: r = -0.17; p > 0.05). • Chapter 7: No difference in tear lysozyme or lipocalin concentration was found between DE and NDE groups, irrespective of tear collection method. Method of collection significantly influenced absolute concentrations (p<0.008). • Chapter 8: There was no significant difference between the two procedures used to isolate RNA and protein from CIC membranes (p>0.05). Total RNA yield was greater with the MP membrane. The mean yield of protein extracted from MP membrane using the two protein isolation techniques also did not show a significant difference. • Chapter 9: No difference was found in the expression of either MUC1 or MUC16 protein or mRNA expression between symptomatic DE and NDE (p>0.05). Weak correlations were found between the NITBUT values compared with either soluble or membrane bound MUC1 and MUC16 expression. Conclusions • Chapter 4: Questionnaires are useful tools to symptomatically divide participants into dry eyed and non dry eyed candidates. However, the questionnaire used to categorise patients can impact on the outcome variables determined. • Chapter 5: Post-menopausal women with dry eye symptoms demonstrate shorter NITBUT, lower tear volume and increased bulbar conjunctival hyperemia than those who have no symptoms. • Chapter 6: Tear osmolality in DE is higher than in NDE. There is a tendency towards less ferning in persons over 50 years of age, regardless of their symptoms. • Chapter 7: Comparison of clinical data with lipocalin and lysozyme concentrations failed to reveal statistically significant correlations. The concentration of either protein was not associated with tear stability or secretion. • Chapter 8: The total RNA yield was greater with the MP membrane. RNeasy Mini (RN) (Qiagen) method is recommended due to enhanced speed as well as on-column isolation and DNase digestion capabilities. CIC with MP membranes followed by immediate freezing and then extraction and processing facilitates the collection of total protein from human conjunctival cells. • Chapter 9: No difference was found in the expression of either MUC1 or MUC16 protein or mRNA expression between symptomatic PMW and asymptomatic controls.
92

Sjogren's Syndrome: A Clinical and Biochemical Analysis

Caffery, Barbara 27 March 2009 (has links)
Sjogren’s syndrome (SS) is a systemic autoimmune disease that presents to eye care practitioners with the hallmark symptom of “dry eye.” Stratifying dry eye patients as Sjogren’s positive or negative is a critical differential diagnosis, as SS patients have numerous systemic complications and a forty times greater risk of developing lymphoma. As such, management of this relatively common dry eye sub-population requires specialized care. Since a firm diagnosis requires testing that is both invasive and expensive, patients should be protected from these tests if they are not warranted. In this thesis, studies were therefore undertaken to determine if SS dry eye could be differentiated from other forms of dry eye using two methods: 1) standard clinical tests used in a multi-disciplinary Sjogren’s syndrome clinic and 2) subsequent biological evaluation of collected tear samples and cells from the ocular surface. The former would allow eye care practitioners to conduct appropriate tests and pose suitable questions to ifferentiate these subgroups, and the latter might serve in the future as a relatively non-invasive quantitative means of differentiating such groups through biomarkers.
93

The Investigation of Tear Film Osmolality as a Clinical Instrument Used in Assessments of the Tear Film and Dry Eye Disease

