Academic literature on the topic 'History Sniffing'

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Journal articles on the topic "History Sniffing"

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Gordon, S., and I. Nedelchev. "Sniffing in the sun: History of a disaster." Network Security 1994, no. 7 (July 1994): 16–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/1353-4858(94)90012-4.

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Mishra, Deebya Raj, Narendra Bhatta, Bidesh Bista, Puru Koirala, and Ramhari Ghimire. "Air due to Glue: Spontaneous Pneumothorax in a Young Adult with Glue Sniffing." Journal of Nepal Medical Association 56, no. 210 (April 30, 2018): 621–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31729/jnma.3530.

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Solvent abuse, as inhalant specially, in the form of low cost adhesives like dendrite is common in low income countries among children and the teens. This habit is often a stepping stone to harder drugs. The neurological and neuropsychological effects of solvent abuse are well explored. But the respiratory effects are often overlooked. In this report, we present a case of a 19 year old gentleman, with regular history of sniffing of commercial “glue” compounds. This patient presented with right sided chest pain and chest x-ray showed a right sided pneumothorax. The pulmonary barotrauma, possibly due to increased intra-alveolar pressure, during the sniffing process can lead to alveolar rupture and in turn, pneumothorax. In the absence of other risk factors for Pneumothorax, the link between inhalant abuse and respiratory complications has to be explored in patients with history of such abuse.
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Ramcharan, Kanterpersad, Amrit Ramesar, Moshanti Ramdath, Joel Teelucksingh, and Maria Gosein. "Encephalopathy and Neuropathy due to Glue, Paint Thinner, and Gasoline Sniffing in Trinidad and Tobago-MRI Findings." Case Reports in Neurological Medicine 2014 (2014): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/850109.

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A 29-year-old male petrol station pump attendant was admitted with ataxia and clinical evidence of a sensorimotor polyneuropathy which developed over the preceding 3 months. He had cognitive dysfunction, hearing loss, and cerebellar clinical abnormalities that came on slowly over the three years. He had a fifteen-year history of sniffing mostly glue, occasionally paint thinners, and, in the recent two years, gasoline. Magnetic resonance brain imaging showed abnormalities of the cerebral cortex, cerebral white matter, corpus callosum, hippocampus, brainstem and cerebellar atrophy, hypointensities of basal ganglia, red nuclei, and substantia nigra as previously described in toluene sniffing. Abstinence for six months led to partial clinical improvement. Clinicians need to be aware of this preventable entity which has peculiar radiological findings which are being increasingly accepted as typical.
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Shibata, S., K. Murakami, Y. Umeno, and S. Komune. "Epidemiological study of cholesteatoma in Fukuoka City." Journal of Laryngology & Otology 129, S2 (February 23, 2015): S6—S11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002221511400231x.

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AbstractObjective and design:To investigate the pathogenesis of cholesteatoma, we planned to conduct a cohort study. As a first step, we conducted an epidemiological study in Fukuoka City, Japan to determine the incidence of cholesteatoma treated both with and without surgery. We also conducted a case–control study to investigate the pathogenesis of cholesteatoma.Results:The annual incidence of cholesteatoma, including cases treated without surgery, was 6.8–10.0 in a population of 100 000. The results of the case–control study suggested that a past history of otitis media and habitual sniffing caused by a patulous eustachian tube play a role in the pathogenesis of cholesteatoma.Conclusions:The annual incidence of cholesteatoma, including cases treated without surgery, was considered to not be high enough to perform a cohort study. The results of the case–control study suggest that otitis media and habitual sniffing due to a patulous eustachian tube, contribute to the onset of cholesteatoma.
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Daniel, François-Joseph. "Sensory Science in Tension." Science & Technology Studies 33, no. 2 (May 14, 2020): 49–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.23987/sts.60784.

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For the last 15 years, sensory science has frequently been recommended to industrial actors to monitor odours, assess the quality of the environment and improve their factories’ functioning. Resident “sniffing teams” have been put in place in different contexts to assess odorous pollution. These teams are groups of local residents living in the neighbourhoods of industrial facilities, who have been trained to report pollution emissions. This article describes these teams as sensory devices and argues that their functioning relies on the consent of the residents to allow themselves to “be affected differently” by smells – from annoyance to interest and curiosity about odour recognition and reporting activity. This consent, which is based on an ‘ethic’ of sensing, centered on the sniffers’ own feelings, is delicate, tense and reversible, given the emotionally-loaded contexts of odorous pollution.
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Altenkirch, Holger, and Walter Kindermann. "Inhalant abuse and heroin addiction: A comparative study on 574 opiate addicts with and without a history of sniffing." Addictive Behaviors 11, no. 2 (January 1986): 93–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0306-4603(86)90033-x.

