30 results on '"D. Bettinelli"'
Search Results
2. The Stueckelberg Mechanism in the presence of Physical Scalar Resonances
- Author
-
A. Quadri and D. Bettinelli
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Theory ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Gauge boson ,hep-th ,Electroweak interaction ,Scalar (mathematics) ,Mass generation ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,FOS: Physical sciences ,hep-ph ,Custodial symmetry ,BRST quantization ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Theoretical physics ,High Energy Physics::Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th) ,Higgs boson ,Gauge fixing - Abstract
We show that it is possible to accommodate physical scalar resonances within a minimal nonlinearly realized electroweak theory in a way compatible with a natural Hopf algebra selection criterion (Weak Power Counting) and the relevant functional identities of the model (Local Functional Equation, Slavnov-Taylor identity, ghost equations, b-equations). The Beyond-the-Standard-Model (BSM) sector of the theory is studied by BRST techniques. The presence of a mass generation mechanism \`a la St\"uckelberg allows for two mass invariants in the gauge boson sector. The corresponding 't Hooft gauge-fixing is constructed by respecting all the symmetries of the theory. The model interpolates between the Higgs and a purely St\"uckelberg scenario. Despite the presence of physical scalar resonances, we show that tree-level violation of unitarity in the scattering of longitudinally polarized charged gauge bosons occurs at sufficiently high energies, if a fraction of the mass is generated by the St\"uckelberg mechanism. The formal properties of the physically favoured limit after LHC7-8 data, where BSM effects are small and custodial symmetry in the gauge boson sector is respected, are studied., Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2015
3. Effets du vieillissement sur les arcades dentaires adultes
- Author
-
D. Bettinelli and L. Deblock
- Subjects
Orthodontics ,Dental arch ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Dental Stress Analysis ,Medicine ,Jaw Relation Record ,General Medicine ,business ,Tooth Migration - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Epitaxial growth of heterostructures on biaxially textured metallic substrates for YBa2Cu3O7-x tape fabrication
- Author
-
F. L. Fabbri, Antonella Mancini, Traian Petrisor, G. Celentano, Paolo Scardi, D. Bettinelli, Lelia Ciontea, G. Grimaldi, V. Galluzzi, S. Ceresara, Vincenzo Boffa, U. Gambardella, and C. Annino
- Subjects
Materials science ,Fabrication ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Non-blocking I/O ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Mineralogy ,Heterojunction ,Epitaxy ,Evaporation (deposition) ,Electron beam physical vapor deposition ,Optoelectronics ,Texture (crystalline) ,business ,Layer (electronics) - Abstract
The paper presents the current status of Ente per le Nuove tecnologie, ĽEnergia e ĽAmbiente research on the processing of high-irreversibility-field superconductor YBa2Cu3O7-x. (YBCO) tapes, useful for power application. A major part of this review is concerned with buffer layer growth, because this is the most important stage in the YBCO thick-film fabrication on biaxially textured metallic substrates. Several architectures are presented: CeO2/Pd/Ni, CeO2/(Ni-V) and CeO2/NiO/(Ni-V). For all the buffer layer structures the top CeO2 film was deposited by pulsed-laser deposition, while the Pd film was grown by electron-beam evaporation. The observed epitaxial orientation is [001]. The properties of a new non-magnetic Ni-V alloy substrate, as well as the preliminary results on superconducting multilayer structures, are also presented. The YBCO film grown on the CeO2/NiO/(Ni-V) configuration has the critical temperature Tc onset of 90.9 K, zero resistance at 86 K and the critical current density Jc =...
