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Magnesium
Kinds of Magnesium Terms modified by Magnesium Selected AbstractsA Facile Reduction of Azoxyarenes with Hydrazine Hydrate/Magnesium: Formation of Different Products under Different Reaction Conditions.CHEMINFORM, Issue 14 2006Hemmaragala M. Nanjundaswamy Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF. [source] EFFECTS OF ADMINISTRATION OF ORAL MAGNESIUM ON PLASMA GLUCOSE AND PATHOLOGICAL CHANGES IN THE AORTA AND PANCREAS OF DIABETIC RATSCLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 8 2005Nepton Soltani SUMMARY 1.,Magnesium deficiency has recently been proposed as a novel factor implicated in the pathogenesis of the complications of diabetes. The purpose of the present study was to determine the relationship between oral Mg supplementation and changes in plasma glucose, calcium, haemogolobin, Ca/Mg ratio, blood pressure and the histology of the pancreas and vascular system in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 2.,Ten days after the induction of diabetes in male Wistar rats, half the diabetic animals were divided into six groups, receiving 0, 1, 3, 10, 30 or 50 g/L MgSO4 added into the drinking water for 8 weeks. Plasma glucose and Mg were measured at days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 14 and 21 to find the optimum dose of Mg and the time-course of its effect. In addition, histological observations were undertaken. Eight weeks later, all animals were decapitated, the pancreas and thoracic aorta were removed carefully and immersed immediately in 10% formaldehyde for histological study. 3.,To evaluate the effects of Mg on plasma glucose, calcium, haemoglobin, Mg and blood pressure, another group of animals was divided into four experimental groups, as follows: (i) non-diabetic controls received tap water for 8 weeks; (ii) acute diabetics received tap water for 10 days; (iii) chronic diabetic controls received tap water for 8 weeks; and (iv) Mg-treated chronic diabetic rats received 10 g/L MgSO4 added into the drinking water 10 days after the induction of diabetes for 8 weeks. 4.,Magnesium dose dependently affects plasma glucose levels. The peak effect was reached during the first 24 h following oral administration. Administration of 10 g/L MgSO4 results in the return of normal structure in the diabetic pancreas and aorta. Moreover, this concentration of MgSO4 causes glucose, haemoglobin, calcium, the Ca/Mg ratio and blood pressure to reach normal levels. Although the Mg level increases slightly following the administration of 10 g/L MgSO4 to diabetic rats, it never reaches control levels. 5.,On the basis of the results of the present study, it may be concluded that chronic Mg administration may have beneficial effects on diabetes. [source] Limits of life in MgCl2 -containing environments: chaotropicity defines the windowENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2007John E. Hallsworth Summary The biosphere of planet Earth is delineated by physico-chemical conditions that are too harsh for, or inconsistent with, life processes and maintenance of the structure and function of biomolecules. To define the window of life on Earth (and perhaps gain insights into the limits that life could tolerate elsewhere), and hence understand some of the most unusual biological activities that operate at such extremes, it is necessary to understand the causes and cellular basis of systems failure beyond these windows. Because water plays such a central role in biomolecules and bioprocesses, its availability, properties and behaviour are among the key life-limiting parameters. Saline waters dominate the Earth, with the oceans holding 96.5% of the planet's water. Saline groundwater, inland seas or saltwater lakes hold another 1%, a quantity that exceeds the world's available freshwater. About one quarter of Earth's land mass is underlain by salt, often more than 100 m thick. Evaporite deposits contain hypersaline waters within and between their salt crystals, and even contain large subterranean salt lakes, and therefore represent significant microbial habitats. Salts have a major impact on the nature and extent of the biosphere, because solutes radically influence water's availability (water activity) and exert other activities that also affect biological systems (e.g. ionic, kosmotropic, chaotropic and those that affect cell turgor), and as a consequence can be major stressors of cellular systems. Despite the stressor effects of salts, hypersaline environments can be heavily populated with salt-tolerant or -dependent microbes, the halophiles. The most common salt in hypersaline environments is NaCl, but many evaporite deposits and brines are also rich in other salts, including MgCl2 (several hundred million tonnes of bischofite, MgCl2·6H2O, occur in one formation alone). Magnesium (Mg) is the third most abundant element dissolved in seawater and is ubiquitous in the Earth's crust, and throughout the Solar System, where it exists in association with a variety of anions. Magnesium chloride is exceptionally soluble in water, so can achieve high concentrations (> 5 M) in brines. However, while NaCl-dominated hypersaline environments are habitats for a rich variety of salt-adapted microbes, there are contradictory indications of life in MgCl2 -rich environments. In this work, we have sought to obtain new insights into how MgCl2 affects cellular systems, to assess whether MgCl2 can determine the window of life, and, if so, to derive a value for this window. We have dissected two relevant cellular stress-related activities of MgCl2 solutions, namely water activity reduction and chaotropicity, and analysed signatures of life at different concentrations of MgCl2 in a natural environment, namely the 0.05,5.05 M MgCl2 gradient of the seawater : hypersaline brine interface of Discovery Basin , a large, stable brine lake almost saturated with MgCl2, located on the Mediterranean Sea floor. We document here the exceptional chaotropicity of MgCl2, and show that this property, rather than water activity reduction, inhibits life by denaturing biological macromolecules. In vitro, a test enzyme was totally inhibited by MgCl2 at concentrations below 1 M; and culture medium with MgCl2 concentrations above 1.26 M inhibited the growth of microbes in samples taken from all parts of the Discovery interface. Although DNA and rRNA from key microbial groups (sulfate reducers and methanogens) were detected along the entire MgCl2 gradient of the seawater : Discovery brine interface, mRNA, a highly labile indicator of active microbes, was recovered only from the upper part of the chemocline at MgCl2 concentrations of less than 2.3 M. We also show that the extreme chaotropicity of MgCl2 at high concentrations not only denatures macromolecules, but also preserves the more stable ones: such indicator molecules, hitherto regarded as evidence of life, may thus be misleading signatures in chaotropic environments. Thus, the chaotropicity of MgCl2 would appear to be a window-of-life-determining parameter, and the results obtained here suggest that the upper MgCl2 concentration for life, in the