9 results
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2. Comparative Analysis of Sleep Hygiene and Patterns among Adolescents in Two Russian Arctic Regions: A Pilot Study.
- Author
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Kolomeichuk, Sergey N., Korostovtseva, Lyudmila S., Morozov, Artem V., Bochkarev, Michail V., Sviryaev, Yury V., Petrashova, Dina A., Pozharskaya, Victoria V., Markov, Alexander A., Poluektov, Michail G., and Gubin, Denis G.
- Subjects
SUNSHINE ,SCHOOLS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,CHI-squared test ,SLEEP duration ,SLEEP ,ACADEMIC achievement ,DROWSINESS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SLEEP hygiene ,REGRESSION analysis ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Purpose: The circumpolar habitat stands as one of the most vulnerable environments for human activity and health. The primary study objective was to compare sleep-related factors, light exposure, social cues, and potential confounding variables among schoolchildren residing in the European Arctic region from two settlements situated below and above the Polar Circle using validated self-reported questionnaires. Materials and Methods: We recruited 94 children aged 13–15 years (40.4% males), matched by sex and age, from public educational institutions in two circumpolar settlements located below (Kem', Republic of Karelia; 64.6 NL) and above the Polar Circle (Apatity, Murmansk Region; 67.3 NL). Participants completed several surveys, including the Pediatric Daytime Sleepiness Scale, the Insomnia Severity Index, the Adolescent Sleep Hygiene Scale, and the Munich ChronoType Questionnaire, to evaluate sleep parameters and chronotype. The χ
2 test was used to test for differences between proportions. Linear regression and multiple regression models with co-factors were applied to assess the relationship between studied indicators. Results: A noteworthy increase in physical activity was observed in children residing in Kem' compared to those in Apatity. Children from Apatity showed higher alcohol consumption than their counterparts from Kem'. The overall rate of excessive daytime sleepiness in the sample was 17.1%. Moderate insomnia symptoms were reported in 18.4% of adolescents living in Kem' and in 25% of respondents living in Apatity, respectively. Notably, participants from Kem' attained higher academic scores and had longer exposure to sunlight on schooldays. On the other hand, children from Apatity tended to have later bedtimes and sleep-onset times on schooldays. According to the Munich ChronoType Questionnaire data, a reliance on alarm clocks on schooldays, and a higher Sleep Stability Factor based on the Adolescent Sleep Hygiene Scale. Discussion: Our study indicating that higher physical activity and longer sunlight exposure among Kem' children on schooldays are associated with earlier wake-up times during schooldays, earlier bedtime whole week, reduced dependence on alarm clocks, and higher academic achievements. The results of older schoolchildren differ from many works published previously in the USA, Argentina, and Japan, which could be explained by the season when the study was performed. Here, we observed a negative impact on school performance and sleep parameters in children living in high latitudes, namely in circumpolar regions. Conclusions: Our study points out that adolescents living above the Polar Circle tend to have sleep problems, e.g., late sleep-onset times, higher excessive daytime sleepiness, and insomnia-related symptoms, because of experiencing reduced exposure to natural light. Future research encompassing assessments across all four seasons will provide a more comprehensive understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Epidemiology of Viral Hepatitis in the Indigenous Populations of the Arctic Zone of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia).
- Author
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Kichatova, Vera S., Lopatukhina, Maria A., Potemkin, Ilya A., Asadi Mobarkhan, Fedor A., Isaeva, Olga V., Chanyshev, Mikhail D., Glushenko, Albina G., Khafizov, Kamil F., Rumyantseva, Tatyana D., Semenov, Sergey I., Kyuregyan, Karen K., Akimkin, Vasiliy G., and Mikhailov, Mikhail I.