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Magnetic Properties of Biaxially Oriented NI-V Substrate
- Author
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Vincenzo Boffa, Traian Petrisor, Viorel Pop, U. Gambardella, L. Nistor, S. Ceresara, Paolo Scardi, and D. Bettinelli
- Subjects
Materials science ,Fabrication ,Magnetic moment ,Analytical chemistry ,Vanadium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Recrystallization (metallurgy) ,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics ,Thermal treatment ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Full width at half maximum ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,chemistry ,Curie temperature ,Anisotropy - Abstract
The paper presents the structural and magnetic properties of a new non-magnetic biaxially textured substrate based on Ni 100-x V x solid-solution for YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7-y tape fabrication. The effective atomic magnetic moment monotonously decreases with the vanadium concentration, causing a corresponding decrease of Curie temperature. The Curie temperature reaches the zero value at about 11.5. % of vanadium. The texturing studies revealed that (100)[001] cube texture can be easily developed up to x=11 at. %, by a cold rolling process followed by a recrystallization thermal treatment. The X-ray ω and ϕ scans have demonstrated that the samples have a good out-of-plane and in-plane texture for the whole solubility range, with FWHM of 7° and 11°, respectively. The correlation between the magnetic and structural anisotropy was also studied.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Erratum: One-loop self-energy and counterterms in a massive Yang-Mills theory based on the nonlinearly realized gauge group [Phys. Rev. D77, 105012 (2008)]
- Author
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Andrea Quadri, R. Ferrari, and D. Bettinelli
- Subjects
Loop (topology) ,Physics ,Renormalization ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Self-energy ,Gauge group ,Yang–Mills theory ,Mathematical physics - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Erratum: One-loop self-energies in the electroweak model with a nonlinearly realized gauge group [Phys. Rev. D79, 125028 (2009)]
- Author
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D. Bettinelli, Andrea Quadri, and R. Ferrari
- Subjects
Renormalization ,Physics ,Loop (topology) ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Gauge group ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Electroweak interaction ,Technicolor ,Mathematical physics - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Heavy top renormalon contribution to fermion propagators
- Author
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D. Bettinelli and J.J. van der Bij
- Subjects
Physics ,High Energy Physics - Theory ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,High Energy Physics::Lattice ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Propagator ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Fermion ,Renormalon ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nonlinear Sciences::Exactly Solvable and Integrable Systems ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th) ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Physics::Atomic and Molecular Clusters ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) ,Resummation - Abstract
We study resummed perturbative contributions due to a heavy top-quark. These renormalon contributions are evaluated for fermion propagators. Results for the top-quark width are given. Estimates of non-perturbative uncertainties are made on the \rho-parameter using different schemes of dealing with the Landau-pole. For the physical top-quark mass the effects are negligible., Comment: 30 pages, 14 figures, 1 table; v2: Ref.19 added, typos corrected, final version published in PRD
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Resummed corrections to the \rho parameter due to a finite width of the top quark
- Author
-
J.J. van der Bij and D. Bettinelli
- Subjects
Physics ,High Energy Physics - Theory ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Top quark ,Wave function renormalization ,Particle physics ,High Energy Physics::Lattice ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Propagator ,High Energy Physics::Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Quantum electrodynamics ,Regularization (physics) ,Effective lagrangian ,Cutoff ,Gauge theory - Abstract
We perform an all-order calculation of the \rho parameter in a simplified framework, where the top propagator can be calculated exactly. Special emphasis is placed on the question of gauge invariance and the treatment of non-perturbative cut-off effects., Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, typos corrected, final version published by Phys. Rev. D
- Published
- 2010
10. Quantitative comparison of five current protocols in gait analysis
- Author
-
P. Crenna, D. Bettinelli, Alberto Ferrari, Alberto Leardini, Maria Grazia Benedetti, Carlo Albino Frigo, Esteban Pavan, Marco Rabuffetti, Ferrari A., Benedetti M.G., Pavan E., Frigo C., Bettinelli D., Rabuffetti M., Crenna P., and Leardini A.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Computer science ,Physiology ,Biophysics ,Kinematics ,Settore BIO/09 - Fisiologia ,Young Adult ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Gait (human) ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Gait ,Simulation ,Protocol (science) ,Data collection ,Rehabilitation ,Data reduction ,Gait analysis ,Inter-protocol repeatability ,Kinetics ,Repeatability ,Middle Aged ,Trunk ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Anatomical landmark - Abstract
Data collection and reduction procedures, coherently structured in protocols, are necessary in gait analysis to make kinematic and kinetic measurements clinically comprehensible. The current protocols differ considerably for the marker-set and for the biomechanical model implemented. Nevertheless, conventional gait variables are compared without full awareness of these differences. A comparison was made of five worldwide representative protocols by analysing kinematics and kinetics of the trunk, pelvis and lower limbs exactly over the same gait cycles. A single comprehensive arrangement of markers was defined by merging the corresponding five marker-sets. This resulted in 60 markers to be positioned either on the skin or on wands, and in 16 anatomical landmark calibrations to be performed with an instrumented pointer. Two healthy subjects and one patient who had a special two degrees of freedom knee prosthesis implanted were analysed. Data from up-right posture and at least three gait repetitions were collected. Five corresponding experts participated in the data collection and analysed independently the data according to their own procedures. All five protocols showed good intra-protocol repeatability. Joint flexion/extension showed good correlations and a small bias among protocols. Out-of-sagittal plane rotations revealed worse correlations, and in particular knee abduction/adduction had opposite trends. Joint moments compared well, despite the very different methods implemented. The abduction/adduction at the prosthetic knee, which was fully restrained, revealed an erroneous rotation as large as 30 degrees in one protocol. Higher correlations were observed between the protocols with similar biomechanical models, whereas little influence seems to be ascribed to the marker-set.