Dalton, Kristine Nicole January 2009 (has links)
Introduction: Tear film osmolality is a product of the varying concentrations of dissolved solutes (proteins, lipids and mucins) in the tear fluid. Research suggests that a hyperosmotic tear film is a trait common to all forms of dry eye, and it may be the driving force causing the discomfort, ocular surface damage and inflammation found in both evaporative and tear deficient forms of dry eye disease. Tear film osmolality has been proposed to be the “gold standard” diagnostic test for the evaluation of dry eye disease, as a distinct separation between tear film osmolalities in normal and dry-eyed (aqueous deficient or evaporative) populations has become evident. Historically, tear film osmolality could only be measured in a laboratory setting and required a highly skilled technician to use the instrumentation. The recent development of easy-to-use, small volume osmometers has made it possible for tear film osmolality to be measured clinically. As these instruments are quite new, there has been very little research completed with them. Therefore, a series of studies was conducted to investigate the utility of one of these new osmometers – the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer. The specific aims of each chapter were: - Chapter 3: To determine if the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer was capable of quantitatively measuring tear film osmolality in a normal population, using 0.5μL tear samples. - Chapter 4: Previous studies have shown the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer not significantly different from another commercially available osmometer (Wescor Vapor Pressure Osmometer) for the measurement of human tears. This chapter examined the repeatability of the new instrument over multiple measurements on the same sample and over multiple days. - Chapter 5: To determine if tear film osmolality values varied significantly over the course of a normal working day in a population that was primarily free from symptoms of dry eye. - Chapter 6: To investigate the relationships between tear film osmolality and other commonly used clinical tests for dry eye disease. The clinical tests examined included various questionnaires designed to assess patient symptoms (Single Item Dry Eye Questionnaire (SIDEQ), the Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI), and the McMonnies Dry Eye Questionnaire (MMDEQ) and a linear analogue comfort scale (LACS)), a non-invasive tear break-up time test (NIBUT), and examination of ocular surface redness and tear ferning (TF). Secondarily to determine if the other clinical tests demonstrated significant diurnal variations over the course of a normal working day. - Chapter 7: To measure tear film osmolality in a population with mild to moderate symptoms of dry eye disease, and to compare this value with the osmolality of a population of age-matched controls without the disease. Secondarily, to investigate the relationship between tear film osmolality and patient comfort in a population with mild to moderate symptoms of dry eye disease. Methods: - Chapter 3: Tears were collected from 40 volunteer participants with a capillary tube. Some participants were non-contact lens wearers (Non-CL), while others wore either soft or rigid contact lenses (CL). Tear film osmolality was measured with the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer. - Chapter 4: Tears were collected from 10 volunteer participants using two different collection techniques. Collections were repeated on three separate days (6 study visits total); three osmolality measurements per collection were taken using the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre osmometer. - Chapter 5: Tears were collected from 40 volunteer participants in two separate studies (n=80 in total). Tears were collected with a capillary tube three times a day (morning, mid-day and afternoon), on two separate days (6 study visits total). Tear film osmolality was measured with the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer. - Chapter 6: Clinical tests were administered and tear samples were collected using a capillary tube from 40 volunteer participants. Measurements were taken three times a day (morning, mid-day and afternoon), on two separate days (6 study visits total). Tear film osmolality was measured with the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer. - Chapter 7: Participants were classified as either having dry eye disease (DE) or not having dry eye disease (NDE) based on a clinical examination that included a case history, phenol red thread test and biomicroscopy (white light and sodium fluorescein assessment). Tear samples were then collected from all participants using a capillary tube and tear film osmolality was measured with the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer. Participants also completed the SIDEQ, the OSDI, and the MMDEQ. Results: - Chapter 3: The mean tear film osmolality of the population was 298.7±11.4mOsm/Kg. CL wear (soft or rigid) did not appear to have a significant effect on tear film osmolality (CL: 298.5±11.2mOsm/Kg vs. Non-CL: 298.9±11.5mOsm/Kg), although this study was not designed to specifically look at the effects of contact lens wear on tear film osmolality. - Chapter 4: There was reasonably good concordance between measurements of tear film osmolality taken with the Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer (intraclass correlations range from 0.6497 (F= 0.0582) to 0.9550 (F = 0.5893)). Repeatability appeared to be affected by significant changes in ambient humidity (>10% per day). Concordance was similar with both sampling techniques. - Chapter 5: In the first study, no significant diurnal change in tear film osmolality was found (p>0.05), although a significant difference in measurements taken on Day 1 compared to Day 2 was found (p=0.040). When the first and last 10 participants enrolled were compared, the difference between days was present in the first 10 participants, but not in the last 10; it is likely that the investigator underwent a learning process during the period of the study, and that reflex tearing occurred more often in the early portion of the study compared with the latter portion. In the second study, no significant diurnal change in tear film osmolality was found (p>0.05) and no significant difference in measurements taken on Day 1 compared to Day 2 was found (p>0.05). When tear film osmolality was compared with the number of hours participants were awake, no significant correlation was found (r = 0.07044). - Chapter 6: Significant correlations were not found between tear film osmolality and SIDEQ (r = 0.1347), OSDI (r = 0.0331), MMDEQ (r = 0.2727), LACS (r = -0.1622), NIBUT (r = -0.2280), subjectively graded redness (r=-0.2280), or objectively measured redness (r = 0.1233). A weakly significant correlation was found between TF and tear film osmolality (r = 0.3978). None of the clinical measures (LACS, NIBUT, subjective or objective redness or TF) varied significantly over the course of the day. - Chapter 7: Tear film osmolality was higher in both the right (DE = 311.1±12.4mOsm/Kg, NDE = 306.2±11.2mOsm/Kg) and left eyes (DE = 313.2±11.9mOsm/Kg, NDE = 304.0±7.5mOsm/Kg) of participants, but the difference was only statistically significant in the left eye. Tear film osmolality did not correlate significantly with DE patient symptoms using any of the questionnaires (SIDEQ, OSDI, MMDEQ). Conclusions: - Chapter 3: The Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer appeared to be capable of measuring tear film osmolality in a normal population. Our population mean was slightly lower than what is reported to be normal (305mOsm/Kg), but it still fell within the range of values reported as normal (297 – 318mOsm/Kg). - Chapter 4: The Advanced Instruments Model 3100 Nanolitre Osmometer demonstrated reasonably good repeatability for the measurement of human tear samples. Unfortunately, the instrumentation appeared to be affected by dramatic weather changes. Maintaining the instrument in a humidity controlled environment may resolve this problem. - Chapter 5: Tear film osmolality did not appear to vary significantly over a normal working day. Inducing reflex tearing, perhaps with an unskilled investigator collecting the tears, can be a significant source of error (as demonstrated in the first study). - Chapter 6: Tear film osmolality did not correlate well with other clinical instruments designed to assess either patient symptoms or signs of dry eye disease in a normal population. Tear film osmolality and tear ferning did demonstrate a weakly significant positive correlation. None of the clinical measures assessed demonstrated a significant diurnal variation over the course of a normal working day. - Chapter 7: Tear film osmolality appeared to be higher in participants with mild to moderate symptoms of dry eye when compared with age matched, asymptomatic controls. Tear film osmolality did not correlate well with patient symptoms in a population of mild to moderate severe dry eyed individuals.
94

