Outflow

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Outflow

  • capital outflow
  • fluid outflow
  • sympathetic outflow
  • venous outflow

  • Terms modified by Outflow

  • outflow boundary condition
  • outflow concentration
  • outflow gradient
  • outflow obstruction
  • outflow pathway
  • outflow rate
  • outflow reconstruction
  • outflow resistance
  • outflow tract
  • outflow tract gradient
  • outflow tract obstruction
  • outflow velocity

  • Selected Abstracts


    Infertility observed in female rats treated with N-acetyl-L-cysteine: Histopathological examination of ovarian follicles and recovery of fertility

    CONGENITAL ANOMALIES, Issue 3 2003
    Miwa Harada
    ABSTRACT, We previously reported infertility in female rats that received N,acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) intravenously at a dosage of 1000 mg/kg/day. Unfertilized oocytes and gestation day 1 and 2 embryos were assessed morphologically, and the results suggested that absence or thinning of the zona pellucida (ZP) is related to infertility. However, the morphological characteristics of oocytes before ovulation and recovery from the effects of NAC were not clarified. In the present study, the ovarian follicles were histopathologi,cally examined and the recovery of reproductive function was evaluated to investigate the effects of NAC. Female Sprague-Dawley rats at 10 weeks of age received NAC intravenously at 1000 mg/kg/day for more than 1 week. Thinning of the ZP was observed in the ovarian follicles in all stages of growth by light microscopy. Outflow of the components of the ZP between the corona radiata and disarrangement of the corona radiata were more pronounced in growing follicles than in large secondary follicles. Similar findings were observed by electron microscopy, and the effects of NAC were limited to the ZP. Infertility and thinning of the ZP were observed in the no,recovery NAC group, but not in the recovery NAC group, in which animals recovered within four estrous cycles after NAC administration. It has been reported that the ZP is expressed by oocytes or by both oocytes and granulosa cells, but no changes were noted in these cells. The present findings suggest that NAC affects the ZP directly and that reproductive function may recover from the effects of NAC. [source]


    Myeloproliferative disorders: a time of new definitions Outflow from New Horizons in Haematology Meeting, 9,10 March 2007

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 2007
    Radek Skoda
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Modelling lake stage and water balance of Lake Tana, Ethiopia

    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 25 2009
    Yirgalem A. Chebud
    Abstract The level of Lake Tana, Ethiopia, fluctuates annually and seasonally following the patterns of changes in precipitation. In this study, a mass balance approach is used to estimate the hydrological balance of the lake. Water influx from four major rivers, subsurface inflow from the floodplains, precipitation, outflow from the lake constituting river discharge and evapotranspiration from the lake are analysed on monthly and annual bases. Spatial interpolation of precipitation using rain gauge data was conducted using kriging. Outflow from the lake was identified as the evaporation from the lake's surface as well as discharge at the outlet where the Blue Nile commences. Groundwater inflow is estimated using MODular three-dimensional finite-difference ground-water FLOW model software that showed an aligned flow pattern to the river channels. The groundwater outflow is considered negligible based on the secondary sources that confirmed the absence of lake water geochemical mixing outside of the basin. Evaporation is estimated using Penman's, Meyer's and Thornwaite's methods to compare the mass balance and energy balance approaches. Meteorological data, satellite images and temperature perturbation simulations from Global Historical Climate Network of National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration are employed for estimation of evaporation input parameters. The difference of the inflow and outflow was taken as storage in depth and compared with the measured water level fluctuations. The study has shown that the monthly and annually calculated lake level replicates the observed values with root mean square error value of 0·17 and 0·15 m, respectively. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    The development of a new dust uplift scheme in the Met Office Unified ModelÔ

    METEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, Issue 4 2009
    D. Ackerley
    Abstract Aeolian mineral dust aerosol is an important consideration in the Earth's radiation budget as well as a source of nutrients to oceanic and land biota. The modelling of aeolian mineral dust has been improving consistently despite the relatively sparse observations to constrain them. This study documents the development of a new dust emissions scheme in the Met Office Unified ModelÔ (MetUM) based on the Dust Entrainment and Deposition (DEAD) module. Four separate case studies are used to test and constrain the model output. Initial testing was undertaken on a large dust event over North Africa in March 2006 with the model constrained using AERONET data. The second case study involved testing the capability of the model to represent dust events in the Middle East without being re-tuned from the March 2006 case in the Sahara. While the model is unable to capture some of the daytime variation in AERONET AOD there is good agreement between the model and observed dust events. In the final two case studies new observations from in situ aircraft data during the Dust Outflow and Deposition to the Ocean (DODO) campaigns in February and August 2006 were used. These recent observations provided further data on dust size distributions and vertical profiles to constrain the model. The modelled DODO cases were also compared to AERONET data to make sure the radiative properties of the dust were comparable to observations. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society and Crown Copyright [source]