- Published
- 2007
11. A SINGLE GAIT CYCLE AS MEASURED BY FOUR CURRENT PROTOCOLS
- Author
-
Esteban Pavan, Carlo Albino Frigo, Maria Grazia Benedetti, D. Bettinelli, Alberto Ferrari, and Alberto Leardini
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Computer science ,Rehabilitation ,Biophysics ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Gait cycle - Published
- 2006
12. Rear-foot, mid-foot and fore-foot motion during the stance phase of gait
- Author
-
R. Nativo, Alberto Leardini, Lisa Berti, D. Bettinelli, Maria Grazia Benedetti, Sandro Giannini, Leardini A., Benedetti M.G., Berti L., Bettinelli D., Nativo R., and Giannini S.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Rotation ,Movement ,Population ,Biophysics ,Models, Biological ,Gait (human) ,Foot Joints ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,education ,Gait ,education.field_of_study ,Foot ,Foot Bones ,Rehabilitation ,Anatomy ,Sagittal plane ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Transverse plane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Photogrammetry ,Gait analysis ,Coronal plane ,Female ,Calcaneus ,Metatarsal bones ,Geology - Abstract
This paper proposes a new protocol designed to track a large number of foot segments during the stance phase of gait with the smallest possible number of markers, with particular clinical focus on coronal plane alignment of the rear-foot, transverse and sagittal plane alignment of the metatarsal bones, and changes at the medial longitudinal arch. The shank, calcaneus, mid-foot and metatarsus were assumed to be 3D rigid bodies. The longitudinal axis of the first, second and fifth metatarsal bones and the proximal phalanx of the hallux were also tracked independently. Skin markers were mounted on bony prominences or joint lines, avoiding the course of main tendons. Trajectories of the 14 markers were collected by an eight-camera motion capture system at 100 Hz on a population of 10 young volunteers. Three-dimensional joint rotations and planar angles were calculated according to anatomically based reference frames. The marker set was well visible throughout the stance phase of gait, even in a camera configuration typical of gait analysis of the full body. The time-histories of the joint rotations and planar angles were well repeatable among subjects and consistent with clinical and biomechanical knowledge. Several dynamic measurements were originally taken, such as elevation/drop of the medial longitudinal arch and of three metatarsal bones, rear-foot to fore-foot rotation and transverse plane deformation of the metatarsus. The information obtained from this protocol, consistent with previous clinical knowledge, enhanced our understanding of the dynamics of the human foot during stance.
