36 results on '"M. Bojanowska"'
Search Results
2. Was Tolstoi a Colonial Landlord? The Dilemmas of Private Property and Settler Colonialism on the Bashkir Steppe
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Cultural Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Using new archival research, this article establishes key facts about the most understudied aspect of Lev Tolstoi's biography—his Samara estate—assessing its role in the Tolstoi family economy and property structure. Integrating imperial history with the theoretical perspective of settler colonial studies, the article argues that the estate functioned within the context of Russia's settler colonialism in Bashkiria. While this experience contributed to Tolstoi's rejection of private property, it never erased his enthusiasm for Russia's manifest destiny as a settler civilization. Sympathizing with the plight of Russian settlers, Tolstoi remained perplexingly indifferent to the suffering of the semi-nomadic Bashkirs they displaced. These findings complicate Tolstoi's status as Russia's premier anti-colonial writer, urging a more capacious framing of the problem of empire in Tolstoi's art and thought, one that balances his critiques of the military conquest of the Caucasus against his embrace of settler colonialism.
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- 2022
3. Sakhalin Island
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Published
- 2023
4. Race-ing the Russian Nineteenth Century
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Cultural Studies ,Intersectionality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Empire ,Human sexuality ,Race (biology) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Aesthetics ,Reading (process) ,Perception ,Racialization ,Sociology ,Ideology ,media_common - Abstract
The article offers a methodological reflection on the practical work of reading race in Russian literary texts, especially from the nineteenth century. It makes four key arguments. First, “racialization,” in the sense of an interactive process, is a more productive lens than an essentially static concept of race. Second, race is not only, and not always, a question of perception or meaning-making, but also ideology. Third, the concept of race typically engages notions of class, gender, and sexuality, an intersectionality that merits particular attention. Fourth, critiquing race can be productively furthered by paying attention to anxieties and insecurities that underlie racial hierarchies and biases, which can be revealed through readings against the grain. As we cast new light on Russia's engagement with race, it is essential that the culture of the Russian nineteen-century become part of this reappraisal.
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- 2021
5. Relationship Between Anti-DFS70 Autoantibodies and Oxidative Stress
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Paweł Krzemień, Sławomir Kasperczyk, Maciej Banach, Aleksandra Kasperczyk, Michał Dobrakowski, Tomasz Tomasik, Adam Windak, Mirosław Mastej, Alberico Catapano, Kausik K Ray, Dimitri P Mikhailidis, Peter P Toth, George Howard, Gregory YH Lip, Maciej Tomaszewski, Fadi J Charchar, Naveed Sattar, Bryan Williams, Thomas M MacDonald, Peter E Penson, Jacek J Jóźwiak, B. Al-Shaer, W. Andrusewicz, M. Andrzejczuk-Rosa, E. Anusz-Gaszewska, A. Bagińska, P. Balawajder, G. Bańka, E. Barańska-Skubisz, B. Barbara Przyczyna, S. Bartkowiak, J. Bartodziej, M. Bartosiewicz, M. Basałyga, A. Batyra, A. Bąk, M. Bednarz, K. Bejnar, W. Bernacki, M. Betiuk-Kwiatkowska, S. Biegaj, M. Bień, W. Bilski, M. Biłogan, G. Biruta-Pawłowska, A. Biskup, B. Błaszczyk, H. Błaszczyk, T. Błońska-Jankowska, B. Bogacka-Gancarczyk, M. Bojanowska, E. Bonda, J. Borowik-Skwarek, J. Borowska, J. Bruckner, J. Brzostek, M. Brzuchacz, M. Budzyńska, I. Bulzacka-Fugiel, J. Bulzak, K. Bunikowski, A. Cebulska, T. Celka, E. Cempel-Nowak, W. Chechliński, A. Chludzińska, D. Chmiel, M. Chmielewska, M. Cichy, A. Ciemięga, A. Ciepluch, I. Cieszyńska, B. Czajka, B. Czapla, M. Czerner, B. Czerwińska, W. Czuryszkiewicz, E. Daleka, Z. Dawid, M. Dąbrowska, R. Dąbrowska, D. Dąbrowski, M. Dąbrowski, K. Demczyszyn, A. Dębowska-Serwińska, J. Dmochowski, J. Dobrzecka-Kiwior, E. Dolanowska, H. Dolanowski, P. Dołek, M. Domagała, H. Domański, A. Doszel, D. Duda, M. Dudkowska, B. Dudziuk, P. Dybciak, M. Dymanowski, L. Dziadzio-Bolek, M. Eicke, H. El-Hassan, A. Eremus, M. Fąferek-Muller, E. Figura-Roguska, I. Fijałkowska-Kaczmarek, M. Flis, T. Florczak, M. Florczuk, E. Foryszewska-Witan, W. Frydrych, A. Fugiel, E. Futyma, A. Gaca-Jaroszewicz, I. Gajdamowicz, K. Ganczarski, A. Gatnar, M. Gers, A. Głowacki, K. Głód, J. Godula, J. Gołąb, M. Gołębiewski, E. Goszczyńska, K. Gościcka, A. Górna-Hajduga, E. Górny, T. Grabowska, R. Grabowski, A. Graczyk-Duda, A. Gromow, A. Grudewicz, J. Gruszecka, A. Gruszka, J. Gryboś, J. Grzebyk, A. Grzechowiak, D. Grzesiak, T. Grześkowiak, A. Guźla, G. Hachuła, B. Hawel, H. Hiltawska, E. Honkowicz, J. Ignatowicz, K. Imielski, A. Iwaniura, A. Jagieła-Szymala, M. Jalć-Sowała, A. Janczylik, E. Janisz, M. Janiszek, K. Jankiewicz-Ziobro, K. Januszewska, A. Jaremek, A. Jaros-Urbaniak, J. Jarosz, P. Jarosz, W. Jasiński, M. Jezierska-Wasilewska, T. Jędraszewski, A. Jędrzejowska, R. Józefowicz, K. Juźwin, E. Kacprzak, J. Kaczmarek-Szewczyk, M. Kaczmarzyk, R. Kandziora, C. Kaniewski, L. Karolak-Brandt, S. Kasperczyk, E. Kasperek-Dyląg, I. Kedziora, A. Kępa, J. Kiciński, J. Kielak-Al-Hosam, Ł. Kiełczawa, P. Kilimowicz, K. Kitliński, T. Kiwka, U. Klein, L. Klichowicz, A. Klimowicz, B. Klonowski, B. Kmolek, E. Kobyłko-Klepacka, A. Kocoń, A. Kolenda, E. Kollek, M. Kopeć, B. Koper-Kozikowska, J. Koralewska, M. Korczyńska, M. T. Korzeniewski, A. Kosk, K. Kotarski, E. Kowalczyk, M. Kowalczyk, I. Kowalik, B. Kozak-Błażkiewicz, M. Kozik, D. Kozłowska, E. Kozłowska, M. Kozłowska, T. Kozubski, K. Kózka, L. Kraśnik, T. Krężel, B. Krochmal, B. Król, G. Król, J. Król, T. Królikowska