absence of compensating (e.g. kosmotropic) solutes, is about 2.3 M. [source] Solute Content and the Grain Microstructure of High Pressure Diecast Magnesium,Aluminium Alloys,ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 11 2009Anumalasetty V. Nagasekhar The grain microstructure is strongly bimodal due to the mixture of large dendritic grains that solidify in the shot sleeve and are subsequently injected into the die cavity, and the small grains that nucleate inside the cavity and grow to a size dictated by the solute content and the solidification rate. The large grains form only in concentrated alloys; their size is also partially controlled by the growth restriction factor. [source] Influence of Different Surface Machining Treatments of Magnesium-based Resorbable Implants on the Degradation Behavior in Rabbits,ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 5 2009Nina Von Der Höh The surface of magnesium,calcium implants (MgCa0.8) was differently treated which resulted in cylinders with smooth, sand-blasted, or threaded surface. These cylinders were implanted into the medial femoral condyle of New Zealand White rabbits. The degradation behavior and the reaction of the organism were assessed by clinical compatibility, radiographs, and µ -computed tomography. [source] Stress Corrosion Cracking and Hydrogen Diffusion in Magnesium,ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 8 2006A. Atrens Evaluation of recent data for hydrogen (H) diffusion in magnesium (Mg) yielded a new equation for the diffusion coefficient of H in Mg. This indicates that there can be significant H transport ahead of a stress corrosion crack in Mg at ambient temperature and that H may be involved in the mechanism of stress corrosion cracking in Mg. [source] Magnesium sulphate treatment decreases blood,brain barrier permeability during acute hypertension in pregnant ratsEXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2008Anna G. Euser Eclampsia is associated with increased blood,brain barrier (BBB) permeability and formation of cerebral oedema. Magnesium sulphate is used to treat eclampsia despite an unclear mechanism of action. This study was to determine the effect of magnesium sulphate on in vivo BBB permeability and formation of cerebral oedema during acute hypertension and on brain aquaporin-4 (AQP4) protein expression. An in vivo model of hypertensive encephalopathy was used in late-pregnant (LP) rats following magnesium sulphate treatment, 270 mg kg,1i.p. injection every 4 h for 24 h. Permeability of the BBB was determined by in situ brain perfusion of Evan's Blue (EB) and sodium fluorescein (NaFl), and dye clearance determined by fluorescence spectrophotometry. Cerebral oedema was determined following acute hypertension by measuring brain water content. The effect of magnesium treatment on AQP4 expression was determined by Western blot analysis. Acute hypertension with autoregulatory breakthrough increased BBB permeability to EB in both brain regions studied (P < 0.05). Magnesium attenuated BBB permeability to EB during acute hypertension by 41% in the posterior cerebrum (P < 0.05) but had no effect in the anterior cerebrum (P > 0.05). Treatment with magnesium did not change NaFl permeability, cerebral oedema formation or AQP4 expression. In summary, BBB permeability to Evan's Blue was increased by acute hypertension in LP rats, and this was attenuated by treatment with magnesium sulphate. The greatest effect on BBB permeability to EB was in the posterior cerebrum, an area particularly susceptible to oedema formation during eclampsia. [source] Biomass, nutrient and pigment content of beech (Fagus sylvatica) saplings infected with Phytophthora citricola, P. cambivora, P. pseudosyringae and P. undulataFOREST PATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2004F. Fleischmann Summary Fagus sylvatica saplings were infected with Phytophthora citricola, Phytophthora cambivora, Phytophthora pseudosyringae and Phytophthora undulata to study the influence of these root pathogens on total belowground and aboveground biomass, on the nutrient distribution within plants, on the concentration of plastid pigments, including tocopherol and on components of the xanthophyll cycle. Phytophthora citricola and P. cambivora infection significantly reduced total biomass of beech when compared with control plants and finally most of these plants died at the end of the experiment. However, beech invaded by the other two Phytophthora spp. did not differ from control plants and none of them was killed. Fine root length as well as the number of root tips of all infected beeches were reduced between 30 and 50%. The excellent growth of beech infected with P. pseudosyringae and P. undulata when compared with control plants was correlated with a strong increase of important root efficiency parameters. Phytophthora citricola and P. cambivora caused a significant reduction in nitrogen concentration of leaves in comparison with control and other infected plants, whereas this nutrient was slightly increased in fine and coarse roots. Furthermore, the phosphorus and potassium concentrations in leaves were impaired after infection with P. citricola. However, foliar concentrations of Ca and Mg were not affected by the different Phytophthora spp., whereas fine and coarse roots were significantly enriched with Ca in beech infected with P. citricola or P. cambivora. The concentrations of , -tocopherol and xanthophyll cycle pigments were increased in plants infected by P. citricola and P. cambivora, indicating that several reactive oxygen species might be formed in leaves during infection. Résumé Des plants de Fagus sylvatica ont été infectés par Phytophthora citricola, Phytophthora cambivora, Phytophthora pseudosyringae et Phytophthora undulata pour étudier l'effet de ces pathogènes racinaires sur la biomasse totale aérienne et racinaire, la distribution des éléments minéraux dans les plantes et la concentration en pigments des plastes, tocophérol et composants du cycle des xanthophylles. L'infection par P. citricola et P. cambivora a entraîné une réduction significative de la biomasse totale par rapport aux plantes témoins et la plupart des plants infectés sont morts au cours de l'expérience. Par contre, les hêtres infectés par les deux autres espèces de Phytophthora ne différent pas des témoins et aucune mortalité n'a été observée. Chez tous les hêtres infectés, une réduction de 30 à 50% de la longueur de racines fines et du nombre d'extrémités racinaires a été observée. La très bonne croissance des plants infectés par P. pseudosyringae et P. undulata par rapport aux témoins est associée à une forte augmentation de paramètres importants d'efficience racinaire. P. citricola et P. cambivora ont causé une réduction significative de la concentration foliaire en azote par rapport aux plantes témoins et aux autres plantes infectées, alors que la concentration était légèrement augmentée dans les fines et grosses racines. De plus, la concentration foliaire en phosphore et potassium a été altérée après infection par P. citricola. Les concentrations foliaires en Ca et Mg n'ont pas été affectées par les