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Tryka, A. F., W. E. Cox, and S. H. Van Devanter. "ESI detection of titanium in lungs of a spray paint sniffer." Proceedings, annual meeting, Electron Microscopy Society of America 49 (August 1991): 134–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424820100084971.

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Do lungs of inhalation substance abusers contain materials indicative of such abuse, and is it possible to detect these materials by electron energy loss spectroscopy? While most abuse involves only volatile materials, spray paint is one material where when volatile materials evaporate, resultant solid particles may be of respirable size. These particles may contain paint pigments such as titanium dioxide.Lung biopsy tissue was obtained for diagnostic purposes from a 16 year old male who presented with acute onset of progressive respiratory insufficiency. The patient later admitted to a history of significant paint sniffing. Desquamative interstitial pneumonitis was observed by light microscopy, with an unusual additional feature of many alveolar macrophages having dusty cytoplasm. Routine ultrastructural study demonstrated large amounts of electron dense material in these macrophages. To address the question of what materials were present in the cells, additional tissue samples were embedded in Araldite, sectioned at 30 nm, and viewed unstained on a Zeiss 902.
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Chao, Tzee Cheng, Danny S. T. Lo, J. Koh, T. C. Ting, L. M. Quek, T. H. Koh, C. Y. Koh-Tan, and A. Zubaidah. "Glue Sniffing Deaths in Singapore — Volatile Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Post-Mortem Blood by Headspace Gas Chromatography." Medicine, Science and the Law 33, no. 3 (July 1993): 253–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002580249303300312.

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Over a period from 1983 to 1991, of a total of 19,000 post-mortems, 33 were found to have at least one aromatic hydrocarbon (benzene, toluene or xylenes) in the blood. Of the 33 deceased, 22 had a history of toluene or petrol abuse while most of the remaining 11 were suspected to be glue sniffers through evidence found at the scene. This number, which represented 0.17 per cent of all the unnatural deaths, is considered small for a nation having a glue sniffing epidemic. The low death rate, as compared to 2.1 per cent through drug and chemical poisoning during the same period, is attributed to the timely intervention by the Government who outlawed glue sniffing and the effectiveness of compulsory rehabilitation. The male gender predominates (81.8 per cent) among the 33 deceased with a mean age of 20.1 years (range 15 to 33). The mean age for the female gender is 17.7 years (range 16 to 20). The blood toluene levels were found to be in the range 0.2 to 92μg per ml blood. The causes of death are: 63.6 per cent due to falling or suicide by jumping; 18.2 per cent drowning; 6.1 per cent hanging; 6.1 per cent homicide; and 6.1 per cent acute toluene poisoning. The high proportion of traumatic deaths are discussed. Headspace gas chromatography with a suitable GC column was used for the analysis. Calibration blood standards were prepared in situ or in bulk stabilized by 10 per cent (v/v) methanol to overcome the hydrophobic and volatile nature of the aromatic hydrocarbons. Both methods of calibration gave analogous calibration factors, (slope for toluene: 0.092 to 0.095; slope for m-xylene: 0.070 to 0.071; and slope for o-xylene: 0.064 to 0.065), correlation coefficients of 0.9997 or better and standard deviation of 3.1 per cent or less. The consequences of different ways of blood standards preparations are discussed.
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Clough, Alan R., Peter D'abbs, Sheree Cairney, Dennis Gray, Paul Maruff, Robert Parker, and Bridie O'reilly. "Adverse Mental Health Effects of Cannabis Use in Two Indigenous Communities in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia: Exploratory Study." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 39, no. 7 (July 2005): 612–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/j.1440-1614.2005.01634.x.

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Objective: We investigated adverse mental health effects and their associations with levels of cannabis use among indigenous Australian cannabis users in remote communities in the Northern Territory. Method: Local indigenous health workers and key informants assisted in developing 28 criteria describing mental health symptoms. Five symptom clusters were identified using cluster analysis of data compiled from interviews with 103 cannabis users. Agreement was assessed (method comparison approach, κ-statistic) with a clinician's classification of the 28 criteria into five groups labelled: ‘anxiety’, ‘dependency’, ‘mood’, ‘vegetative’ and ‘psychosis’. Participants were described as showing ‘anxiety’, ‘dependency’ etc., if they reported half or more of the symptoms comprising the cluster. Associations between participants' self-reported cannabis use and each symptom cluster were assessed (logistic regression adjusting for age, sex, other substance use). Results: Agreement between two classifications of 28 criteria into five groups was ‘moderate’ (64%, κ=0.55, p<0.001). When five clusters were combined into three, ‘anxietydependency’, ‘mood-vegetative’ and ‘psychosis’, agreement rose to 71% ( κ=0.56, p<0.001). ‘Anxiety-dependency’ was positively associated with number of ‘cones’ usually smoked per week and this remained significant when adjusted for confounders (p=0.020) and tended to remain significant in those who had never sniffed petrol (p=0.052). Users of more than five cones per week were more likely to display ‘anxiety-dependency’ symptoms than those who used one cone per week (OR=15.8, 1.8–141.2, p=0.013). A crude association between the ‘mood-vegetative’ symptom cluster and number of cones usually smoked per week (p=0.014) also remained statistically significant when adjusted for confounders (p=0.012) but was modified by interactions with petrol sniffing (p=0.116) and alcohol use (p=0.276). There were no associations between cannabis use and ‘psychosis’. Conclusions: Risks for ‘anxiety-dependency’ symptoms in cannabis users increased as their level of use increased. Other plausible mental health effects of cannabis in this population of comparatively new users were probably masked by alcohol use and a history of petrol sniffing.
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Mail. "Boozing, Sniffing, and Toking: An Overview of the Past, Present, and Future of Substance Use by American Indians." American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research 5, no. 2 (1993): 1–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5820/aian.0502.1993.1.