, H. Kruszewska, B. Krygier-Potrykus, W. Krystek, J. Krzysztoń, T. Kubicki, A. Kuczmierczyk-El-Hassan, W. Kuczyńska-Witek, D. Kujda, A. Kurowski, I. Kurzelewska-Solarz, M. Kwaczyńska, M. Kwaśniak, P. Kwaśniak, T. Kwietniewska, A. Łebek-Ordon, A. Lebiedowicz, L. Lejkowska-Olszewska, M. Lentas, A. Lesiewicz-Ksycińska, M. Limanowski, S. Łoniewski, J. A. Łopata, B. Łubianka, I. Łukasiuk, M. Łużna, M. Łysiak, B. Łysik, Z. Machowski, J. Maciaczyk-Kubiak, G. Mackiewicz-Zabochnicka, Z. Magner-Krężel, S. Majda, P. Malinowski, J. Mantyka, E. Marchlik, G. Martyna-Ordyniec, J. Marzec, M. Marzec, R. Matejko-Wałkiewicz, M. Mazur, M. Michalczak, A. Michalska-Żyłka, M. Michniewicz, D. Mika-Staniszewska, E. Mikiciuk, T. Mikołajczak, J. Milewski, E. Miller, B. Misiaszek, M. Mizik-Łukowska, E. Młyńczyk-Pokutycka, M. Mocek, M. Moczała, M. Morawska-Hermanowicz, P. Moryc, A. Moskal, S. Moskal, A. Moździerz, P. Moździerz, M. Mrozińska, K. Mrozowicz, G. Mróz, T. Munia, A. Mura, M. Muras-Skudlarska, E. Z. Murawska, Ł. Murawski, R. Murawski, R. Musielak, K. Nadaj, W. Nagarnowicz, R. Napierała, M. Niedźwiecka, A. Niemirski, J. Nikiel, M. Nosal, W. Nowacki, J. Nowak, M. Nyrka, A. Obst, J. Ochowicz, E. Ogonowska, M. Oleszczyk, A. Ołdakowski, I. Ołowniuk-Stefaniak, J. Ordowska-Rejman, M. Orliński, B. Osińska, A. Ostańska-Burian, A. Paciorkowska, U. Paczkowska, L. Paluch, L. Pałka, J. Paszko-Wojtkowska, A. Paszkowska, E. Pawlak-Ganczarska, W. Pawlik, I. Pawłowska, M. Paździora, G. Permiakow, A. Petlic-Marendziak, T. Piasecka, E. Piaścińska, A. Piktel, A. Pilarska-Igielska, A. Piotrkowska, K. Piwowar-Klag, M. Planer, J. Plewa, P. Płatkiewicz, B. Płonczyńska, A. Podgórska, M. Polewska, B. Porębska, P. Porwoł, I. Potakowska, A. Prokop, J. Przybylski, M. Przybyła, H. Psiuk, K. Ptak, G. Puzoń, N. Rabiza, S. Rachwalik, E. Raczyńska, M. Raniszewska, A. Romanek-Kozik, A. Rosa, K. Rosa, A. Rozewicz, J. Rudzka-Kałwak, J. Rusak, D. Rutkowska, M. Rybacki, D. Rybińska, A. Rycyk-Sadowska, L. Rynda, B. Rynkiewicz, B. Sadowska-Krawczyk, M. Sadowska-Zarzycka, B. Sarnecka, E. Sawalach-Tomanik, B. Sidor-Drozd, M. Siemieniak-Dębska, A. Sieroń, B. Siewniak-Zalewska, A. Sikora, B. Sitarska-Pawlina, J. Skorupski, I. Skrzypińska-Mansfeld, J. Skubisz, R. Skwarek, M. Słodyczka, M. Smentek, K. Smolińska, B. Solarz, W. Sosnowska, B. Sroka, H. Stachura, D. Stangreciak, M. Staniak, Z. Stańczyk, D. Stańszczak-Ozga, E. Startek, M. Stefańczyk, R. Stelmach, E. Sternadel-Rączka, M. Sternik, J. Stępień, J. Stocka, M. Stokowska-Wojda, M. Studler-Karpińska, W. Suchorukow, W. Sufryd, B. Supłacz, J. Sygacz, Ł. Szczepański, J. Szkandera, J. Szłapa-Zellner, D. Szydlarska, T. Śliwa, J. Śliwka, Ł. Śmiejkowski, A. Targońska, E. Tesarska, M. Tobiasz, J. Tomaka, K. Tomalska-Bywalec, E. Tomiak, S. Topczewski, A. Trawińska, L. Trela-Mucha, D. Trojanowski, M. Trzaskowska, B. Trzcińska-Larska, A. Trznadel-Mozul, K. Ulanicka-Liwoch, M. Urbanowicz, A. Uthke-Kluzek, J. Waczyński, J. Walczak, L. Warsz, M. Wasyńczuk, U. Wąchała-Jędras, D. Wąsowicz, J. Wczysła, F. Wenda, E. Werner-Kubicka, E. Weryszko, B. Węgrzynowska, M. Wiaksa, M. Wiankowski, A. Wicherek, R. Wieczorek, R. Wiencek, G. Wienzek-Tatara, B. Wierzbicka, M. Wierzbicki, B. Wilczyńska, D. Wilmańska, P. Winiarski, A. Wiszniewska-Pabiszczak, M. B. Witkowska, J. Witzling, A. Wlaź, I. Wojtkowiak, J. Woydyłło, K. Woźniak, A. Wójtowicz, J. Wrona, M. Wrońska, H. Wujkowska, J. Wyrąbek, O. Wysokiński, R. Zakrzewski, J. Zaleska-Zatkalik, J. Zaleski, M. Zalewska-Dybciak, E. Zalewska, B. Zalewska-Uchimiak, J. Zawadzka-Krajewska, J. Zawadzki, A. Zieliński, E. Zubrycka, I. Żybort, and M. Żymełka
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Pharmacology ,RM ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biochemistry (medical) ,oxidative stress ,biomarkers ,Molecular Medicine ,free radicals ,R1 ,Antibodies ,Original Research - Abstract
Background: The anti-DFS70 autoantibodies are one of the most commonly and widely described agent of unknown clinical significance, frequently detected in healthy individuals. It is not known whether the DFS70 autoantibodies are protective or pathogenic. One of the factors suspected of inducing the formation of anti-DFS70 antibodies is increased oxidative stress. We evaluated the coexistence of anti-DFS70 antibodies with selected markers of oxidative stress and investigated whether these antibodies could be considered as indirect markers of oxidative stress. Methods: The intensity of oxidative stress was measured in all samples via indices of free-radical damage to lipids and proteins such as total oxidant status (TOS), concentrations of lipid hydroperoxides (LPH), lipofuscin (LPS), and malondialdehyde (MDA). The parameters of the non-enzymatic antioxidant system, such as total antioxidant status (TAS) and uric acid concentration (UA), were also measured, as well as the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD). Based on TOS and TAS values, the oxidative stress index (OSI) was calculated. All samples were also tested with indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) and 357 samples were selected for direct monospecific anti DFS70 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) testing. Results: The anti-DFS70 antibodies were confirmed by ELISA test in 21.29% of samples. Compared with anti-DFS70 negative samples we observed 23% lower concentration of LPH ( P = .038) and 11% lower concentration of UA ( P = .005). TOS was 20% lower ( P = .014). The activity of SOD was up to 5% higher ( P = .037). The Pearson correlation showed weak negative correlation for LPH, UA, and TOS and a weak positive correlation for SOD activity. Conclusion: In samples positive for the anti-DFS70 antibody a decreased level of oxidative stress was observed, especially in the case of samples with a high antibody titer. Anti-DFS70 antibodies can be considered as an indirect marker of reduced oxidative stress or a marker indicating the recent intensification of antioxidant processes.