différentes espèces de Phytophthora, les fines et grosses racines étant significativement enrichies en Ca chez les plants infectés par P. citricola ou P. cambivora. La concentration en , -tocophérol et pigments du cycle des xanthophylles a augmenté dans les plants infectés par P. citricola et P. cambivora, suggérant la formation de plusieurs espèces actives de l'oxygène dans les feuilles pendant l'infection. Zusammenfassung Buchensämlinge wurden mit Phytophthora citricola, Phytophthora cambivora, Phytophthora pseudosyringae und mit Phytophthora undulata infiziert, um den Einfluss dieser Wurzelpathogene auf die oberirdische und unterirdische Biomasse, auf die Nährstoffverteilung innerhalb verschiedener Pflanzenorgane, sowie auf die Gehalte unterschiedlicher Photosynthesepigmente und Komponenten des Xanthophyll- Zyklus studieren zu können. Die Infektion mit P. citricola und P. cambivora führte zu einer deutlich reduzierten Gesamtbiomasse und am Versuchsende waren die meisten Pflanzen abgestorben. Dagegen überlebten alle mit P. pseudosyringae oder P. undulata infizierten Buchen und sie zeigten keine Unterschiede in ihren Biomassen verglichen mit Kontrollpflanzen bzw. übertrafen diese sogar. Die Feinwurzellänge und die Anzahl ihrer Wurzelspitzen war bei allen Phytophthora infizierten Pflanzen zwischen 30 und 50% im Vergleich zu denen der Kontrollen reduziert. Das ausgezeichnete Wachstum der P. pseudosyringae und P. undulata infizierten Pflanzen ging mit stark gesteigerten Wurzeleffizienzparametern einher. Die P. citricola und P. cambivora Infektion führte zu reduzierten Stickstoffgehalten in den Blättern. Die Gehalte in den Wurzeln waren jedoch leicht erhöht. Zudem wurden reduzierte Gehalte an Phosphor und Kalium in den Blättern gemessen. Die Calcium und Magnesium- Konzentrationen der Blätter unterschieden sich nicht von denen der Kontrollen. Allerdings wurde eine Calcium-Anreicherung in den Fein- und Grobwurzeln infizierter Pflanzen gemessen. Weiterhin zeigten wir, dass die Konzentrationen von , -Tocopherol und Pigmenten des Xanthophyll-Zyklus in Blättern P. citricola und P. cambivora infizierter Pflanzen erhöht waren, was möglicherweise auf die Bildung reaktiver Sauerstoffspezies hindeutet. [source] Incidence of Phytophthora species in oak forests in Austria and their possible involvement in oak declineFOREST PATHOLOGY, Issue 3 2003Y. Balci Summary A survey on the occurrence of Phytophthora species in oak ecosystems in Austria was conducted from April to May 1999 and in June 2000. The investigations were carried out at 35 study sites distributed throughout the zone of oak forests in eastern Austria. Four oak species, including Quercus robur, Q. petraea, Q. cerris and Q. pubescens were considered in the survey. Rhizosphere soil samples were taken from sample trees, which consisted of healthy and declining trees as indicated by their crown transparency. Young oak leaflets were used as baits to recover Phytophthora species. The assemblage of Phytophthora spp. detected in Austrian oak forests consisted of five species, including Phytophthora quercina, P. citricola, P. gonapodyides, P. europaea and P. syringae. P. quercina and P. citricola were isolated from 11 and seven sites, respectively, and were thus the most common and most widely distributed species. The three other species were recovered only sporadically. P. citricola could be separated into two morphologically and genetically well-characterized types (A and B). Phytophthora species, in particular the common P. quercina and P. citricola occurred on sites showing a wide variety of soil types, soil textures and moisture classes. There was mild evidence for connection between deteriorating crown status and the presence of Phytophthora spp. Furthermore, significant differences in contents of magnesium, as well as calcium, aluminium, nitrogen and carbon at different soil depths (0,10, 10,20 and 20,40 cm) were detected between Phytophthora -infested and Phytophthora -free sites. The results of the present study provide circumstantial evidence that Phytophthora species are involved in oak decline at certain sites in Austria. Résumé Une prospection des espèces de Phytophthora dans les écosystèmes de chênaie a été réalisée en Autriche en avril-mai 1999 et en juin 2000. Les recherches ont été conduites dans 35 sites répartis dans l'ensemble des chênaies de l'est de l'Autriche. Quatre espèces de chênes ont été prises en considération: Quercus robur, Q. petraea, Q. cerris et Q. pubescens. Des échantillons de sol rhizosphérique ont été prélevés au pied d'arbres sains ou dépérissants, jugés d'après la transparence de leur houppier. De jeunes feuilles de chênes ont été utilisées comme piège. Les Phytophthora spp. détectés dans les chênaies autrichiennes appartenaient à cinq espèces : P. quercina, P. citricola, P. gonapodyides, P. europaea et P. syringae. Phytophthora quercina et P. citricola ont été isolés dans 11 et 7 sites respectivement; ils étaient les plus fréquents et les plus largement répandus. Les trois autres espèces n'ont été trouvées que sporadiquement. Chez P. citricola, deux types (A et B) ont pu être distingués, morphologiquement et génétiquement différents. Les espèces de Phytophthora, en particulier P. quercina et P. citricola,étaient présents dans des sites très variés pour les types de sol, leur texture et l'humidité. Phythophthora spp. tendaient àêtre plus fréquemment présents en lien avec la détérioration des houppiers. Par ailleurs, des différences significatives ont été trouvées entre les sites avec ou sans Phytophthora, pour les teneurs en magnésium ainsi qu'en calcium, aluminium, azote et carbone à différentes profondeurs du sol (0,10, 10,20 et 20,40 cm). Les résultats montrent que des espèces de Phytophthora sont impliquées dans le dépérissement des chênes dans certains sites en Autriche. Zusammenfassung Im Rahmen einer breit angelegten Erhebung wurde im April und Mai 1999 sowie im Juni 2000 das Auftreten von Phytophthora -Arten in Eichenwaldökosystemen in Österreich untersucht. Die Erhebungen wurden an 35 Standorten durchgeführt, die über das gesamte natürliche Eichenwaldvorkommen in Ostösterreich verteilt waren. In die Untersuchung wurden die vier Eichenarten Quercus robur, Q. petraea, Q. cerris und Q. pubescens einbezogen. Von jeder , anhand ihres Kronenzustands als gesund bzw. krank eingestuften , Eiche wurden Bodenproben entnommen und aus diesen mittels ,Eichenblatt'-Ködermethode die Phytophthora -Arten isoliert. Das Spektrum der in Österreich isolierten Phytophthora -Arten umfasste die 5 Arten Phytophthora quercina, P. citricola, P. gonapodyides, P. europaea und P. syringae. P. quercina und P. citricola wurden von 11 bzw. 7 der untersuchten Standorte isoliert und waren somit die häufigsten und am weitesten verbreiteten Arten. Die drei anderen Phytophthora -Arten traten hingegen nur sporadisch auf. Innerhalb von P. citricola konnten anhand morphologischer und genetischer Merkmale 2 Typen (Typ A und Typ B) unterschieden werden. Phytophthora -Arten, insbesondere die häufig nachgewiesenen Arten P. quercina und P. citricola wurden an Standorten mit den unterschiedlichsten Bodentypen, -textur und -feuchteklassen nachgewissen. Es wurde ein schwach signifikanter Zusammenhang zwischen dem sich verschlechternden Kronenzustand und dem Vorhandensein von Phytophthora nachgewissen. Darüber hinaus unterschieden sich Phytophthora -infizierte und Phytophthora -freie Standorte in verschiedenen Bodentiefen (0,10, 10,20 und 20,40 cm) signifikant in ihren Magnesium, Kalzium, Aluminium, Stickstoff und Kohlenstoff-Gehalten. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Studie lassen den Schluss zu, dass Phytophthora -Arten an einigen Untersuchungsstandorten in Österreich am Eichensterben beteiligt sind. [source] Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Magnesium and Calcium Removal by Brown Midrib Sorghum Sudangrass in the Northeastern USAJOURNAL OF AGRONOMY AND CROP SCIENCE, Issue 6 2006Q. M. Ketterings Abstract For the long-term sustainability of the dairy industry in the Northeastern USA, manure nutrient application rates should not exceed crop nutrient removal once above-optimum soil fertility levels are reached. Dairy producers have shown a growing interest in brown midrib (BMR) forage sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench.) × sudangrass (Sorghum sudanense Piper) hybrids (S × S) as a more environmentally sound alternative to maize (Zea mays L.) but data on S × S nutrient removal rates are scant. Our objectives were to determine N, P, K, Ca and Mg removal with harvest as impacted by N application rate, using six N rate studies in New York. One of the six sites had a recent manure history. Although site-to-site differences existed, N application tended to decrease P and K and increase N, Ca and Mg concentrations in BMR S × S forage. Nutrient removal and yield were highly correlated for all sites except one location that showed a K deficiency. The crop removed large amounts of P and K in the manured site, suggesting that BMR S × S is an excellent scavenger of these nutrients. If manure is applied mid-season, forage K levels are likely too high for feeding to non-lactating cows. [source] Controlling the biodegradation rate of magnesium using biomimetic apatite coatingJOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, Issue 2 2009Yajing Zhang Abstract Magnesium is light, biocompatible and has similar mechanical properties to natural bone, so it has the potential to be used as a biodegradable material for orthopedic applications. However, pure magnesium severely corrodes in a physiological environment, which may result in fracture prior to substantial tissue healing. Hydroxyapatite (HA) is the main composition of natural bone. It has excellent bioactivity and osteoconductivity. In this study, HA coating with two different thicknesses was applied onto the surface of pure magnesium substrates using a biomimetic technique. The corrosion rate of the surface-treated substrates was tested. It was found that both types of coatings substantially slowed down the corrosion of the substrate, and the dual coating was more effective than the single coating in hindering the degradation of the substrate. Thus, the corrosion rate of magnesium implants can be closely tailored by adjusting apatite coating thickness and thereby monitoring the release of magnesium ions into the body. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2009 [source] Calcium Channel Antagonism Reduces Exercise-Induced Ventricular Arrhythmias in Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia Patients with RyR2 MutationsJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2005HEIKKI SWAN M.D. Introduction: Recently, gain-of-function mutations of cardiac ryanodine receptor RyR2 gene have been identified as a cause of familial or catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia. We examined the influence of the calcium channel blockers, verapamil and magnesium, on exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias in patients with RyR2 mutations. Methods and Results: Six molecularly defined catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia patients, all carrying a RyR2 mutation and on ,-adrenergic blocker therapy, underwent exercise stress test four times: at baseline, after verapamil and magnesium sulphate infusions, and finally, without interventions. The number of isolated and successive premature ventricular complexes during exercise ranged from 40 to 374 beats (mean 165 beats) at baseline, and was reduced during verapamil by 76 ± 17% (P < 0.05). Premature ventricular complexes appeared later and at higher heart rate during verapamil than at baseline (119 ± 21 vs. 127 ± 27 min,1, P < 0.05). Magnesium did not inhibit the arrhythmias. Results in the fourth exercise stress test without interventions were similar to those in the first baseline study. Conclusions: This study provides the first in vivo demonstration that a calcium channel antagonist, verapamil, can suppress premature ventricular complexes and nonsustained ventricular salvoes in catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia caused by RyR2 mutations. Modifying the abnormal calcium handling by calcium antagonists might have therapeutic value. [source] Beta-Adrenergic Stimulation of Pig Myocytes with Decreased Cytosolic Free Magnesium Prolongs the Action Potential and Enhances Triggered ActivityJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 6 2002SHAO-KUI WEI M.D. Beta-Adrenergic Stimulation and Repolarization.Introduction: Heart failure results in chronic beta-adrenergic stimulation, repolarization lability, and arrhythmias associated with early afterdepolarizations (EADs) and delayed afterdepolarizations (DADs). Having described a significant reduction in intracellular free magnesium ([Mg2+]i) in experimental heart failure, we asked whether a reduction in [Mg2+]i would delay repolarization or facilitate EADs and/or DADs. Methods and Results: Left ventricular myocytes were isolated from Yorkshire swine. Cytosolic free [Mg2+] was set at 0.12 mM (LoMg) or 1.2 mM (HiMg) through pipette dialysis. Action potentials (AP), Ca current (ICa), and sodium/calcium exchange current (INCX) were measured in the presence or absence of isoproterenol (2 ,M) at 37°C. Under basal conditions (0.1-Hz stimulation, 2 mM external [Ca2+]), reducing [Mg2+]i had no effect on AP duration and ICa but did significantly enhance INCX. In contrast, during superfusion with isoproterenol, reduced [Mg2+]i caused a significant increase in AP duration at both 50% and 90% repolarization (APD50 and APD90) compared with HiMg (P < 0.05). LoMg cells manifested a high incidence of triggered activities, including spontaneous AP, EADs, and DADs (83.3% in LoMg, n = 12 vs 38.3% in HiMg, n = 13; P < 0.05). ICa and INCX were significantly increased in LoMg cells compared with HiMg cells (P < 0.05). Conclusion: Decreased cytosolic free magnesium prolongs AP duration and increases the incidence of triggered activity during beta-adrenergic stimulation. These effects may be due to increased ICa and INCX in the presence of reduced intracellular [Mg2+]. A magnesium-dependent increase in triggered activity coupled with delayed repolarization during beta-adrenergic stimulation could contribute to the arrhythmogenic substrate