- Published
- 2006
13. [Effects of aging on the adult dental arch]
- Author
-
D, Bettinelli and L, Deblock
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Dental Stress Analysis ,Male ,Aging ,Dental Arch ,Adolescent ,Jaw Relation Record ,Humans ,Female ,Tooth Migration ,Middle Aged ,Aged - Published
- 2004
14. Effect of changing the gravity vector on respiratory output and control
- Author
-
Raffaele Dellaca, P. Vaida, Pierre Techoueyres, D. Bettinelli, Jean-Luc Lachaud, Giuseppe Miserocchi, C. Kays, Dellaca, R, Bettinelli, D, Kays, C, Techoueyres, P, Lachaud, J, Vaida, P, and Miserocchi, G
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Gravity (chemistry) ,respiratory mechanic ,Physiology ,Acceleration ,Posture ,Hypergravity ,Physiology (medical) ,Physical Stimulation ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Respiratory system ,Physics ,Gravity, Altered ,Mathematical analysis ,Middle Aged ,Adaptation, Physiological ,microgravity ,Anesthesia ,Respiratory Mechanics ,pulmonary ventilation ,Respiratory control ,Female ,respiratory control ,Hypogravity - Abstract
We studied the respiratory output in five subjects exposed to parabolic flights [gravity vector 1, 1.8 and 0 gravity vector in the craniocaudal direction (Gz)] and when switching from sitting to supine (legs bent at the knees). Despite differences in total respiratory compliance (highest at 0 Gz and in supine and minimum at 1.8 Gz), no significant changes in elastic inspiratory work were observed in the various conditions, except when comparing 1.8 Gz with 1 Gz (subjects were in the seated position in all circumstances), although the elastic work had an inverse relationship with total respiratory compliance that was highest at 0 Gz and in supine posture and minimum at 1.8 Gz. Relative to 1 Gz, lung resistance (airways plus lung tissue) increased significantly by 52% in the supine but slightly decreased at 0 Gz. We calculated, for each condition, the tidal volume changes based on the energy available in the preceding phase and concluded that an increase in inspiratory muscle output occurs when respiratory load increases (e.g., going from 0 to 1.8 Gz), whereas a decrease occurs in the opposite case (e.g., from 1.8 to 0 Gz). Despite these immediate changes, ventilation increased, going to 1.8 and 0 Gz (up to ≈23%), reflecting an increase in mean inspiratory flow rate, tidal volume, and respiratory frequency, while ventilation decreased (approximately −14%), shifting to supine posture (transition time ∼15 s). These data suggest a remarkable feature in the mechanical arrangement of the respiratory system such that it can maintain the ventilatory output with small changes in inspiratory muscle work in face of considerable changes in configuration and mechanical properties.
- Published
- 2004
15. Effect of gravity and posture on lung mechanics
- Author
-
D. Bettinelli, André Capderou, P. Vaida, Giuseppe Miserocchi, Pierre Techoueyres, O. Bailliart, Jean-Luc Lachaud, C. Kays, Bettinelli, D, Kays, C, Bailliart, O, Capderou, A, Techoueyres, P, Lachaud, J, Vaida, P, and Miserocchi, G
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Gravity (chemistry) ,Aircraft ,Functional Residual Capacity ,Physiology ,Recoil pressure ,Posture ,interstitial pressure ,Pulmonary compliance ,Functional residual capacity ,Esophagus ,Physiology (medical) ,Diffusing capacity ,Pressure ,Medicine ,Humans ,Thoracic Wall ,Lung Compliance ,Body posture ,Weightlessness ,business.industry ,Lung mechanics ,Anatomy ,Mechanics ,respiratory system ,Middle Aged ,Respiratory Mechanics ,esophageal pressure ,Female ,business - Abstract
The volume-pressure relationship of the lung was studied in six subjects on changing the gravity vector during parabolic flights and body posture. Lung recoil pressure decreased by ∼2.7 cmH2O going from 1 to 0 vertical acceleration (Gz), whereas it increased by ∼3.5 cmH2O in 30° tilted head-up and supine postures. No substantial change was found going from 1 to 1.8 Gz. Matching the changes in volume-pressure relationships of the lung and chest wall (previous data), results in a decrease in functional respiratory capacity of ∼580 ml at 0 Gz relative to 1 Gz and of ∼1,200 ml going to supine posture. Microgravity causes a decrease in lung and chest wall recoil pressures as it removes most of the distortion of lung parenchyma and thorax induced by changing gravity field and/or posture. Hypergravity does not greatly affect respiratory mechanics, suggesting that mechanical distortion is close to maximum already at 1 Gz. The end-expiratory volume during quiet breathing corresponds to the mechanical functional residual capacity in each condition.