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- 2022
6. Nikolai Gogol: Between Ukrainian and Russian Nationalism
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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- 2007
7. Robert Louis Jackson
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Cultural Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2022
8. Pushkin's 'To the Slanderers of Russia': The Slavic Question, Imperial Anxieties, and Geopolitics
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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History ,General Medicine ,Slavic languages ,Ancient history ,Geopolitics - Published
- 2019
9. Lipid levels, atrial fibrillation and the impact of age:Results from the LIPIDOGRAM2015 study
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Stephanie L. Harrison, Deirdre A. Lane, Maciej Banach, Mirosław Mastej, Sławomir Kasperczyk, Jacek J. Jóźwiak, Gregory Y.H. Lip, B. Al-Shaer, W. Andrusewicz, M. Andrzejczuk-Rosa, E. Anusz-Gaszewska, A. Bagińska, P. Balawajder, G. Bańka, E. Barańska-Skubisz, B. Barbara Przyczyna, S. Bartkowiak, J. Bartodziej, M. Bartosiewicz, M. Basałyga, A. Batyra, A. Bąk, M. Bednarz, K. Bejnar, W. Bernacki, M. Betiuk-Kwiatkowska, S. Biegaj, M. Bień, W. Bilski, M. Biłogan, G. Biruta-Pawłowska, A. Biskup, B. Błaszczyk, H. Błaszczyk, T. Błońska-Jankowska, B. Bogacka-Gancarczyk, M. Bojanowska, E. Bonda, J. Borowik-Skwarek, J. Borowska, J. Bruckner, J. Brzostek, M. Brzuchacz, M. Budzyńska, I. Bulzacka-Fugiel, J. Bulzak, K. Bunikowski, A. Cebulska, T. Celka, E. Cempel-Nowak, W. Chechliński, A. Chludzińska, D. Chmiel, M. Chmielewska, M. Cichy, A. Ciemięga, A. Ciepluch, I. Cieszyńska, B. Czajka, B. Czapla, M. Czerner, B. Czerwińska, W. Czuryszkiewicz, E. Daleka, Z. Dawid, M. Dąbrowska, R. Dąbrowska, D. Dąbrowski, M. Dąbrowski, K. Demczyszyn, A. Dębowska-Serwińska, J. Dmochowski, J. Dobrzecka-Kiwior, E. Dolanowska, H. Dolanowski, P. Dołek, M. Domagała, H. Domański, A. Doszel, D. Duda, M. Dudkowska, B. Dudziuk, P. Dybciak, M. Dymanowski, L. Dziadzio-Bolek, M. Eicke, H. El-Hassan, A. Eremus, M. Fąferek-Muller, E. Figura-Roguska, I. Fijałkowska-Kaczmarek, M. Flis, T. Florczak, M. Florczuk, E. Foryszewska-Witan, W. Frydrych, A. Fugiel, E. Futyma, A. Gaca-Jaroszewicz, I. Gajdamowicz, K. Ganczarski, A. Gatnar, M. Gers, A. Głowacki, K. Głód, J. Godula, J. Gołąb, M. Gołębiewski, E. Goszczyńska, K. Gościcka, A. Górna-Hajduga, E. Górny, T. Grabowska, R. Grabowski, A. Graczyk-Duda, A. Gromow, A. Grudewicz, J. Gruszecka, A. Gruszka, J. Gryboś, J. Grzebyk, A. Grzechowiak, D. Grzesiak, T. Grześkowiak, A. Guźla, G. Hachuła, B. Hawel, H. Hiltawska, E. Honkowicz, J. Ignatowicz, K. Imielski, A. Iwaniura, A. Jagieła-Szymala, M. Jalć-Sowała, A. Janczylik, E. Janisz, M. Janiszek, K. Jankiewicz-Ziobro, K. Januszewska, A. Jaremek, A. Jaros-Urbaniak, J. Jarosz, P. Jarosz, W. Jasiński, M. Jezierska-Wasilewska, T. Jędraszewski, A. Jędrzejowska, R. Józefowicz, J.J. Jóźwiak, K. Juźwin, E. Kacprzak, J. Kaczmarek-Szewczyk, M. Kaczmarzyk, R. Kandziora, C. Kaniewski, L. Karolak-Brandt, S. Kasperczyk, E. Kasperek-Dyląg, I. Kedziora, A. Kępa, J. Kiciński, J. Kielak-Al-Hosam, Ł. Kiełczawa, P. Kilimowicz, K. Kitliński, T. Kiwka, U. Klein, L. Klichowicz, A. Klimowicz, B. Klonowski, B. Kmolek, E. Kobyłko-Klepacka, A. Kocoń, A. Kolenda, E. Kollek, M. Kopeć, B. Koper-Kozikowska, J. Koralewska, M. Korczyńska, M.T. Korzeniewski, A. Kosk, K. Kotarski, E. Kowalczyk, M. Kowalczyk, I. Kowalik, B. Kozak-Błażkiewicz, M. Kozik, D. Kozłowska, E. Kozłowska, M. Kozłowska, T. Kozubski, K. Kózka, L. Kraśnik, T. Krężel, B. Krochmal, B. Król, G. Król, J. Król, T. Królikowska, H. Kruszewska, B. Krygier-Potrykus, W. Krystek, J. Krzysztoń, T. Kubicki, A. Kuczmierczyk-El-Hassan, W. Kuczyńska-Witek, D. Kujda, A. Kurowski, I. Kurzelewska-Solarz, M. Kwaczyńska, M. Kwaśniak, P. Kwaśniak, T. Kwietniewska, A. Łebek-Ordon, A. Lebiedowicz, L. Lejkowska-Olszewska, M. Lentas, A. Lesiewicz-Ksycińska, M. Limanowski, S. Łoniewski, J.A. Łopata, B. Łubianka, I. Łukasiuk, M. Łużna, M. Łysiak, B. Łysik, Z. Machowski, J. Maciaczyk-Kubiak, G. Mackiewicz-Zabochnicka, Z. Magner-Krężel, S. Majda, P. Malinowski, J. Mantyka, E. Marchlik, G. Martyna-Ordyniec, J. Marzec, M. Marzec, R. Matejko-Wałkiewicz, M. Mazur, M. Michalczak, A. Michalska-Żyłka, M. Michniewicz, D. Mika-Staniszewska, E. Mikiciuk, T. Mikołajczak, J. Milewski, E. Miller, B. Misiaszek, M. Mizik-Łukowska, E. Młyńczyk-Pokutycka, M. Mocek, M. Moczała, M. Morawska-Hermanowicz, P. Moryc, A. Moskal, S. Moskal, A. Moździerz, P. Moździerz, M. Mrozińska, K. Mrozowicz, G. Mróz, T. Munia, A. Mura, M. Muras-Skudlarska, E.Z. Murawska, Ł. Murawski, R. Murawski, R. Musielak, K. Nadaj, W. Nagarnowicz, R. Napierała, M. Niedźwiecka, A. Niemirski, J. Nikiel, M. Nosal, W. Nowacki, J. Nowak, M. Nyrka, A. Obst, J. Ochowicz, E. Ogonowska, M. Oleszczyk, A. Ołdakowski, I. Ołowniuk-Stefaniak, J. Ordowska-Rejman, M. Orliński, B. Osińska, A. Ostańska-Burian, A. Paciorkowska, U. Paczkowska, L. Paluch, L. Pałka, J. Paszko-Wojtkowska, A. Paszkowska, E. Pawlak-Ganczarska, W. Pawlik, I. Pawłowska, M. Paździora, G. Permiakow, A. Petlic-Marendziak, T. Piasecka, E. Piaścińska, A. Piktel, A. Pilarska-Igielska, A. Piotrkowska, K. Piwowar-Klag, M. Planer, J. Plewa, P. Płatkiewicz, B. Płonczyńska, A. Podgórska, M. Polewska, B. Porębska, P. Porwoł, I. Potakowska, A. Prokop, J. Przybylski, M. Przybyła, H. Psiuk, K. Ptak, G. Puzoń, N. Rabiza, S. Rachwalik, E. Raczyńska, M. Raniszewska, A. Romanek-Kozik, A. Rosa, K. Rosa, A. Rozewicz, J. Rudzka-Kałwak, J. Rusak, D. Rutkowska, M. Rybacki, D. Rybińska, A. Rycyk-Sadowska, L. Rynda, B. Rynkiewicz, B. Sadowska-Krawczyk, M. Sadowska-Zarzycka, B. Sarnecka, E. Sawalach-Tomanik, B. Sidor-Drozd, M. Siemieniak-Dębska, A. Sieroń, B. Siewniak-Zalewska, A. Sikora, B. Sitarska-Pawlina, J. Skorupski, I. Skrzypińska-Mansfeld, J. Skubisz, R. Skwarek, M. Słodyczka, M. Smentek, K. Smolińska, B. Solarz, W. Sosnowska, B. Sroka, H. Stachura, D. Stangreciak, M. Staniak, Z. Stańczyk, D. Stańszczak-Ozga, E. Startek, M. Stefańczyk, R. Stelmach, E. Sternadel-Rączka, M. Sternik, J. Stępień, J. Stocka, M. Stokowska-Wojda, M. Studler-Karpińska, W. Suchorukow, W. Sufryd, B. Supłacz, J. Sygacz, Ł. Szczepański, J. Szkandera, J. Szłapa-Zellner, D. Szydlarska, T. Śliwa, J. Śliwka, Ł. Śmiejkowski, A. Targońska, E. Tesarska, M. Tobiasz, J. Tomaka, K. Tomalska-Bywalec, E. Tomiak, S. Topczewski, A. Trawińska, L. Trela-Mucha, D. Trojanowski, M. Trzaskowska, B. Trzcińska-Larska, A. Trznadel-Mozul, K. Ulanicka-Liwoch, M. Urbanowicz, A. Uthke-Kluzek, J. Waczyński, J. Walczak, L. Warsz, M. Wasyńczuk, U. Wąchała-Jędras, D. Wąsowicz, J. Wczysła, F. Wenda, E. Werner-Kubicka, E. Weryszko, B. Węgrzynowska, M. Wiaksa, M. Wiankowski, A. Wicherek, R. Wieczorek, R. Wiencek, G. Wienzek-Tatara, B. Wierzbicka, M. Wierzbicki, B. Wilczyńska, D. Wilmańska, P. Winiarski, A. Wiszniewska-Pabiszczak, M.B. Witkowska, J. Witzling, A. Wlaź, I. Wojtkowiak, J. Woydyłło, K. Woźniak, A. Wójtowicz, J. Wrona, M. Wrońska, H. Wujkowska, J. Wyrąbek, O. Wysokiński, R. Zakrzewski, J. Zaleska-Zatkalik, J. Zaleski, M. Zalewska- Dybciak, E. Zalewska, B. Zalewska-Uchimiak, J. Zawadzka-Krajewska, J. Zawadzki, A. Zieliński, E. Zubrycka, I. Żybort, and M. Żymełka