Hemodialyspatienters uppfattning om begreppet torrvikt

Lindström, Rosmarie, Bäckström Andersson, Helena January 2011 (has links)
Sammanfattning Syftet med denna studie var att beskriva hur hemodialyspatienter uppfattar begreppet torrvikt. Studien utnyttjade en beskrivande design med kvalitativ ansats. Data insamlades via intervjuer med öppen frågeställning. Tio intervjuer utfördes med patienter på en dialysenhet i Mellansverige. Manifest innehållsanalys användes för att analysera materialet. Resultatet utmynnade i sex kategorier: överlämnande, okunskap, börda, delaktighet, insikt och ignorans. Begreppet torrvikt är grundläggande vid genomförandet av en adekvat och säker hemodialysbehandling, eftersom torrvikten styr avgörande delar av behandlingsregimen. Huvudresultatet visade att vissa av deltagarna i studien inte har någon uppfattning om vad begreppet torrvikt är och vad det innebär. Andra deltagare uttryckte en känsla av utanförskap samt upplevde torrvikten som en börda i vardagslivet. Vissa av deltagarna kände sig mer delaktig i sin situation när de gjorde en del kontroller under behandlingen själv. I det kliniska arbetet har dialyssköterskan en viktig uppgift i att bistå patienten att uppnå förståelse för vilken central roll begreppet torrvikt har för dennes behandling. Vad begreppet står för utgör en barriär i kommunikationen mellan den dialysbehövande och dennes vårdgivare/sjuksköterska. Konklusionen i denna studie påvisar att det finns brister i kunskapsförmedlingen till dialyspatienter. Resultatet kan ha betydelse för fortsatt utveckling i den kliniska verksamheten.     Nyckelord: Torrvikt, undervisning, dialys. / Abstract The purpose of this study was to describe how haemodialysis patients perceive the concept of dry weight. The study used a descriptive design with a qualitative approach. Data was collected through interviews with open questions. Ten interviews were carried out with participants at a dialysis unit in central Sweden. Manifest content analysis was used to analyze the material. The analysis resulted in six categories: presentment, ignorance, burden, empowerment, insight and neglection. The concept of dry weight is essential in the implementation of an adequate and safe hemodialysis treatment, since the dry weight control crucial aspects of the treatment regimen. The main results showed that few of the participants in the study had no idea of what the concept of dry weight was and what it meant. Some of the participants expressed a sense of alienation and felt that dry weight was a burden in everyday life. A few of the participants felt more involved of their situation when they did some checks during treatment itself. In the clinical work has dialysis nurse an important role in assisting the patient to achieve understanding of the crucial role that the concepts of dry weight are on their treatment. What the concept stands for is a barrier in communication between the patient and his/hers caregiver/nurse. The conclusion of this study demonstrates that there are gaps in knowledge mediation to dialysis patients. Results may be important for further development in the clinical practice.       Keywords: Dry weight, education, dialysis.
95