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INDIGENOUS peoples ,VIRAL hepatitis ,HEPATITIS A ,HEPATITIS D virus ,HEPATITIS E virus ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
The indigenous populations of the Arctic regions of Russia experience the lowest coverage of health-related services. We assessed the prevalence of hepatitis A, B, C, D and E viruses (HAV, HBV, HCV, HDV and HEV) among 367 healthy adult Native people of the Arctic zone of Yakutia. The HAV seroprevalence was above and increased with age. The anti-HEV IgM and IgG antibody detection rates were 4.1% and 2.5%, respectively. The average HBsAg detection rate was 4.6%, with no positive cases identified in participants aged under 30 years, confirming the effectiveness of the newborn vaccination program that began in 1998. Anti-HDV antibodies were detected in 29.4% of HBsAg-positive cases. The anti-HCV and HCV RNA detection rates peaked in the age cohort of 50–59 years (10.8% and 3.9%). No statistically significant gender differences in the prevalence of different viral hepatitis were observed. The time-scaled phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that all HBV genotype A and D strains isolated in this study were autochthonous and had an estimated most common recent ancestor (MCRA) age of around the 11th to 14th century. Unlike HBV, the HCV strains of subtypes 1b, 2a and 2k/1b were introduced from other regions of Russia in the 1980s and 1990s. The HCV 1b sequence analysis revealed a series of transmission events. In conclusion, these data emphasize the urgent need for expanded viral hepatitis screening and care programs in the indigenous populations of the Arctic zone of Yakutia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Energy cooperation of Russia and China in the Arctic: state and prospects.
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Fadeev, Alexey M., Spiridonov, Andrey A., Kondratov, Nikolay A., Zaikov, Konstantin S., Kuprikov, Mikhail Y., and Kuprikov, Nikita M.
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INTERSTATE agreements ,NORTHEAST Passage ,COOPERATION ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
In the twenty-first century the Arctic region remains strategically important for many states located both inside and outside the Arctic. The transformation of the Arctic into an outpost of the world economy is dictated by the rapid and irreversible changes in the natural, socio-economic and political environment, among which two interrelated features stand out: climate change and globalization. The article focuses on analyzing the features of energy interaction between Russia and the People's Republic of China in the Russian Arctic. Over the past two years, the development of the Arctic, including the Russian Arctic zone, has been strongly influenced by the exacerbation of the Ukrainian crisis. The termination of Russia's cooperation with member countries and the majority of observer states of the Arctic Council towards the implementation of industrial projects in the Russian Arctic has strengthened the so-called 'orientation to the east' in Russian Arctic policy. The current macroeconomic situation creates the preconditions for the development of cooperation between the Russian Federation and the countries of the Asia-Pacific region, primarily with China. The publication analyzes the current stage of Russian-Chinese relations and examines the prospects for interstate energy cooperation in the Arctic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Summer Russian Heat Waves Linked to Arctic Sea Ice Anomalies in 2010 and 2016.
- Author
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Zhang, Xuanwen, Wu, Bingyi, and Ding, Shuoyi
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HEAT waves (Meteorology) ,SEA ice ,WESTERLIES ,ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,ZONAL winds ,GEOPOTENTIAL height - Abstract
This study investigates dominant features of the atmospheric circulation evolution associated with extreme heat waves (HWs) in Russia during the summers of 2010 and 2016, respectively, and their possible association with Arctic sea ice loss. Results show that a region of Russia (20°–70°E, 45°–65°N) experienced a lasting 44-day HW event from 4 July to 16 August 2010 and a 26-day HW event from 2 to 27 August 2016. The associated atmospheric circulation anomalies are characterized by the summer Arctic cold anomaly in the mid- to low troposphere and an anticyclonic circulation anomaly over the Ural Mountains. Simulation experiments forced by summer Arctic sea ice anomalies reproduce the major characteristics of observational associations. Observations and numerical simulations indicate that summer Arctic sea ice anomaly is conducive to the formation of the summer Arctic cold anomaly, which is often accompanied by the enhanced baroclinicity in most of the Arctic troposphere and increased and decreased meridional temperature gradient in the high and midlatitudes, respectively. Such a configuration strengthens westerly winds over most of the Arctic and weakens zonal westerly over the southern Ural Mountains. This anomalous zonal wind pattern establishes the background conditions for the sustained positive geopotential height anomaly in the mid- to low troposphere that dynamically facilitates the prevalence of Russian HW events. Moreover, when compared with 2016, the weaker meridional potential vorticity gradient anomaly in the summer of 2010 prolonged the persistence of Ural blocking, which may lead to longer HW events in Russia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Changes in the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress.
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O'Rourke, Ronald, Comay, Laura B., Frittelli, John, Keating-Bitonti, Caitlin, Ramseur, Jonathan L., and Sheikh, Pervaze A.
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SPECIAL operations (Military science) ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,SEA ice - Abstract
The article focuses on the changing dynamics in the Arctic, with topics including the impact of diminishing sea ice, geopolitical competition among the United States, Russia, and China, and increased military operations, commercial shipping, and resource exploration in the region. It highlights the significance of these changes for the United States, particularly with regard to its political, economic, energy, and environmental interests in the Arctic.