- Published
- 2002
16. Effect of gravity on chest wall mechanics
- Author
-
O. Bailliart, Giuseppe Miserocchi, P. Vaida, D. Bettinelli, C. Kays, Pierre Techoueyres, Jean-Luc Lachaud, André Capderou, Bettinelli, D, Kays, C, Bailliart, O, Capderou, A, Techoueyres, P, Lachaud, J, Vaida, P, and Miserocchi, G
- Subjects
Thorax ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gravity (chemistry) ,Physiology ,Vital Capacity ,Respiratory physiology ,Chest wall mechanics ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pressure ,Humans ,Lung volumes ,Lung ,Physics ,Weightlessness ,Total Lung Capacity ,chest wall resting volume ,Middle Aged ,chest wall compliance ,Surgery ,Compliance (physiology) ,Residual Volume ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,Inhalation ,Cardiology ,Respiratory Mechanics ,esophageal pressure ,Female ,Lung Volume Measurements ,supine posture ,Compliance ,Gravitation - Abstract
Chest wall mechanics was studied in four subjects on changing gravity in the craniocaudal direction (Gz) during parabolic flights. The thorax appears very compliant at 0 Gz: its recoil changes only from −2 to 2 cmH2O in the volume range of 30–70% vital capacity (VC). Increasing Gz from 0 to 1 and 1.8 Gzprogressively shifted the volume-pressure curve of the chest wall to the left and also caused a fivefold exponential decrease in compliance. For lung volume z than from 1 to 1.8 Gz. For a volume from 30 to 70% VC, the effect is inspiratory going from 0 to 1 Gz but expiratory from 1 to 1.8 Gz. For a volume greater than ∼70% VC, gravity always has an expiratory effect. The data suggest that the chest wall does not behave as a linear system when exposed to changing gravity, as the effect depends on both chest wall volume and magnitude of Gz.
- Published
- 2002
17. Pulmonary microvascular and perivascular interstitial geometry
- Author
-
Negrini, Daniela, Candiani, A., Boschetti, F., Crisafulli, B., DEL FABBRO, M., and Miserocchi, D. BETTINELLI AND G.
- Published
- 2001
18. Gait analysis results from five current protocols
- Author
-
Carlo Albino Frigo, Maria Grazia Benedetti, P. Crenna, D. Bettinelli, Alberto Ferrari, Alberto Leardini, Marco Rabuffetti, and Esteban Pavan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Computer science ,Gait analysis ,Rehabilitation ,Biophysics ,medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Current (fluid) - Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. NEW EXPERIMENTAL PROTOCOLS FOR LOWER LIMB AND FOOT MULTI-SEGMENTAL GAIT ANALYSIS
- Author
-
Sandro Giannini, D. Bettinelli, Alberto Leardini, S. Ingrosso, Lisa Berti, and Maria Grazia Benedetti
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Gait analysis ,Rehabilitation ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,business ,Lower limb ,Foot (unit) - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Epitaxial growth of heterostructures on biaxially textured metallic substrates for YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7-x tape fabrication
- Author
-
Boffa, C. Annino, D. Bettinelli, S., V., primary
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Notas sobre aves de la Meseta de Somuncura, Río Negro, Argentina
- Author
-
Marcelo D. Bettinelli and Juan C. Chebez
- Subjects
Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
En este trabajo se dan los resultados de un estudio realizado en la Meseta de Somuncurá; se registraron 48 especies de aves en 5 localidades, de las cuales 22 son primeros registros para el área. Se presenta información para 9 de estas especies.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Pulmonary microvascular and perivascular interstitial geometry during development of mild hydraulic edema
- Author
-
Daniela Negrini, Beatrice Crisafulli, Giuseppe Miserocchi, D. Bettinelli, Federica Boschetti, Anna Candiani, Massimo Del Fabbro, Negrini, D, Candiani, A, Boschetti, F, Crisafulli, B, Del Fabbro, M, Bettinelli, D, and Miserocchi, G
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pulmonary Circulation ,perivascular interstitial volume ,Physiology ,Vasodilator Agents ,Vasomotion ,Blood Pressure ,Pulmonary Edema ,pulmonary arteriolar vasomotion ,Sodium Chloride ,Microcirculation ,Interstitial space ,Physiology (medical) ,Edema ,Papaverine ,medicine ,Animals ,mild interstitial edema ,Lung ,business.industry ,Respiratory disease ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary Alveoli ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Circulatory system ,Rabbits ,medicine.symptom ,Pulmonary alveolus ,business ,Extracellular Space - Abstract