Study on the influence of twice deposited mask layer of nano-structure

Liu, Chiao-yun 31 August 2010 (has links)
FIB is currently the economic methods to produce nano-structure below 100nm. In the past, FIB manufactures nano-structure patterns also unsatisfactory. In this study, the influence of twice deposited mask layer on the aspect ratio of nano-structure and verticality of side wall contour was discussed. The single mask layer is used for pattern transfer. Pattern distortion may occur during etching due to several factors like improper parameter setting, limitation of machine table, etc. The most common situations are aciculate and salient shape on the top and angle of slope which is too big to be vertical. In order to improve above-mentioned situations, a mask layer of multi-deposition was designed to protect the side wall so that it could retard etching. In addition to modifying verticality of side wall, the aspect ratio could be raised indirectly because the second deposition had reduced the interval between patterns. In the aspect of using machine table, the first mask layer, chromium, which was deposited by the sputtering machine. And the etching pattern was directly written on the first mask layer by focused ion beam. The silicon was uncovered at etched place, and then the second mask layer, silica (SiO2), which was deposited by the sputtering machine. The surface contour was directly covered with silica layer. Right after that, the top and bottom of silica were removed through vertical etching by inductively coupled plasma machine. The silica on the side wall of structure was retained to protect the side wall and raise aspect ratio. Eventually, the silicon was etched by the same way of inductively coupled plasma machine that it was researched on the difference in etching gas. And there was a comparison between chlorine and fluorine gases. After optimizing parameters, the nano-structure was made under 100nm.
96

An Assessment of Factors Limiting Tropical Congestus Cloud-Top Heights

Casey, Sean P. 2009 December 1900 (has links)
binding of either tyrosine or 6MPH4 alone does not change the coordination. However, when both tyrosine and 6MPH4 are bound, the active site becomes 5-coordinate, creating an open site for reaction with O2. Investigation of the kinetics of oxygen reactivity of TyrH complexes in the absence and presence of tyrosine and/or 6MPH4 indicated that there is a significant enhancement in reactivity in the 5-coordinate complex in comparison to the 6-coordinate form. Similar investigations with E332A TyrH showed that Glu332 residue plays a role in directing the protonation of the bridged complex that forms prior to the formation of Fe(IV)O. Rapid chemical quench analyses of DOPA formation showed a burst of product formation, suggesting a slow product release step. Steady-state viscosity experiments established a diffusional step as being significantly rate-limiting. Further studies with stopped-flow spectroscopy indicated that the rate of TyrH reaction is determined by a combination of a number of physical and chemical steps. Investigation of the NO complexes of TyrH by means of optical absorption, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) techniques revealed the relative positions of the substrate and cofactor with respect to NO, an O2 mimic, and provided further insight into how the active site is tuned for catalytic reactivity upon substrate and cofactor binding. The second theory is that a decreased vertical temperature lapse rate, dT/dp, would slow cloud growth, creating a mode of cloud-top heights at the stable layer as clouds lose buoyancy. The signal for lapse rate changes in the AIRS data, however, is not as strong as the signal for RH differences. Near 600-400 hPa, roughly the region where congestus cloud-top heights are located, no significant difference in lapse rates is noted between congestus and deep clouds; in fact, the mean values suggest that congestus clouds appear in more unstable atmospheres than deep clouds. Only slight differences in temperature and lapse rate are noted in ERA data as well. These results suggest that drier air may play a greater role in limiting congestus cloud-top heights than increased atmospheric stability. Five years of relative humidity (RH) observations from the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument aboard the Aqua satellite are then analyzed to identify areas of anomalously dry air between 600 and 400 hPa over deep convective regions of the tropical oceans. Back trajectories are then calculated for each observed parcel.
97