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Multivariate statistics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Inverse Association ,Epidemiology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age ,Age groups ,Risk Factors ,Total cholesterol ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Poisson regression ,Triglycerides ,Lipoprotein cholesterol ,business.industry ,Cholesterol, HDL ,Atrial fibrillation ,Cholesterol, LDL ,medicine.disease ,Lipids ,030104 developmental biology ,Cholesterol ,Quartile ,symbols ,Cardiology ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Poland ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and aims: An inverse relationship between lipid levels and atrial fibrillation (AF) has been suggested, but whether the association is upheld for all age groups remains unclear. The aim of the study was to examine associations between lipid levels and AF by age groups in a nationwide study in Poland. Methods: Multivariate Poisson regression models were used to estimate prevalence ratios (PRs) for AF by lipid levels. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides (TG), total cholesterol (TC), non-HDL-C and LDL-C/HDL-C ratios were grouped into quartiles. Results: Of the 13,724 participants, 5.2% (n = 708) had AF. People with AF were older with more comorbidities, but lower lipid levels (all p < 0.05). The prevalence of AF was inversely associated with LDL-C (Adjusted PR (95% Confidence Interval) highest versus lowest quartile: 0.60 (0.48, 0.75)), TC (0.61 (0.49, 0.75)) and non-HDL-C (0.63 (0.51, 0.78)). The prevalence of AF was inversely associated with HDL-C (0.58 (0.46, 0.74)), but this was not statistically significant for people aged 75 years and older. For the LDL-C/HDL-C ratio, the prevalence of AF was only inversely associated with higher levels for people aged 75 years and older (0.75 (0.61, 0.94)). There was no statistically significant difference in prevalence of AF by TG levels. Conclusions: The results suggest an inverse relationship between lipid levels and AF. The inverse association between higher HDL-C and AF was only significant for people aged
- Published
- 2020
10. Zmiany jakościowe oleju wytłoczonego z ozonowanych nasion rzepaku
- Author
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M. Bojanowska, Izabella Jackowska, and Monika Sachadyn-Król
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General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2018
11. Prying Open Japan, Prospecting Korea
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
Mining engineering ,Political science ,Prospecting - Published
- 2018
12. The Bestseller and Its Afterlife
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
Literature ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Afterlife ,Art ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2018
13. Note on Primary Sources, Transliteration, Ethnonyms, and Place Names
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
History ,Transliteration ,Toponymy ,Linguistics - Published
- 2018
14. From London to Cape Town, or How to Run a Successful Empire
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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History ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cape ,Empire ,Ancient history ,media_common - Published
- 2018
15. Russians Confront Human Diversity
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
Human diversity ,Political science ,Environmental ethics - Published
- 2018
16. Pineapples in Petersburg, Cabbage Soup on the Equator
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Horticulture ,Geography ,Equator - Published
- 2018
17. A World of Empires
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Published
- 2018
18. A World of Empires : The Russian Voyage of the Frigate Pallada
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska and Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Abstract
Through the lens of a classic Russian travelogue, this historical study examines early globalization and Russia's participation in the Imperial race. In the 1850s, American Commodore Matthew Perry embarked on a legendary expedition to open trade relations with Japan. Less well known is the Russian expedition that followed on his heels. Serving aboard the Russian Frigate Pallada was the novelist Ivan Goncharov, who turned his impressions into a bestselling book. In A World of Empires, Edyta Bojanowska uses Goncharov's travelogue as a window onto mid-19th century global imperialism. Goncharov recounts experiences in Africa's Cape Colony, Dutch Java, Spanish Manila, Japan, and the British ports of Singapore, Hong Kong, and Shanghai, offering keen insight on imperial expansion, cooperation, and competition. Often overlooked in the history of European imperialism, Russia emerges here as an increasingly assertive empire, eager to position itself on the world stage and fully conversant with the ideologies of civilizing mission and race. Goncharov's gripping narrative offers a unique eyewitness account of empire in action. Bojanowska's illuminating analysis reveals both a zeal to emulate European powers and a determination to define Russia against them.A Financial Times Best History Book of the Year
- Published
- 2018
19. Chemical determinants of the use of recycled vehicle components Chemiczne uwarunkowania zagospodarowania elementów pojazdów poddanych recyklingowi
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Tomasz Słowik, Wiesław Piekarski, M. Bojanowska, I. Jackowska, W. Misztal, and Andrzej Marczuk
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General Chemical Engineering ,Environmental science ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2015
20. The impact of industrial soil pollution on cadmium and lead accumulation in crops Wpływ skażenia przemysłowego gleby na kumulację kadmu i ołowiu w roślinach
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A. Stankiewicz, Wojciech Lipiński, Izabella Jackowska, M. Bojanowska, Halina Lipińska, and Andrzej Marczuk
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Cadmium ,chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Environmental chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental science ,Heavy metals ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2015
21. Writing the Russian Reader into the Text: Gogol, Turgenev, and their Audiences
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Literature ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2016