in heart failure. [source] Floristic inventory and diversity assessment of a lowland African Montane Rainforest at Korup, Cameroon and implications for conservationAFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Innocent Ndoh Mbue Abstract Twenty modified-Whittaker plots were stratified at different sampling locations from February to May of 2008 in the central zone of Korup National Park, Cameroon. Our interest was to assess floristic diversity and investigate their relationship with environmental variables. Diversity profiles and rank abundance,curves were used for diversity analysis while canonical correspondence analysis and species,response curves were used to investigate the relationships between the response and explanatory variables. Of the 66 families identified, the Rubiaceae (999 species) were the most abundant. The Sterculiaceae (basal area = 10.482 m2 ha,1) were the dominant family, while the co-dominant families included the Ebenaceae (basal area = 9.092 m2 ha,1) and the Euphorbiaceae (basal area = 8.168 m2 ha,1). Soil variables explained 54.3% of total variation in family distribution. Canonical axes were related to different environmental gradients: axis1 was related to increasing canopy cover (r = 0.6951); axis 2, increasing Magnesium (r = 0.8465) and effective cation exchange capacity (r = 0.5899); axis 3, increasing effective cation exchange capacity (r = 0.5536); while axis 4, increasing Phosphorus concentration (r = 0.5232). Our results demonstrate the advantage which diversity profiles have over single or combination of indices, and the importance of using a combination of methodologies in diversity analysis. Résumé De février à mai 2008, vingt parcelles de Whittaker modifié ont été stratifiées à différents sites d'échantillonnage dans la zone centrale du Parc National de Korup, au Cameroun. Nous voulions évaluer la diversité floristique et étudier son lien avec diverses variables environnementales. Nous avons employé des profils de diversité et des courbes de rangs d'abondance pour l'analyse de la diversité, tandis que nous utilisions une analyse canonique des correspondances et des courbes de réponse des espèces pour étudier les relations entre les réponses et les variables explicatives. Sur les 66 familles identifiées, les Rubiacées (999 espèces) étaient les plus abondantes. Les Sterculiacées (surface basale = 10,482 m2 ha,1) étaient la famille dominante et, parmi les familles co-dominantes, il y avait les Ebénacées (surface basale = 9,092 m2 ha,1) et les Euphorbiacées (surface basale = 8,168 m2 ha,1). Des variables du sol expliquaient 54,3% de la variation totale de la distribution des familles. Les axes canoniques ont été liés aux différents gradients environnementaux; l'axe 1 était liéà une couverture croissante de la canopée (r = 0,6951); l'axe 2 à une augmentation du magnésium (r = 0,8465) et à la capacité réelle d'échange de cations (r = 0,5899); l'axe 3 à une capacité réelle croissante d'échanges de cations (r = 0,5536); et l'axe 4 à une concentration croissante en phosphore (r = 0,5532). Nos résultats montrent l'avantage que les profils de diversité ont sur des indices uniques ou combinés et l'importance d'utiliser une combinaison de méthodologies dans une analyse de diversité. [source] Reducing ammonia emission from poultry manure composting via struvite formationJOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY, Issue 6 2007Wenxiu Zhang Abstract Composting can provide a viable alternative for poultry manure management in the Fraser Valley of British Columbia, Canada. However, it has a high potential for ammonia emission because of the high nitrogen content of poultry litter. The objective of this study was to reduce ammonia emission by precipitating ammonia into struvite before it can volatilize from the composting matrix. Nitrogen transformation occurs during composting, but struvite formation can help to conserve nitrogen, and does not allow a large amount of nitrogen to be released into the environment as ammonia or nitrate, because ammonium-nitrogen becomes bound in struvite. It would also be possible to remove phosphorus from the manure. A laboratory-scale experiment was conducted to examine the feasibility of struvite formation during poultry manure composting. Magnesium and phosphate salts were supplemented to create favorable conditions to form struvite. Results indicated that ammonia emission was reduced by 40% to 84%, while the nitrogen retention in compost was enhanced. The struvite formed in compost was confirmed by means of X-ray diffraction; and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry [source] Comparison of intrathecal magnesium, fentanyl, or placebo combined with bupivacaine 0.5% for parturients undergoing elective cesarean deliveryACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 3 2009H. UNLUGENC Background: Intrathecal (i.t.) administration of magnesium has been reported to potentiate opioid antinociception in rats and humans. In this prospective, randomized, double-blind, study, we investigated the sensory, motor, and analgesic block characteristics of i.t. magnesium 50 mg compared with fentanyl 25 ,g and saline when added to 0.5% bupivacaine (10 mg). Methods: Ninety ASA I or II adult patients undergoing cesarean section were randomly allocated to receive 1.0 ml of 0.9% sodium chloride in group S, 50 mg of magnesium sulfate (1.0 ml) 5% in group M, or 25 ,g of fentanyl (1.0 ml) in group F following 10 mg of bupivacaine 0.5% i.t. We recorded the following: onset and duration of sensory and motor block, maximal sensory block height, the time to reach the maximal dermatomal level of sensory block, and the duration of spinal anesthesia. Results: Magnesium did not shorten the onset time of sensory and motor blockade or prolong the duration of spinal anesthesia. The duration of sensory (P<0.032) and motor (P<0.002) blockade was significantly shorter in M and S groups than in the F group. The time to reach the maximal dermatomal level of sensory block was significantly shorter in the F group than in the S and M groups (P<0.002). Conclusion: In patients undergoing cesarean section with spinal anesthesia, the addition of magnesium sulfate (50 mg) i.t. to 10 mg of spinal bupivacaine (0.5%) did not shorten the onset time of sensory and motor blockade or prolong the duration of spinal anesthesia, as seen with fentanyl. [source] Magnesium and biological activity of oxytocin analogues modified on aromatic ring of amino acid in position 2JOURNAL OF PEPTIDE SCIENCE, Issue 8 2001ina Slaninová Abstract For the purpose of evaluating substitution effects in the ortho, meta or para positions of the aromatic ring of tyrosine or phenylalanine in position 2 of oxytocin on uterotonic activity in vitro in the presence and absence of magnesium ions, six new analogues of oxytocin ([,,- and ,,- m -methylphenylalanine2]oxytocin, [,,- and ,,- m -methoxyphenylalanine2]oxytocin and [,,- and ,,- o -methyltyrosine2]oxytocin) were synthesized and several previously described analogues resynthesized. For the phenylalanine series, it is found that, in the absence of magnesium ions, substitution of the ortho and