Dry aging beef for the retail channel

Smith, Robert David 17 September 2007 (has links)
USDA Choice (n=48) and Select (n=48) paired Beef Loin, Short Loins, Short Cut (IMPS #174) were separated randomly into one of two treatments, dry or wet aging, and were aged for 14, 21, 28, or 35 d. At the end of each aging period, short loins were fabricated in a simulated retail cutting room at Texas A&M University to determine retail yields and processing times. Upon completion of cutting tests, steaks were served to consumers to determine palatability characteristics. Retail cutting tests showed that dry aged short loins had reduced yields and increased cutting times when compared to wet aged short loins. Consumers were unable to determine differences between dry and wet aged steaks and for aging periods, however, USDA quality grade had a significant impact on consumer perception of palatability attributes. The purpose of this research was to determine palatability characteristics and retail cutting characteristics associated with dry aged beef.
98

Dry-Farming in the Arid Southwest

Clothier, R. W. 01 February 1913 (has links)
This item was digitized as part of the Million Books Project led by Carnegie Mellon University and supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Cornell University coordinated the participation of land-grant and agricultural libraries in providing historical agricultural information for the digitization project; the University of Arizona Libraries, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and the Office of Arid Lands Studies collaborated in the selection and provision of material for the digitization project.
99

Rock joint and rock mass behaviour during pressurised hydraulic injections

Pine, R. J. January 1986 (has links)
The hydro-mechanical effects of high pressure fluid injections into jointed rock are considered mostly in the context of Hot Dry Rock (HDR) geothermal energy systems. In Part I, the mai n aspects ari sing from the HDR research at the "Camborne School of Mines (CSM) and Los Alamos Nat iana 1 Laboratory (LANL) projects are reviewed. Previous approaches to fluid-rock interacti ons at these projects and important observed phenomena are highlighted. Fundamental aspects of rock joint geometry, mechanical behaviour and flow regimes within jointed rock are also reviewed. These aspects are then related to possible conditions in HDR systems. The role of in situ stress conditions is of great significance in this study and is reviewed theoretically and in detail for both the CSM and LANL project sites. The revi ew incl udes a comprehensi ve seri es of measurements, by different techniques, organised and interpreted by the author at the CSM project. In Part II, model development, the emphasis is on intermediate fluid pressures which are too high for simple diffusion alone and too low for tensile hydraulic fracturing. The dominant mechanical activity is one of joint shear. Strike-slip shearing due to fluid injection is examined in two dimensions with the numerical model FRIP, which has been extended by the author. Similar behaviour is examined in three dimensions with an analytical model which is linked to microseismic observations. This model explains the observed phenomenon of downward shear growth. Joint distribution and mechanical properties, and their effect on fluid diffusivity, are examined and used in analytical models of fluid pressure pulse propagation, tracer transport, and rock stress increment transfer. All models are used to help interpret field data, mainly from the CSM project. The models are also of potential application to hydrocarbon reservoir stimulation, liquid waste disposal and leakage from high pressure water tunnels.
100

Water Use in Vegetables - Dry Bulb Onions

Martin, Edward C., Slack, Donald C., Pegelow, E. J. 10 1900 (has links)
Revised; Originally Published: 2009 / 2 pp. / This publication discusses water in in dry bulb onion production in Arizona.

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