22. Empire by Consent: Strakhov, Dostoevskii, and the Polish Uprising of 1863
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Cultural Studies ,Militant ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Empire ,Russian literature ,050701 cultural studies ,0506 political science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Political science ,Law ,050602 political science & public administration ,Literary criticism ,Ideology ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
In this article Edyta Bojanowska explores the circumstances surrounding the publication, in 1863 in the Dostoevskii brothers' journalVremia, of a pro-Polish article by Nikolai Strakhov that led to the journal's closing. Bojanowska argues against accepting Strakhov's and Fedor Dostoevskii's retroactive explanations that the article was misunderstood. She analyzes Strakhov's article and the entire issue ofVremiain which it appeared and finds a consistent message in both: that Russia should withdraw from Poland, where imperial success would be either unlikely or too costly, shift its attention from imperial expansion to a domestic agenda, and restructure the empire into one based on the constituent populations' consent. Given Dostoevskii's endorsement of Strakhov's article and his hands-on editorial work onVremia, this affair suggests a tolerant and pragmatic phase in Dostoevskii's imperial ideology that contrasts with the militant imperialistic punditry of his later period.
- Published
- 2012
23. Equivocal Praise and National-Imperial Conundrums: Gogol'’s 'A Few Words About Pushkin'
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
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Literature ,Sine qua non ,business.industry ,Ukrainian ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Russian literature ,Biography ,General Medicine ,Art ,The arts ,language.human_language ,Close reading ,language ,Literary criticism ,Praise ,business ,media_common - Abstract
PUSHKIN: What the devil! Seems I've tripped over Gogol!GOGOL: (Getting up) What a vile abomination! You can't even have a rest. (Walks off, stumbles over PUSHKIN and falls) Seems I've stumbled over Pushkin!PUSHKIN: (Getting up) Not a minute of peace! (Walks off, stumbles over GOGOL and falls) What the devil! Seems I've tripped over Gogol again!GOGOL: (Getting up) Always an obstacle in everything! (Walks off, stumbles over PUSHKIN and falls) It's a vile abomination! Tripped over Pushkin again!PUSHKIN: (Getting up) Hooliganism! Sheer hooliganism! (Walks off, stumbles over GOGOL and falls) [etc., etc.] Daniil Kharms, "Pushkin and Gogol" (1934)INTRODUCTIONA tradition of contrasting the Pushkinian and Gogolian origins of modem Russian literature began famously with N. G. Chernyshevskii and was later reinvented by V. Rozanov.1 Yet Russian literary criticism has also produced an opposite critical trend, which has stressed the personal and artistic relationship between the two writers and noted Gogol" s apparent indebtedness to Pushkin in almost every aspect of his art. Gukovskii's famous monograph on Gogol' typifies this trend. It makes Pushkin an absolute reference point without which Gogol' would have been unthinkable, and situates a commentary on Pushkin as the sine qua non of any meaningful commentary on Gogol'.2 Russian literary criticism, both imperial and Soviet, eager to construct teleologies in the manner of royal lines of succession, placed Pushkin at the head of Russian literature and crowned Gogol' as his successor. Pushkin's purported gift to Gogol' of the plots of his two greatest works, The Government Inspector and Dead Souls, achieved a significance approaching the transfer of regalia. Gogol" s 1835 Arabesques article "Neskol'ko slov o Pushkine" [A Few Words about Pushkin], in which he eulogizes Pushkin as a national poet, has served as important evidence that Gogol' treated Pushkin as his mentor and placed him on a pedestal.What I propose here is a close reading of this article that finds Gogol" s praise of Pushkin double-edged and disingenuous. The text contradicts the idea of the two writers as amicable collaborators in the arts, at least as far as Gogol' - despite his mercenary posturing - was concerned. The text bears the stamp of characteristic Gogolian chutzpah that most students of Gogol' - myself included - find quite amusing and readily forgivable. But along with the fun of cheeky innuendo the article also carries a serious message with regard to Gogol"s conception of "national" art. In the course of discussing Pushkin's strategies of encoding nationality in literature, Gogol' develops his own conception of national literary expression, by which he aims to affix the stamp of nationality to his own writings, rather than Pushkin's.The complexities of Gogolian texts often echo the complexities of his biography and "A Few Words About Pushkin" proves a case in point. The nature and extent of the two writers' friendship is a matter of some controversy. Though most students of Russian literature inherit an image of the two writers as warm and respectful friends, some critics, like Vladimir Nabokov, Dmitry Mirsky, and Andrei Siniavskii, have doubted Gogol"s and Pushkin's personal closeness. Most recently, Yuri Druzhnikov has gathered known factual data and debunked this entrenched myth.3 Druzhnikov is right to note Pushkin's reserved, business-like tone in his scanty correspondence with Gogol' and his attempts to keep the young Ukrainian at arm's length. Gogol' himself, who shamelessly dropped Pushkin's name to impress his friends, wildly exaggerated and mischaracterized the scope of their personal contacts, particularly during the summer of 1831. 4 Gogol"s own claim of intimacy with Pushkin appears questionable also in light of his correspondence after Pushkin's death, in which Gogol" s lamentations ring hollow.5Gogol"s attitude to Pushkin was in fact quite self-serving. …
- Published
- 2009
24. E Pluribus Unum : Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry As a Story Cycle
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature ,Linguistics and Language ,History ,Literature and Literary Theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,Poetry ,business.industry ,Pluribus ,EPIC ,Language and Linguistics ,Cohesion (linguistics) ,Baroque ,Narratology ,Narrative ,business ,Unum - Abstract