To study pulmonary arteriolar vasomotion in control conditions and in the transition to hydraulic edema, changes in subpleural pulmonary arteriolar diameter and perivascular interstitial volume were evaluated in anesthetized spontaneously breathing rabbits. Images of subpleural pulmonary microvessels were recorded in control conditions and for up to 180 min during a 0.5 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) intravenous saline infusion through an intact parietal pleural window. Images were digitized and analyzed with a semiautomatic procedure to determine vessel diameter and perivascular interstitial thickness from which interstitial fluid volume was derived. In control vessels, the diameter of approximately 30-, approximately 50-, and approximately 80-microm arterioles and the perivascular interstitial thickness were fairly stable. During infusion, the diameter increased maximally by 20% in approximately 30 microm vessels, was unchanged in approximately 50 microm vessels, and decreased by 25% in approximately 80-microm arterioles; the perivascular interstitial volume increased by 54% only around 30-microm microvessels. In papaverine-treated rabbits, all arterioles dilated and a larger increase in perivascular interstitial thickness was observed. The data suggest that the opposite vasomotor behavior of 30- and 80-microm arterioles during development of mild edema may represent a local specific response of the pulmonary microcirculation to reduce capillary pressure in the face of an increased transendothelial fluid filtration, thus counteracting progression toward severe edema.
23. New experimental protocolls for lower limb and foot multisegmental gait analysis
- Author
-
Leardini, Alberto, Ingrosso, S., LISA BERTI, Giannini, Sandro, Bettinelli, D., Maria Grazia Benedetti, A. Leardini, S. Ingrosso, L. Berti, S. Giannini, D. Bettinelli, and M.G. Benedetti
24. Quantitative comparison of five current protocols in gait analysis.
- Author
-
Ferrari A, Benedetti MG, Pavan E, Frigo C, Bettinelli D, Rabuffetti M, Crenna P, and Leardini A
- Subjects
- Biomechanical Phenomena, Humans, Kinetics, Middle Aged, Physiology methods, Young Adult, Gait physiology
- Abstract
Data collection and reduction procedures, coherently structured in protocols, are necessary in gait analysis to make kinematic and kinetic measurements clinically comprehensible. The current protocols differ considerably for the marker-set and for the biomechanical model implemented. Nevertheless, conventional gait variables are compared without full awareness of these differences. A comparison was made of five worldwide representative protocols by analysing kinematics and kinetics of the trunk, pelvis and lower limbs exactly over the same gait cycles. A single comprehensive arrangement of markers was defined by merging the corresponding five marker-sets. This resulted in 60 markers to be positioned either on the skin or on wands, and in 16 anatomical landmark calibrations to be performed with an instrumented pointer. Two healthy subjects and one patient who had a special two degrees of freedom knee prosthesis implanted were analysed. Data from up-right posture and at least three gait repetitions were collected. Five corresponding experts participated in the data collection and analysed independently the data according to their own procedures. All five protocols showed good intra-protocol repeatability. Joint flexion/extension showed good correlations and a small bias among protocols. Out-of-sagittal plane rotations revealed worse correlations, and in particular knee abduction/adduction had opposite trends. Joint moments compared well, despite the very different methods implemented. The abduction/adduction at the prosthetic knee, which was fully restrained, revealed an erroneous rotation as large as 30 degrees in one protocol. Higher correlations were observed between the protocols with similar biomechanical models, whereas little influence seems to be ascribed to the marker-set.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Rear-foot, mid-foot and fore-foot motion during the stance phase of gait.