meta positions leads to loss of intrinsic activity (the analogues are antagonists) in contrast to the para position. In the tyrosine series, only methyl substitution in the meta position has this effect (substitution of ortho position only attenuates the agonistic biological activity). Addition of Mg ions restores to a certain degree the agonistic activity in the case of the o -methylphenylalanine analogue and enhances the agonistic activity of o -methyltyrosine oxytocin. All other analogues keep the original qualities as in the absence of Mg. Molecular modelling calculations of the structure of the above analogues was carried out to help explain these findings of the molecular level. Copyright © 2001 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Mechano-Synthesis of Lead,Magnesium,Niobate CeramicsJOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 10 2006Danjela Kuscer The synthesis of Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3 (PMN) with high-energy milling was studied by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) using the Rietveld-refinement method. The results are discussed in terms of the qualitative and quantitative composition of the crystalline and amorphous phases as a function of milling time. The mechano-synthesis of PbO, Nb2O5, and MgO leads to the formation of perovskite PMN. In the initial stage of milling, particle size reduction and a high degree of amorphization were observed, together with the simultaneous formation of perovskite and pyrochlore-type structures. A mechanism for the formation of PMN by the mechano-synthesis route is proposed. [source] Independent Effects of Nitrogen Substitution for Oxygen and Yttrium Substitution for Magnesium on the Properties of Mg-Y-Si-Al-O-N GlassesJOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 3 2003Michael J. Pomeroy Glasses of composition (in equivalent percent) (28 ,x)Mg:xY:56Si:16Al:(100 ,y)O:yN, with x= 0, 14, or 28 for y= 0 and 15 and with x= 0, 7, 14, 21, or 28 for y= 10, were prepared by melting and casting. For glasses where the nitrogen content was varied for a constant cationic ratio, the glass molar volume (MV), compactness (C), Young's modulus (E), glass-transition temperature (Tg), and dilatometric-softening temperature (Tds) varied linearly as the nitrogen content increased, with MV decreasing and the other properties increasing. From the incremental changes in these properties with nitrogen content, for glasses with x= 0, 14, and 28, good linear fits (R2 > 0.99) were obtained, and best-fit slopes are reported here. The property changes and their linearity were consistent with the increased cross-linking of the glass network by tricoordinated nitrogen. The replacement of magnesium by yttrium led to a nonlinear decrease in glass compactness and to nonlinear increases in MV, Tg, and Tds. However, linear correlations were found for MV and ionic volume and for Tg, Tds, and the coordination of (Si,Al)(O,N) tetrahedra of the glass structural units to the modifier cations not involved in charge compensating aluminum ions in fourfold coordination. The replacement of magnesium by yttrium had little effect on Young's modulus, and this result was related to similar changes in the compactness, C. The present results showed that the effects of substituting nitrogen for oxygen and yttrium for magnesium are independent and additive; thus, no synergistic effects of anion and cation substitutions were observed. [source] Effect of the Liquid-Phase Characteristic on the Microstructures and Dielectric Properties of Donor- (Niobium) and Acceptor- (Magnesium) Doped Barium TitanateJOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 1 2003Seok-Hyun Yoon Changes in the microstructure and dielectric properties with the variation of the donor/acceptor ratio in BaTiO3 ceramics were investigated. In donor-rich specimens, a liquid that appeared during sintering did not penetrate into grain boundaries. However, in the acceptor-rich specimens, the grains were separated by a liquid film during sintering. The much higher mobility of the liquid film than that of the grain boundaries was suggested to cause extensive grain growth in acceptor-rich BaTiO3. The macroscopic homogenization of dopants because of grain growth in acceptor-rich specimens resulted in changes in the dielectric properties. [source] Adsorption of Magnesium by Bottom Soils in Inland Brackish Water Shrimp Ponds in AlabamaJOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY, Issue 4 2010Harvey J. Pine Low-salinity (2.0,9.0 g/L) well waters used for inland culture of marine shrimp in Alabama are imbalanced with respect to ionic composition. Inputs of potassium (muriate of potash) and potassium-magnesium sulfate (Kmag®) fertilizers are used to correct these imbalances. Potassium is lost in overflow and intentional discharge, seepage, and through adsorption by bottom soils by exchangeable and non-exchangeable processes. This study was initiated to determine if bottom soils removed magnesium in the same manner as potassium. Laboratory soil,water mesocosms revealed that soils strongly adsorbed magnesium. The rate of adsorption tended to decline over time, indicating establishment of the equilibrium. Magnesium losses for the three soils ranged from 1405 to 1713 mg/tank (average = 1568 mg/tank). The cation exchange capacity (CEC) of the soils varied from 10.4 to 44.0 cmolc/kg (average = 24.6cmolc/kg). The decline in magnesium increased with higher soil CEC. In another trial, repeated exposures of soils to solutions of 40 mg Mg2+/L failed to saturate exchange sites, but rather maintained equilibrium with other base cations on soil adsorption sites. Dissolved sulfate resulting from additions of magnesium with magnesium sulfate heptahydrate (MgSO4·7H2O) was also monitored. Although difficulties of analysis occurred, sulfate was not adsorbed appreciably by the soils. [source] Influence of Dietary Levels of Magnesium on Growth, Tissue Mineral Content, and Resistance of Channel Catfish Ictalurus punctatus Challenged with Edwardsiella ictaluriJOURNAL OF THE WORLD AQUACULTURE SOCIETY, Issue 1 2003Chhorn Lim Juvenile channel catfish were fed purified diets supplemented with magnesium (Mg) from Mg sulfate at levels of 0, 200, 400, 600, 800, and 1,000 mg/kg and 0, 200, 400, 600, and 800 mg/kg in two separate feeding studies. In study I, the effect of dietary levels of Mg on growth response, vertebral mineral content, and macrophage chemotaxis were evaluated. Study II had similar objectives except that whole body mineral content was measured, and resistance of channel catfish to Edwardsiella ictaluri challenge was also determined. Fish with an average weight of 10.89 g were stocked at a rate of 50 fish/110-L aquarium (study I). In study II, fish with an average weight of 4.14 g were stocked at rates of 40 fish/110-L aquarium. Prior to stocking, each batch of fish was acclimated to laboratory conditions and fed the basal diet for 2 wk. The concentration of Mg in rearing water was 1.8 mg/L. Each diet was fed to fish in quadruplicate and triplicate aquaria to apparent satiation for 10 wk for studies I and II, respectively. Fish fed the