14ied Cavalry's form has perplexed critics since its first publication in 1926. The work has been described as an epic, a lyric poem, a baroque novel, a novel of stories, a loose collection of stories unified by a theme, and a series of anecdotes.' While each of these approaches illuminates a certain aspect of the work, a full appreciation of Red Cavalry's masterful design and its wealth and complexity of meanings requires an approach that will take the work for what it appears to be: a cycle of short stories, that is, a series of short narratives composed and arranged by the author to form a coherent whole. Despite acknowledgements of Red Cavalry's unified structure, the question of what exactly holds the cycle together has so far received only perfunctory treatment.2 In this article I will attempt a more comprehensive though by no means exhaustive analysis of Red Cavalry's basic patterns of cohesion. I also will demonstrate a close interdependence of formal structure and thematic developments in the work. In conclusion I will consider some implications of Mikhail Bakhtin's narrative theory for the genre of the story cycle and will discuss the cycle's differences from the novel form. Red Cavalry baffles its readers for what they take to be its unresolved tensions, stark juxtapositions, and ambiguities in the narrative voice. The work's open-endedness fully justifies this reaction. Yet an approach to Red Cavalry as a whole, as a work of a particular genre that generates meanings in ways peculiar to itself, is likely to dispel some of this bafflement.
- Published
- 2000
25. Polycylic aromatic hydrocarbons in rape seeds with relation to their growing site and thermal treatment
- Author
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M Bojanowska and J Czerwiński
- Subjects
Smoke ,Rapeseed ,Trace Amounts ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Brassica napus ,Brassica rapa ,Contamination ,Raw material ,Toxicology ,Hydrocarbons, Aromatic ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Soil ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Benzopyrene ,Benzo(a)pyrene ,Pyrene ,Humans ,Plant Oils ,Poland ,Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons - Abstract
A significant source of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in human diet is vegetable oils, especially those produced from plants grown in regions where the soil and the atmosphere are contaminated with these chemicals. Contamination with PAH of vegetable oils may also occur in the process of plant material drying with smoke or exhaust fumes, or in the course of extraction of that material with solvents containing trace amounts of PAH. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between the levels of PAH present in rape seeds and the occurrence of these compounds in cultivation region and the relationship of the levels of PAH in rape seeds to thermal treatment after harvest. Rape seeds and pods from experimental fields and rape seeds subjected to thermal treatment in dryers obtained from suppliers of the raw material were examined and compared. Cleanup of extracts was performed with high-resolution size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and final determinations were by Trace Ultra/PolarisQ gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS). The results obtained indicated that during thermal treatment of rape seeds the concentration of PAH increased, but the levels of benzo[a]pyrene did not exceed threshold permissible levels. Data demonstrate that rapeseed cultivation in the presence of PAH results in higher levels of contaminants; however, the PAH levels still did not exceed the maximal allowable levels in Poland.
- Published
- 2010
26. Nikolai Gogol
- Author
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Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Published
- 2007
27. Wislawa Szymborska: Naturalist and Humanist
- Author
-
Edyta M. Bojanowska
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature ,Linguistics and Language ,Literature and Literary Theory ,business.industry ,Philosophy ,Humanism ,business ,Language and Linguistics - Published
- 1997
28. On Recovery of a Non-Negative Relaxation Spectrum Model from the Stress Relaxation Test Data.
- Author
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Stankiewicz A, Bojanowska M, and Drozd P
- Abstract
The relaxation spectra, from which other material functions used to describe mechanical properties of materials can be uniquely determined, are important for modeling the rheological properties of polymers used in chemistry, food technology, medicine, cosmetics, and many other industries. The spectrum, being not directly accessible by measurement, is recovered from relaxation stress or oscillatory shear data. Only a few models and identification methods take into account the non-negativity of the real spectra. In this paper, the problem of recovery of non-negative definite relaxation spectra from discrete-time noise-corrupted measurements of relaxation modulus obtained in the stress relaxation test is considered. A new hierarchical identification scheme is developed, being applicable both for relaxation time and frequency spectra. Finite-dimensional parametric classes of models are assumed for the relaxation spectra, described by a finite series of power-exponential and square-exponential basis functions. The related models of relaxation modulus are given by compact analytical formula, described by the products of power of time and the modified Bessel functions of the second kind for the time spectrum, and by recurrence formulas based on products of power of time and complementary error functions for frequency spectrum. The basis functions are non-negative. In result, the identification task was reduced to a finite-dimensional linear-quadratic problem with non-negative unknown model parameters. To stabilize the solution, an additional smoothing constraint is introduced. Dual approach was used to solve the stated optimal identification task resulting in the hierarchical two-stage identification scheme. In the first stage, dual problem is solved in two levels and the vector of non-negative model parameters is computed to provide the best fit of the relaxation modulus to experiment data. Next, in second stage, the optimal non-negative spectrum model is determined. A complete scheme of the hierarchical computations is outlined; it can be easily implemented in available computing environments. The model smoothness is analytically studied, and the applicability ranges are numerically examined. The numerical studies have proved that using developed models and algorithm, it is possible to determine non-negative definite unimodal and bimodal relaxation spectra for a wide class of polymers. However, the examples also demonstrated that if the basis functions are non-negative and the model is properly selected for a given type of the real spectrum (unimodal, multimodal), the optimal model determined without non-negativity constraint can be non-negative in the dominant range of its arguments, especially in the wide neighborhood of the spectrum peaks.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. An evaluation of the knowledge on specific nutritional needs and factors affecting pregnancy outcome in women of reproductive age.
