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1.
Arch Pediatr ; 22(6): 580-94, 2015 Jun.
Artículo en Francés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25896626

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: The main objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence of social and psychological problems, risk behaviors, and depression symptoms in a population of adolescents consulting in a Pediatric Emergency Department of a general hospital, and compare these according to the reasons for consulting. METHODS: Observational monocentric study, in the Pediatric Emergency Department of a general hospital in Britany, France, between January and September 2013, using a questionnaire dispensed to 12- to 18-year-old adolescents. The questions covered habits, school, symptoms, risk behaviors, and depression symptoms. Patients were classified into three groups based of the initial aim of the consultation: medical, traumatologic, and acute psychiatric. RESULTS: A total of 379 adolescents, median age: 15 years, were included. Adolescents from the "psychiatric" group resided significantly more often with only one of their parents or in a residential home; they were more often followed by an youth worker and/or a mental health professional such as a psychologist or a psychiatrist; consumed alcohol, cannabis, and/or tobacco more often; they complained more often of headache or abdominal and lumbar pain, dizziness, and sleep disorders; they consumed anxiolytic and hypnotic drugs more often; they ran away more often; and had signs of depression and/or suicidal ideation and behaviors. The prevalence of all these psychosocial and behavioral risks was also high in the two other groups. CONCLUSION: The Pediatric Emergency Department is a good place to detect adolescents with behavioral problems and/or depression symptoms, even if this is not the initial purpose of admission.


Asunto(s)
Depresión/diagnóstico , Asunción de Riesgos , Adolescente , Niño , Depresión/epidemiología , Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Prevalencia , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
2.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 21(46): 464126, 2009 Nov 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21715890

RESUMEN

We examine various aspects of dynamic wetting with viscous Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. Rather than concentrating on the mechanisms that relieve the classic contact line stress singularity, we focus on the behavior in the wedge flow near the contact line which has the dominant influence on wetting with these fluids. Our experiments show that a Newtonian polymer melt composed of highly flexible molecules exhibits dynamic wetting behavior described very well by hydrodynamic models that capture the critical properties of the Newtonian wedge flow near the contact line. We find that shear thinning has a strong impact on dynamic wetting, by reducing the drag of the solid on the fluid near the contact line, while the elasticity of a Boger fluid has a weaker impact on dynamic wetting. Finally, we find that other polymeric fluids, nominally Newtonian in rheometric measurements, exhibit deviations from Newtonian dynamic wetting behavior.

3.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 313(1): 274-80, 2007 Sep 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17499759

RESUMEN

The impact of fluid elasticity on the dynamic wetting of polymer solutions is important because many polymer solutions in technological use exhibit non-Newtonian behaviors in the high shear environment of the wedge-like flow near a moving contact line. Our former study [G.K. Seevaratnam, Y. Suo, E. Ramé, L.M. Walker, Phys. Fluids 19 (2007) Art. No. 012103] showed that shear thinning induced by a semi-flexible high molecular weight polymer reduces the viscous bending near a moving contact line as compared to a Newtonian fluid having the same zero-shear viscosity. This results in a dramatic reduction of the dependence of the effective dynamic contact angle on contact line speed. In this paper, we discuss dynamic wetting of Boger fluids which exhibit elasticity-dominated rheology with minimal shear thinning. These fluids are prepared by dissolving a dilute concentration of high molecular weight polymer in a "solvent" of the oligomer of the polymer. We demonstrate that elasticity in these fluids increases curvature near the contact line but that the enhancement arises mostly from the weakly non-Newtonian behavior already present in the oligomeric solvent. We present evidence of instabilities on the liquid/vapor interface near the moving contact line.

4.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 284(1): 265-70, 2005 Apr 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15752812

RESUMEN

The hydrodynamics near moving contact lines of two room-temperature polymer melts, polyisobutylene (PIB) and polystyrene (PS), are different from those of a third polymer melt, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). While all three fluids exhibit Newtonian behavior in rotational rheological measurements, a model of the hydrodynamics near moving contact lines which assumes Newtonian behavior of the fluid accurately describes the interface shape of a variety of PDMS fluids but fails to describe the interface deformation by viscous forces in PIB and PS. The magnitude of the deviations from the model and the distance along the liquid-vapor interface over which they are seen increase with increasing capillary number. We conclude that the wetting behaviors of PIB and PS are influenced by weak elasticity in these low molecular weight melts and that dynamic wetting is more sensitive to this elasticity than standard rheometric techniques.

5.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 70(3 Pt 1): 031608, 2004 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15524535

RESUMEN

Directly probing the fluid flow and liquid-vapor interface shape in the microscopic immediate vicinity of the moving contact line can only be accomplished in very specific and isolated cases. Yet this physics is critical to macroscopic dynamic wetting. Here we examine the microscopic (or inner) physics of spreading silicone fluids using data of macroscopic dynamic contact angle versus Capillary number Ca=U mu/sigma. This dynamic contact angle is precisely defined so that it can be related back to the microscopic behavior through detailed theory. Our results indicate that the parameters describing the inner region have a detectable dependence on spreading velocity when this velocity exceeds a critical value. This dependence is not scaled (i.e., the data are not collapsed) by Ca, which suggests that an additional time scale must be present in the model of the inner region.

6.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 177(1): 234-244, 1996 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10479437

RESUMEN

We have studied shapes of dynamic fluid interfaces at distances 0.01. Our measured dynamic contact angle parameter extracted by fitting the analysis with viscous deformation to the shape near the moving contact line coincides with the contact angle of the static-like shape far from the contact line. We measure and explain the discrepancy between this dynamic contact angle parameter and the apparent contact angles based on meniscus or apex heights. Our observations of viscous effects at large distances from the contact line have implications for dynamic contact angle measurements in capillary tubes.

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