basal diet started to die as early as 3 d after the study began (17 d of feeding the diet without Mg supplementation). In both studies, weight gain, survival, and feed efficiency were lowest for fish fed the basal diet but increased with increasing dietary levels of Mg. However, the differences between the values of each of these parameters for fish fed diets containing supplemental Mg were not always significant. Magnesium-deficiency signs observed were anorexia, sluggishness, convulsions, deformed snout, vertebral curvature, muscle flaccidity, and high mortality. Vertebral and whole body ash concentrations were high, but Mg content was low for fish fed the basal and the 200-mg Mg diets. Bone Ca content did not differ among fish fed different diets (study I), but whole body Ca tended to increase for fish fed the basal diet, suggesting the possibility of calcification of soft tissues. Macrophage chemotaxis in the presence of exoantigen was highest for fish fed diets supplemented with Mg at 400 and 200 mgkg for studies I and II, respectively. When expressed in terms of chemotaxis index, however, maximum or near maximum value was observed at a dietary Mg level of 400 mg/kg. Thus, a dietary level of Mg of 400 mg/kg from Mg sulfate was required for optimum growth and survival, maintaining high tissue levels of Mg, prevention of muscle flaccidity and skeletal deformity, and stimulating macrophage chemotaxis. Dietary levels of Mg had no effect on the resistance of juvenile channel catfish to Edwarsiella. ictaluri challenge. [source] Editorial: Cats and Magnesium,Another Species to ConsiderJOURNAL OF VETERINARY INTERNAL MEDICINE, Issue 3 2002Shane Bateman DVM No abstract is available for this article. [source] The effect of adding intrathecal magnesium sulphate to bupivacaine,fentanyl spinal anaesthesiaACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 10 2005M. Özalevli Background:, The addition of intrathecal (IT) magnesium to spinal fentanyl prolongs the duration of spinal analgesia for vaginal delivery. In this prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled study, we investigated the effect of adding IT magnesium sulphate to bupivacaine,fentanyl spinal anaesthesia. Methods:, One hundred and two ASA I or II adult patients undergoing lower extremity surgery were recruited. They were randomly allocated to receive 1.0 ml of preservative-free 0.9% sodium chloride (group S) or 50 mg of magnesium sulphate 5% (1.0 ml) (group M) following 10 mg of bupivacaine 0.5% plus 25 µg of fentanyl intrathecally. We recorded the following: onset and duration of sensory block, the highest level of sensory block, the time to reach the highest dermatomal level of sensory block and to complete motor block recovery and the duration of spinal anaesthesia. Results:, Magnesium caused a delay in the onset of both sensory and motor blockade. The highest level of sensory block was significantly lower in group M than in group S at 5, 10 and 15 min (P < 0.001). The median time to reach the highest dermatomal level of sensory block was 17 min in group M and 13 min in group S (P < 0.05). The mean degree of motor block was also lower in group M at 5, 10 and 15 min (P < 0.001). The median duration of spinal anaesthesia was longer in group M (P < 0.001). Conclusion:, In patients undergoing lower extremity surgery, the addition of IT magnesium sulphate (50 mg) to spinal anaesthesia induced by bupivacaine and fentanyl significantly delayed the onset of both sensory and motor blockade, but also prolonged the period of anaesthesia without additional side-effects. [source] Magnesium and sulphur in the calcite shells of two brachiopods, Terebratulina retusa and Novocrania anomalaLETHAIA, Issue 1 2007JENNIFER ENGLAND This study determines the distribution of magnesium and sulphur in the shells of two species of brachiopod from the same environment to highlight environmental and biological influences on shell composition. In Terebratulina retusa there are differences in magnesium concentration between the primary layer and the outer and inner regions of the secondary layer. In contrast, Novocrania anomala has a shell composed of high magnesium calcite and there is no significant difference in magnesium concentration between the primary and the secondary shell layers. Sulphur provides an indication of the distribution of sulphated organic matrix within the shells of T. retusa and N. anomala. In T. retusa the distribution of magnesium and sulphur correlates across the shell; however, there is no evidence for a relationship between magnesium and sulphur distribution in N. anomala. The relationship between magnesium and sulphur in T. retusa indicates that a proportion of the magnesium content of the shell is associated with the sulphated fraction of the organic matrix. In these two species of brachiopod, from the same environment, magnesium and organic concentration and distribution are very different, emphasizing the importance of fully understanding the factors that control biomineral composition before the application of these biominerals to environmental studies. [source] Fortschritte beim Rührreibschweißen von Aluminium, Magnesium und StahlMATERIALWISSENSCHAFT UND WERKSTOFFTECHNIK, Issue 9 2006S. Sheikhi Dr.-Ing. Friction Stir Welding; Aluminium; Magnesium; Steel; Tailored welded blanks Abstract Das Rührreibschweißen (Friction Stir Welding (FSW)) stellt einen innovativen Schweißprozess zum Fügen von Leichtmetallen insbesondere von Aluminiumlegierungen dar. Die Herstellung von Aluminiumverbindungen mit konventionellen Schmelzschweißverfahren erfüllt nicht immer und nicht bei jeder Legierung die von der Industrie gestellten Qualitätsanforderungen. Das Rührreibschweißen stellt eine Alternative zu den Schmelzschweißverfahren dar. Die entstehenden Schweißnähte weisen gute mechanische Eigenschaften auf, das Verfahren ist robust und seine Reproduzierbarkeit sehr gut. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wird der Einsatz des Rührreibschweißens zum Fügen von Aluminium- und Magnesiumlegierungen erläutert. Dabei werden artgleiche und artungleiche Verbindungen und deren mechanische Eigenschaften beschrieben. Das Rührreibschweißen von Stahl mit seinen besonderen Anforderungen an das Schweißwerkzeug wird ebenfalls vorgestellt. Progresses on the friction stir welding of aluminium, magnesium and steel Friction Stir Welding (FSW) represents an innovative welding process for joining light metal, especially, aluminium and its alloys. Friction Stir Welding offers an attractive alternative to conventional fusion welding processes because of the excellent properties (particularly ductility), reproducibility, robustness, and surface finish obtained with the process. Within the scope of this work the Friction Stir Welding-Process with its possible joint configurations is explained. The focus of this work concentrates on weldability studies concerning cladded aluminium alloys, aluminium cast alloys, aluminium tailored welded blanks both from similar and dissimilar joints produced in aluminium, magnesium and steel. The mechanical properties of the welded samples will be discussed. [source] Treatment of