- Author
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Kostecka J, Bojanowska M, Kostecka-Jarecka J, Kolasa K, and Kostecka M
- Subjects
- Child, Diet, Diuretics, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Weight Gain, Laxatives, Pregnancy Outcome
- Abstract
Background: Pregnancy is one of the few periods in a woman's life when extra weight is not perceived as a negative factor, but has positive connotations with healthy fetal development, which runs against the modern cult of a perfect, slim and healthy body. Most research studies focus on excessive rather than insufficient weight gain in successive trimesters of pregnancy., Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate women's knowledge about the influence of diet on pregnancy outcome and to assess changes in body weight and eating behaviors during pregnancy., Materials and Methods: The study consisted of an online survey. A total of 325 correctly and completely filled in questionnaires were considered. The respondents were divided into two groups: women without children (44.92%) and pregnant women and mothers (55.08%). The respondents' knowledge about eating behaviors during pregnancy was compared between the two groups. The responses given by mothers were used to evaluate weight gains during pregnancy and the nutritional status of pregnant women., Results: Changes in body weight during pregnancy were regarded as acceptable and pregnancy weight gain was considered a normal process by 92% of the respondents. Pregnant women had greater knowledge about the need for increased caloric intake in successive trimesters (p=0.0012). The respondents' knowledge about maternal health and healthy fetal development was assessed with the use of 10 true or false questions. The average score was 6.3±1.8 points, and no significant differences were found between mothers/pregnant women and women without children (6.6±1.3 vs 6.2±1.7, p>0.05). In the present study, 67% of the respondents were of the opinion that they followed a healthy diet, 14% claimed that they did not eat right, but were not motivated to make any changes., Conclusions: The respondents were aware that weight gain during pregnancy is a normal physiological process, but 1/3 of the respondents did not feel comfortable with the observed changes. The respondents did not have sufficient knowledge about the influence of maternal weight on fetal development. The use of diuretics and laxatives by pregnant women without medical consultation is a worrying phenomenon. These results indicate that women should have better access to knowledge about the impact of healthy nutrition on pregnancy outcome., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest, (© Copyright by the National Institute of Public Health NIH - National Research Institute.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Assessment of the level of static and dynamic balance in healthy people, practicing selected Latin American dances.
- Author
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Bojanowska M, Trybulec B, Zyznawska J, Barłowska-Trybulec M, and Mańko G
- Subjects
- Humans, Latin America, Lower Extremity, Postural Balance, Students, Dancing
- Abstract
Purpose: The balance, known as the ability to independently maintain the body in a certain position and return to the starting position, can be divided into static and dynamic balances. Social Latin American dances (salsa, bachata) require dancers to do a characteristic figure, however, they are not trained as intensively as dancing sports. The aim of the study was to assess the static and dynamic balances of dancers, who are regularly dancing those selected Latin American dances, by comparison with those who do not., Methods: The study was conducted among 34 dancers from a Krakow Dancing School and, 37 students of the Jagiellonian University, aged 21-35. A SIGMA balance platform was used to measure static and, the Y-Balance Test platform to assess dynamic balance. The Student's T-test, Mann- Whitney U-test and Spearman's rank correlation coefficient were used in statistical analysis., Results: There were neither significant differences between right and left lower limbs of dancers, nor between values of tilts on the YBT platform in both investigated groups. Non-dancers, however, showed a slightly higher positive correlation between the deviations in the sagittal and frontal planes and the surface area, as well as between the path length and the surface area on the SIGMA platform when compared to dancers., Conclusions: The level of dynamic and static balances of dancing people is similar, when compared to non-dancers. The influence of practicing Latin American dances on the sense of balance require further studies.
- Published
- 2021
31. An evaluation of the nutritional status of elderly with the use of the MNA questionnaire and determination of factors contributing to malnutrition. A pilot study.
- Author
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Kostecka M and Bojanowska M
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Geriatric Assessment, Humans, Male, Malnutrition diagnosis, Pilot Projects, Poland epidemiology, Residence Characteristics, Rural Population, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urban Population, Weight Loss, Malnutrition epidemiology, Nutrition Assessment, Nutrition Surveys statistics & numerical data, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
Background: In the elderly, nutrition significantly influences biological aging and physiological and pathological changes in the body. A balanced diet and physical activity are the key to good physical and mental health., Objective: The aim of this study was: (1) to perform nutritional screening tests in senior citizens residing in eastern Poland and (2) to evaluate the risk of malnutrition in elderly people who live with their families, seniors who live independently, and residents of nursing homes., Material and Method: The Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) screening tool comprising a questionnaire with 22 questions and an abbreviated and survey-adapted version of the questionnaire (KomPAN) were used to investigate eating habits and self-perception of health and nutrition. A total of 398 correctly filled out questionnaires were selected and the resulting data were subjected to statistical analyses in the Statistica 10 program., Results: The BMI values of most respondents were indicative or malnutrition or risk of malnutrition, regardless of gender (mean BMI 23.88 kg/m2 ±5.08). Most overweight and obese respondents were female (p=0.0001). The observed decreased BMI values was significantly (p=0.0012, rs= 0.6714) correlated with lower food intake. Unintentional weight loss greater than 3 kg was most frequently noted in respondents living in nursing homes and living independently (p=0.0021). Eating difficulties also considerably influenced the respondents' nutritional status. The respondents' BMI values were significantly correlated (p<0.0001) with their MNA scores, the average MNA score was 21.0±4.4, (rs = 0.7293). Overweight and obese respondents were more likely to consume at least three meals daily (OR=1.87; 95% CI: 1.32-2.06; p<0.001)., Conclusions: The BMI values and MNA scores of the tested subjects indicate that the majority of the surveyed respondents were malnourished or at risk of malnutrition, regardless of gender. In the present study, the residential environment significantly influenced the patients' nutritional status, in particular in respondents with impaired motor abilities and eating difficulties., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest, (© Copyright by the National Institute of Public Health - National Institute of Hygiene.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. An analysis of dietary patterns and body composition parameters in the Polish population.