- Author
-
Leardini A, Benedetti MG, Berti L, Bettinelli D, Nativo R, and Giannini S
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena, Female, Foot anatomy & histology, Foot Bones anatomy & histology, Foot Bones physiology, Foot Joints physiology, Humans, Male, Models, Biological, Photogrammetry, Rotation, Foot physiology, Gait physiology, Movement physiology
- Abstract
This paper proposes a new protocol designed to track a large number of foot segments during the stance phase of gait with the smallest possible number of markers, with particular clinical focus on coronal plane alignment of the rear-foot, transverse and sagittal plane alignment of the metatarsal bones, and changes at the medial longitudinal arch. The shank, calcaneus, mid-foot and metatarsus were assumed to be 3D rigid bodies. The longitudinal axis of the first, second and fifth metatarsal bones and the proximal phalanx of the hallux were also tracked independently. Skin markers were mounted on bony prominences or joint lines, avoiding the course of main tendons. Trajectories of the 14 markers were collected by an eight-camera motion capture system at 100 Hz on a population of 10 young volunteers. Three-dimensional joint rotations and planar angles were calculated according to anatomically based reference frames. The marker set was well visible throughout the stance phase of gait, even in a camera configuration typical of gait analysis of the full body. The time-histories of the joint rotations and planar angles were well repeatable among subjects and consistent with clinical and biomechanical knowledge. Several dynamic measurements were originally taken, such as elevation/drop of the medial longitudinal arch and of three metatarsal bones, rear-foot to fore-foot rotation and transverse plane deformation of the metatarsus. The information obtained from this protocol, consistent with previous clinical knowledge, enhanced our understanding of the dynamics of the human foot during stance.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Effect of changing the gravity vector on respiratory output and control.
- Author
-
Dellacá RL, Bettinelli D, Kays C, Techoueyres P, Lachaud JL, Vaïda P, and Miserocchi G
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological physiology, Adult, Female, Gravity, Altered, Homeostasis physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Physical Stimulation methods, Acceleration, Hypergravity, Hypogravity, Posture physiology, Pulmonary Ventilation physiology, Respiratory Mechanics physiology
- Abstract
We studied the respiratory output in five subjects exposed to parabolic flights [gravity vector 1, 1.8 and 0 gravity vector in the craniocaudal direction (Gz)] and when switching from sitting to supine (legs bent at the knees). Despite differences in total respiratory compliance (highest at 0 Gz and in supine and minimum at 1.8 Gz), no significant changes in elastic inspiratory work were observed in the various conditions, except when comparing 1.8 Gz with 1 Gz (subjects were in the seated position in all circumstances), although the elastic work had an inverse relationship with total respiratory compliance that was highest at 0 Gz and in supine posture and minimum at 1.8 Gz. Relative to 1 Gz, lung resistance (airways plus lung tissue) increased significantly by 52% in the supine but slightly decreased at 0 Gz. We calculated, for each condition, the tidal volume changes based on the energy available in the preceding phase and concluded that an increase in inspiratory muscle output occurs when respiratory load increases (e.g., going from 0 to 1.8 Gz), whereas a decrease occurs in the opposite case (e.g., from 1.8 to 0 Gz). Despite these immediate changes, ventilation increased, going to 1.8 and 0 Gz (up to approximately 23%), reflecting an increase in mean inspiratory flow rate, tidal volume, and respiratory frequency, while ventilation decreased (approximately -14%), shifting to supine posture (transition time approximately 15 s). These data suggest a remarkable feature in the mechanical arrangement of the respiratory system such that it can maintain the ventilatory output with small changes in inspiratory muscle work in face of considerable changes in configuration and mechanical properties.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. [Effects of aging on the adult dental arch].
- Author
-
Bettinelli D and Deblock L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Dental Stress Analysis, Female, Humans, Jaw Relation Record, Male, Middle Aged, Tooth Migration, Aging physiology, Dental Arch anatomy & histology
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Effect of gravity and posture on lung mechanics.