restless legs syndrome: An evidence-based review and implications for clinical practice,,MOVEMENT DISORDERS, Issue 16 2008Claudia Trenkwalder MD Abstract Only in the last three decades, the restless legs syndrome (RLS) has been examined in randomized controlled trials. The Movement Disorder Society (MDS) commissioned a task force to perform an evidence-based review of the medical literature on treatment modalities used to manage patients with RLS. The task force performed a search of the published literature using electronic databases. The therapeutic efficacy of each drug was classified as being either efficacious, likely efficacious, investigational, nonefficacious, or lacking sufficient evidence to classify. Implications for clinical practice were generated based on the levels of evidence and particular features of each modality, such as adverse events. All studies were classed according to three levels of evidence. All Level-I trials were included in the efficacy tables; if no Level-I trials were available then Level-II trials were included or, in the absence of Level-II trials, Level-III studies or case series were included. Only studies published in print or online before December 31, 2006 were included. All studies published after 1996, which attempted to assess RLS augmentation, were reviewed in a separate section. The following drugs are considered efficacious for the treatment of RLS: levodopa, ropinirole, pramipexole, cabergoline, pergolide, and gabapentin. Drugs considered likely efficacious are rotigotine, bromocriptine, oxycodone, carbamazepine, valproic acid, and clonidine. Drugs that are considered investigational are dihydroergocriptine, lisuride, methadone, tramadol, clonazepam, zolpidem, amantadine, and topiramate. Magnesium, folic acid, and exercise are also considered to be investigational. Sumanirole is nonefficacious. Intravenous iron dextran is likely efficacious for the treatment of RLS secondary to end-stage renal disease and investigational in RLS subjects with normal renal function. The efficacy of oral iron is considered investigational; however, its efficacy appears to depend on the iron status of subjects. Cabergoline and pergolide (and possibly lisuride) require special monitoring due to fibrotic complications including cardiac valvulopathy. Special monitoring is required for several other medications based on clinical concerns: opioids (including, but not limited to, oxycodone, methadone and tramadol), due to possible addiction and respiratory depression, and some anticonvulsants (particularly, carbamazepine and valproic acid), due to systemic toxicities. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society [source] Magnesium, inflammation, and obesity in chronic diseaseNUTRITION REVIEWS, Issue 6 2010Forrest H Nielsen About 60% of adults in the United States do not consume the estimated average requirement for magnesium, but widespread pathological conditions attributed to magnesium deficiency have not been reported. Nevertheless, low magnesium status has been associated with numerous pathological conditions characterized as having a chronic inflammatory stress component. In humans, deficient magnesium intakes are mostly marginal to moderate (approximately 50% to <100% of the recommended dietary allowance). Animal experiments indicate that signs of marginal-to-moderate magnesium deficiency can be compensated or exacerbated by other factors influencing inflammatory and oxidative stress; recent studies suggest a similar happening in humans. This suggestion may have significance in obesity, which is characterized as having a chronic low-grade inflammation component and an increased incidence of a low magnesium status. Marginal-to-moderate magnesium deficiency through exacerbating chronic inflammatory stress may be contributing significantly to the occurrence of chronic diseases such as atherosclerosis, hypertension, osteoporosis, diabetes mellitus, and cancer. [source] Intravenous Magnesium for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1 (CRPS 1) Patients: A Pilot StudyPAIN MEDICINE, Issue 5 2009Susan Collins MSc ABSTRACT Objectives., To explore the feasibility of intravenous magnesium administration as a potential candidate intervention for a large size trial in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1 (CRPS 1). Design., Randomized clinical trial. Setting., Outpatient pain clinic. Patients., Ten CRPS 1 patients. Interventions., Eight patients received 70 mg/kg magnesium sulphate infusions in 4 hours for 5 days. For blinding purposes, 2 patients received equal amount NaCl 0.9% solutions (data not analyzed or presented). Interventions were accompanied by standardized physical therapy. Outcome Measures., Pain was assessed using an 11-point Box scale (three times daily for a week) and the McGill Pain Questionnaire. Skin sensitivity was measured with the Semmes Weinstein Monofilaments, (other) impairments with the Impairment Level Sumscore. In addition, functional limitations (Radboud Skills Questionnaire, questionnaire rising and sitting down) and quality of life (Short Form-36 [SF-36], EuroQol) were evaluated. Assessments were performed at baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 12 weeks after intervention. Results., Mild systemic side effects were experienced and the infusions were locally well tolerated. Pain was significantly reduced at all follow up compared with baseline (T1: P = 0.01, T3: P = 0.04, T6: P = 0.02, T12: P = 0.02). McGill sensory subscale improved significantly at T1 (number of words chosen: P = 0.03 and pain rating index: P = 0.03). Impairment level (P = 0.03) and quality of life (EuroQol P = 0.04, SF-36 physical P = 0.01) were significantly improved at T12. No improvement was found for skin sensitivity and functional limitations. Conclusion., Intravenous magnesium significantly improved pain, impairment and quality of life and was well tolerated. The results of this pilot study are encouraging and suggest that magnesium IV as a treatment in CRPS 1 should be further explored in a large size formal trial design. [source] A Study on the Formation of Smectite in Silica Scales Precipitated from Geothermal Water: The Effect of MagnesiumRESOURCE GEOLOGY, Issue 3 2005Yoshinobu Aramaki Abstract. Silica scales containing large amounts of smectite were recently found in the pipelines for geothermal water at a geothermal power plant. To elucidate the mechanism of smectite formation, seven silica scale samples were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, chemical analysis and 27A1 MAS NMR. Smectite was present in samples with MgO levels above 10 wt% and Al2O3 levels below 10 wt%. In 27A1 MAS NMR spectra, peaks assigned to both tetrahedrally and octahedrally coordinated aluminum (Al(4) and Al(6)) were observed for Mg-rich samples, whereas a peak due to Al(4) alone appeared in Mg-poor samples. From these observation and comparison between 27A1 MAS NMR spectra for synthesized precipitates of Al2O3 -SiO2 containing MgO and not containing MgO, it is concluded that magnesium plays an important role in the stabilization of Al(6), and results in the formation of smectite [source] |