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Books on the topic "History Sniffing"

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Perry, Mark. Sniffin' glue: The essential punk accessory. London: Sanctuary House, 2000.

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Mark, Perry. Sniffin' glue: The essential punk accesory. London: Sanctuary Pub., 2000.

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Suydam, Marty. Walks with Charley: Sniffing Arlington Ridge History and Mystery 2d Edition. Independently Published, 2020.

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Perry, Mark. Action Time Vision: The Story of Sniffing Glue, Alternative TV and Punk Rock. Helter Skelter Publishing, 2017.

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Gildart, Keith, Anna Gough-Yates, Sian Lincoln, Bill Osgerby, Lucy Robinson, John Street, Pete Webb, and Matthew Worley, eds. Ripped, torn and cut. Manchester University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526120595.001.0001.

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Ripped, torn and cut offers a collection of original essays exploring the motivations behind – and the politics within – the multitude of fanzines that emerged in the wake of British punk from 1976. Sniffin’ Glue (1976–77), Mark Perry’s iconic punk fanzine, was but the first of many, paving the way for hundreds of home-made magazines to be cut and pasted in bedrooms across the UK. From these, glimpses into provincial cultures, teenage style wars and formative political ideas may be gleaned. An alternative history, away from the often-condescending glare of London’s media and music industry, can be formulated, drawn from such titles as Ripped & Torn, Brass Lip, City Fun, Vague, Kill Your Pet Puppy, Toxic Grafity, Hungry Beat and Hard as Nails. Here, in a pre-internet world, we see the development of networks and the dissemination of punk’s cultural impact as it fractured into myriad sub-scenes: industrial, post-punk, anarcho, Oi!, indie, goth. Ripped, torn and cut brings together academic analysis with practitioner accounts to forge a collaborative history ‘from below’. The first book of its kind, this collection reveals the contested nature of punk’s cultural politics by turning the pages of a vibrant underground press.
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Book chapters on the topic "History Sniffing"

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Bansal, Chetan, Sören Preibusch, and Natasa Milic-Frayling. "Cache Timing Attacks Revisited: Efficient and Repeatable Browser History, OS and Network Sniffing." In ICT Systems Security and Privacy Protection, 97–111. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18467-8_7.

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Hsu, Hsuan L. "“Every Crime Has Its Peculiar Odor”." In The Smell of Risk, 27–55. NYU Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479807215.003.0002.

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Chapter 1 considers how detective fiction has interacted with the history of differential deodorization. Whereas nineteenth-century texts tend to frame the hyperosmic detective as an agent of deodorization who seeks out and expunges deviant odors, the author argues that the form has also developed accounts of “environmental detection” wherein the detective’s body and mind become exposed and transformed through the very process of sniffing out crime. In the cases of black detective fiction, hard-boiled crime fiction, and narratives of multiple chemical sensitivity that mobilize detective tropes, smells are no longer just clues to be read but material agents of violence.
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Conference papers on the topic "History Sniffing"

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Kikuchi, Hiroaki, Kota Sasa, and Yuta Shimizu. "Interactive History Sniffing Attack with Amida Lottery." In 2016 10th International Conference on Innovative Mobile and Internet Services in Ubiquitous Computing (IMIS). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/imis.2016.109.

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Huang, Anxin, Chen Zhu, Dewen Wu, Yi Xie, and Xiapu Luo. "An Adaptive Method for Cross-Platform Browser History Sniffing." In Workshop on Measurements, Attacks, and Defenses for the Web. Reston, VA: Internet Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14722/madweb.2020.23006.

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O'Neal, Keith, and Scott Yilek. "Interactive History Sniffing with Dynamically-Generated QR Codes and CSS Difference Blending." In 2022 IEEE Security and Privacy Workshops (SPW). IEEE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/spw54247.2022.9833863.

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