- Author
-
Bettinelli D, Kays C, Bailliart O, Capderou A, Techoueyres P, Lachaud JL, Vaïda P, and Miserocchi G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aircraft, Esophagus physiology, Female, Functional Residual Capacity physiology, Humans, Lung Compliance physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Pressure, Thoracic Wall physiology, Posture physiology, Respiratory Mechanics physiology, Weightlessness
- Abstract
The volume-pressure relationship of the lung was studied in six subjects on changing the gravity vector during parabolic flights and body posture. Lung recoil pressure decreased by approximately 2.7 cmH(2)O going from 1 to 0 vertical acceleration (G(z)), whereas it increased by approximately 3.5 cmH(2)O in 30 degrees tilted head-up and supine postures. No substantial change was found going from 1 to 1.8 G(z). Matching the changes in volume-pressure relationships of the lung and chest wall (previous data), results in a decrease in functional respiratory capacity of approximately 580 ml at 0 G(z) relative to 1 G(z) and of approximately 1,200 ml going to supine posture. Microgravity causes a decrease in lung and chest wall recoil pressures as it removes most of the distortion of lung parenchyma and thorax induced by changing gravity field and/or posture. Hypergravity does not greatly affect respiratory mechanics, suggesting that mechanical distortion is close to maximum already at 1 G(z). The end-expiratory volume during quiet breathing corresponds to the mechanical functional residual capacity in each condition.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Effect of gravity on chest wall mechanics.
- Author
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Bettinelli D, Kays C, Bailliart O, Capderou A, Techoueyres P, Lachaud JL, Vaïda P, and Miserocchi G
- Subjects
- Compliance, Female, Humans, Inhalation physiology, Lung physiology, Lung Volume Measurements, Male, Middle Aged, Pressure, Residual Volume, Total Lung Capacity, Vital Capacity, Weightlessness, Gravitation, Respiratory Mechanics, Thorax physiology
- Abstract
Chest wall mechanics was studied in four subjects on changing gravity in the craniocaudal direction (G(z)) during parabolic flights. The thorax appears very compliant at 0 G(z): its recoil changes only from -2 to 2 cmH(2)O in the volume range of 30-70% vital capacity (VC). Increasing G(z) from 0 to 1 and 1.8 G(z) progressively shifted the volume-pressure curve of the chest wall to the left and also caused a fivefold exponential decrease in compliance. For lung volume <30% VC, gravity has an inspiratory effect, but this effect is much larger going from 0 to 1 G(z) than from 1 to 1.8 G(z). For a volume from 30 to 70% VC, the effect is inspiratory going from 0 to 1 G(z) but expiratory from 1 to 1.8 G(z). For a volume greater than approximately 70% VC, gravity always has an expiratory effect. The data suggest that the chest wall does not behave as a linear system when exposed to changing gravity, as the effect depends on both chest wall volume and magnitude of G(z).
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Pulmonary microvascular and perivascular interstitial geometry during development of mild hydraulic edema.
- Author
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Negrini D, Candiani A, Boschetti F, Crisafulli B, Del Fabbro M, Bettinelli D, and Miserocchi G
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure physiology, Extracellular Space physiology, Microcirculation drug effects, Microcirculation physiology, Papaverine pharmacology, Pulmonary Alveoli blood supply, Pulmonary Circulation drug effects, Rabbits, Sodium Chloride pharmacology, Vasodilator Agents pharmacology, Pulmonary Alveoli physiology, Pulmonary Circulation physiology, Pulmonary Edema physiopathology
- Abstract
To study pulmonary arteriolar vasomotion in control conditions and in the transition to hydraulic edema, changes in subpleural pulmonary arteriolar diameter and perivascular interstitial volume were evaluated in anesthetized spontaneously breathing rabbits. Images of subpleural pulmonary microvessels were recorded in control conditions and for up to 180 min during a 0.5 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) intravenous saline infusion through an intact parietal pleural window. Images were digitized and analyzed with a semiautomatic procedure to determine vessel diameter and perivascular interstitial thickness from which interstitial fluid volume was derived. In control vessels, the diameter of approximately 30-, approximately 50-, and approximately 80-microm arterioles and the perivascular interstitial thickness were fairly stable. During infusion, the diameter increased maximally by 20% in approximately 30 microm vessels, was unchanged in approximately 50 microm vessels, and decreased by 25% in approximately 80-microm arterioles; the perivascular interstitial volume increased by 54% only around 30-microm microvessels. In papaverine-treated rabbits, all arterioles dilated and a larger increase in perivascular interstitial thickness was observed. The data suggest that the opposite vasomotor behavior of 30- and 80-microm arterioles during development of mild edema may represent a local specific response of the pulmonary microcirculation to reduce capillary pressure in the face of an increased transendothelial fluid filtration, thus counteracting progression toward severe edema.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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