- Author
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Kostecka M, Bojanowska M, Kostecka J, and Ciołek A
- Subjects
- Body Mass Index, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diet, Humans, Obesity, Poland, Body Composition, Feeding Behavior
- Abstract
Background: Lifestyle factors are the key determinants of health. Diet exerts the great influence on the weight to height ratio and the body fat percentage. In addition to total energy intake, the type and quality of the diet can also play a role in the etiology of obesity in susceptible individuals., Objective: Aim of this study was to identify the dietary patterns of the Polish population and to determine the associations between these characteristics and body composition parameters. This study presents the clustering of dietary models and body composition to determine the association of these dietary patterns with BMI, physique rating (body type) or visceral fat., Material and Methods: The sample consisted of 402 respondents aged 18 to 65. Nutrition models were identified with cluster analysis. Logistic regression modelling with adjustment for confounders was applied. Three dietary-lifestyle patterns were identified., Results: Individuals belonging to the processed food model were at significantly higher risk of overweight and obesity expressed by BMI scores (OR=1.55; 95%CI: 1.26-1.89). The average BMI score was 28.19 ± 3.45 kg/m2 in the processed food model, 23.78 ±2.21 kg/m2 in the control group, and 22.17 ± 2.69 kg/m2 in the healthy nutrition model. Respondents belonging to the processed food model were also characterized by considerably higher body fat percentage (OR=1.89, 95%CI: 1.37-2.34) and higher visceral fat levels (OR=2.12; 95%CI: 1.42-2.34). Frequent intake (at least several times a week) of sweetened carbonated or non-carbonated beverages (p=0.002) and instant foods (p=0.006) were the main factors associated with the risk of higher body fat percentage and higher visceral fat levels., Conclusions: Dietary patterns have been proposed as a solution to investigating the association between food choice and body composition, and such studies focus on analyses of the entire diet, rather than on the intake of individual nutrients or food groups., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest, (© Copyright by the National Institute of Public Health - National Institute of Hygiene.)
- Published
- 2021
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33. Problems in bariatric patient care - challenges for dieticians.
- Author
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Kostecka M and Bojanowska M
- Abstract
Obesity management options include a low-calorie diet, behavioral therapy, regular physical activity and pharmacological therapy. However, treatment failure is frequently encountered, most of these methods are ineffective, and a positive outcome is rarely maintained in the long term. In morbidly obese patients, bariatric surgery is considered the most effective treatment for obesity as well as the accompanying diseases. Bariatric surgery promotes much greater weight loss than conservative treatment, regardless of the applied surgical technique. Bariatric surgery patients should receive professional perioperative (preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative) care from a multidisciplinary team of specialists, including a bariatric surgeon, a general practitioner, a dietitian and a health psychologist. Patients require postoperative nutritional counseling to be able to stabilize their weight and maintain long-term weight loss after surgery. Patients are guided by bariatric dietitians through the process of adopting new eating habits and behavior, learning how to make healthy food choices.
- Published
- 2017
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34. Food allergies in rural areas.
- Author
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Stoma M, Ślaska-Grzywna B, Żukiewicz-Sobczak WA, Kostecka M, Bojanowska M, Dudziak A, Kuna-Broniowska A, Adamczuk P, Sobczak P, and Andrejko D
- Abstract
Introduction: A food allergy is a group of symptoms occurring in the organism and resulting from consuming some food, where the problems are conditioned by immunological mechanisms. The symptoms may become apparent first in adulthood and they may be an initial manifestation of a latent allergy. Typical symptoms of a food allergy occur in different organs, thus not only in the digestive system, but also in the skin, respiratory system and circulatory system., Aim: To assess the frequency of food allergy onset in rural areas of the Lublin region as well as to determine which factors induce such allergies., Material and Methods: A survey was conducted, involving the participation of 340 inhabitants of rural areas. The study monitored the knowledge and situation of the disease, concerning allergens, allergy symptoms, methods of treatment and opinions regarding such treatment., Results: The analysis focused on 124 people with diagnosed allergies., Conclusions: Introducing a diet did not result in a statistically significant difference regarding elimination of the symptoms, as compared to the patients who did not follow any diet. On the other hand, pharmacological treatment causes statistically worse results than using other methods or not being treated at all. The patients in whom allergy symptoms disappeared were more convinced about the positive character of their diet than those in whom the symptoms were not eliminated. The age when the allergy becomes evident does not affect its duration, yet it matters as to the time of its later elimination. The more symptoms were experienced by a patient, the longer the duration of the allergy was.
- Published
- 2016
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35. Adsorption and degradation of phenoxyalkanoic acid herbicides in soils: A review.
- Author
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Paszko T, Muszyński P, Materska M, Bojanowska M, Kostecka M, and Jackowska I
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Animals, Herbicides analysis, Humans, Soil Pollutants analysis, Biodegradation, Environmental, Herbicides chemistry, Soil Pollutants chemistry
- Abstract
The primary aim of the present review on phenoxyalkanoic acid herbicides-2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy) acetic acid (2,4-D), 2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy) acetic acid (MCPA), (2R)-2-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy) propanoic acid (dichlorprop-P), (2R)-2-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy) propanoic acid (mecoprop-P), 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy) butanoic acid (2,4-DB), and 4-(4-chloro-2-methylphenoxy) butanoic acid (MCPB)-was to compare the extent of their adsorption in soils and degradation rates to assess their potential for groundwater contamination. The authors found that adsorption decreased in the sequence of 2,4-DB > 2,4-D > MCPA > dichlorprop-P > mecoprop-P. Herbicides are predominantly adsorbed as anions-on organic matter and through a water-bridging mechanism with adsorbed Fe cations-and their neutral forms are adsorbed mainly on organic matter. Adsorption of anions of 2,4-D, MCPA, dichlorprop-P, and mecoprop-P is inversely correlated with their lipophilicity values, and modeling of adsorption of the compounds based on this relationship is possible. The predominant dissipation mechanism of herbicides in soils is bacterial degradation. The contribution of other mechanisms, such as degradation by fungi, photodegradation, or volatilization from soils, is much smaller. The rate of bacterial degradation decreased in the following order: 2,4-D > MCPA > mecoprop-P > dichlorprop-P. It was found that 2,4-D and MCPA have the lowest potential for leaching into groundwater and that mecoprop-P and dichlorprop-P have slightly higher potential. Because of limited data on adsorption and degradation of 2,4-DB and MCPB, estimation of their leaching potential was not possible., (© 2015 SETAC.)
- Published
- 2016
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36. Polycylic aromatic hydrocarbons in rape seeds with relation to their growing site and thermal treatment.
- Author
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Bojanowska M and Czerwiński J
- Subjects
- Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, Brassica napus, Brassica rapa, Humans, Hydrocarbons, Aromatic, Plant Oils chemistry, Poland, Smoke, Soil, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons analysis, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons chemistry
- Abstract
A significant source of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in human diet is vegetable oils, especially those produced from plants grown in regions where the soil and the atmosphere are contaminated with these chemicals. Contamination with PAH of vegetable oils may also occur in the process of plant material drying with smoke or exhaust fumes, or in the course of extraction of that material with solvents containing trace amounts of PAH. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between the levels of PAH present in rape seeds and the occurrence of these compounds in cultivation region and the relationship of the levels of PAH in rape seeds to thermal treatment after harvest. Rape seeds and pods from experimental fields and rape seeds subjected to thermal treatment in dryers obtained from suppliers of the raw material were examined and compared. Cleanup of extracts was performed with high-resolution size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and final determinations were by Trace Ultra/PolarisQ gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS). The results obtained indicated that during thermal treatment of rape seeds the concentration of PAH increased, but the levels of benzo[a]pyrene did not exceed threshold permissible levels. Data demonstrate that rapeseed cultivation in the presence of PAH results in higher levels of contaminants; however, the PAH levels still did not exceed the maximal allowable levels in Poland.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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