- Published
- 2024
7. The Big Picture of Arctic Geopolitics: An actor-oriented analysis.
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Winther, Iselin Németh, Østhagen, Andreas, Lamazhapov, Erdem, Moe, Arild, Bouffard, Troy, Heggelund, Gørild, Stensdal, Iselin, Raspotnik, Andreas, Stepien, Adam, and Sharma, Bipandeep
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RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- ,GEOPOLITICS ,GREAT powers (International relations) ,GLOBAL production networks - Abstract
Copyright of FNI Reports is the property of Fridtjof Nansen Institute and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
8. Beach litter composition, distribution patterns and annual budgets on Novaya Zemlya archipelago, Russian Arctic.
- Author
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Ershova A, Vorotnichenko E, Gordeeva S, Ruzhnikova N, and Trofimova A
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- Arctic Regions, Russia, Plastics analysis, Environmental Monitoring, Bathing Beaches
- Abstract
Beached macrolitter (>2,5 cm) abundance and composition in the Russian (Eastern) part of the Barents Sea and the adjacent part of the Kara Sea was assessed for 2021-2023. Average densities of beach litter on the coasts are 675 items/100 m and 37 kg/100 m (0.27 items/m
2 and 0.015 kg/m2 ). Annual litter budgets for Cape Zhelaniya beaches are 0.49 items/m2 per year and 0.023 kg/m2 per year. The northernmost tip of Novaya Zemlya is shown to be a beach litter accumulation hot-spot on Novaya Zemlya archipelago, where litter is brought by surface currents and trapped by sea ice margins. Up to 80 % of beached marine macrolitter is made of plastics, originating from vessels. A certain accumulation strip of a beach was identified (14 m - 27.5 m distance from the waterline), and significance of the beach backshore was shown in litter accumulation. Beach litter accounting methodologies on the Arctic beaches are discussed., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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9. Adaptive post-COVID-19 immune response in female subjects of the Russian arctic region.
- Author
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Shchegoleva LS, Kabbani MS, Shashkova EY, Filippova OE, Popovskaya EV, Sergeeva TB, and Morozova OS
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- Humans, Female, Russia epidemiology, Arctic Regions epidemiology, Adult, Young Adult, COVID-19 immunology, SARS-CoV-2 immunology, Adaptive Immunity immunology
- Abstract
The Arctic region's unfavorable living conditions adversely affect the spread of infectious diseases, including COVID-19, This, in turn, can also lead to increased morbidity and mortality rates in the area due to a number of factors such as climate, environment, and high prevalence rate of pre-existing health issues like diabetes, obesity, and respiratory infections. These circumstances adversely affect maintaining the level of working capability. The aim of this paper is to investigate the ratio of immunocompetent cells involved in the adaptive post-COVID-19 immune response. The research includes an immunological assessment of 29 women aged 20-40 years residing in Arkhangelsk, Russia, six months after recovering from COVID-19. The count of leukocytes in the peripheral blood and their differential were evaluated using standard methods to assess the immunological status. To delve deeper into the immunological landscape, phenotypes of lymphocytes (CD5+, CD8+, CD10+, and CD95+) were evaluated using an indirect immunoperoxidase reaction with monoclonal antibodies on dried drop lymphocyte preparations. After incubating blood with latex molecules, the activity and quantity of phagocytes were assessed using a light microscope. The neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio was found to be inverted in the female subjects under investigation. The high concentration of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CD8+) and lymphocytes with apoptotic receptors (CD95+) suggests a potential correlation with a concurrent reduction in the expression of the total T-cell marker (CD5+) across all cases. This association was further linked to a decrease in lymphoproliferative activity and a relative decline in phagocytic activity. These findings led us to posit that the total recovery time after COVID-19 might extend beyond six months, indicative of a prolonged impact on the body's protective capacity. Our observations prompt the hypothesis that cellular immunity plays a crucial role in determining the severity of COVID-19 infection. Specifically, individuals with initially robust phagocytic activity may be predisposed to experiencing a milder form of the infection. However, this assumption warrants further investigation and clarification in individuals with moderate and severe disease progression (Tab. 1, Ref. 17). Keywords: arctic, COVID-19, cytotoxic t-lymphocytes, apoptosis, lymphoproliferation, cellular immunity, phagocytic activity.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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