    Large Apical Muscular Ventricular Septal Defect: Asymptomatic due to Anomalous Muscle Bundles in the Right Ventricle

    CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE, Issue 1 2007
    Anant Khositseth MD
    ABSTRACT This case report demonstrated an apical muscular ventricular septal defect (VSD) that was a large defect but behaved like a small defect because of the restrictive flow across the anomalous muscle bundles in the right ventricular (RV) apex. The anomalous muscle bundles separated the RV sinus into two parts: the RV apex connecting with the left ventricle through the apical muscular VSD on one side, and the rest of the RV sinus connecting with RV inflow and RV outflow on the other side. These findings explained why the 11-year-old girl in this study remained asymptomatic without evidence of volume load. Thus far, it was not necessary to close her defect because of the hemodynamic insignificance. [source]


    Hypocretin/orexin and energy expenditure

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2010
    J. A. Teske
    Abstract The hypocretins or orexins are endogenous neuropeptides synthesized in discrete lateral, perifornical and dorsal hypothalamic neurones. These multi-functional neuropeptides modulate energy homeostasis, arousal, stress, reward, reproduction and cardiovascular function. This review summarizes the role of hypocretins in modulating non-sleep-related energy expenditure with specific focus on the augmentation of whole body energy expenditure as well as hypocretin-induced physical activity and sympathetic outflow. We compare the efficacy of hypocretin-1 and 2 on energy expenditure and evaluate whether the literature implicates hypocretin signalling though the hypocretin-1 and -2 receptor as having shared and or functionally specific physiological effects. Thus far data suggest that hypocretin-1 has a more robust stimulatory effect relative to hypocretin-2. Furthermore, hypocretin-1 receptor predominantly mediates behaviours known to influence energy expenditure. Further studies on the hypocretin-2 receptor are needed. [source]


    Evaluation of sympathetic vasoconstrictor response following nociceptive stimulation of latent myofascial trigger points in humans

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 4 2009
    Y. Kimura
    Abstract Aim:, Myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) are a major cause of musculoskeletal pain. It has been reported that stimulation of a latent MTrP increases motor activity and facilitates muscle pain via activation of the sympathetic nervous system. However, the magnitude of the sympathetic vasoconstrictor response following stimulation of MTrP has not been studied in healthy volunteers. The aims of this study were to (1) evaluate the magnitude of the vasoconstrictor response following a nociceptive stimulation (intramuscular glutamate) of MTrPs and a breath-hold manoeuvre (activation of sympathetic outflow) and (2) assess whether the vasoconstrictor response can be further modulated by combining a nociceptive stimulation of MTrPs and breath-hold. Methods:, Fourteen healthy subjects were recruited in this study. This study consisted of four sessions (normal breath group as control, breath-hold group, glutamate MTrP injection group and glutamate MTrP injection + breath-hold group). Skin blood flow and skin temperature in both forearms were measured with laser Doppler flowmetry and infrared thermography, respectively, in each session (before the treatment, during the treatment and after the treatment). Results:, Glutamate injection into MTrPs decreased skin temperature and blood flow in the peripheral area. The magnitudes of the reduction were comparable to those induced by the breath-hold manoeuvre, which has been used to induce sympathetic vasoconstrictor response. Conclusion:, The combination of glutamate injection into latent MTrPs together with the breath-hold manoeuvre did not result in further decrease in skin temperature and blood flow, indicating that sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity is fully activated by nociceptive stimulation of MTrPs. [source]


    Partial reversal of conduction slowing during repetitive stimulation of single sympathetic efferents in human skin

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2004
    M. Campero
    Abstract Aims:, To describe and identify the function of a class of human C fibre with an unusual response to repetitive electrical stimulation. Other C fibres slow progressively at 2 Hz (type 1), reach a latency plateau (type 2) or hardly slow at all (type 3). Methods:, C fibres innervating hairy skin were recorded by microneurography in the superficial peroneal nerves of 19 healthy volunteers. Baseline electrical stimulation of the skin was at 0.25 Hz, and activity-dependent slowing recorded during stimulation at 2 Hz for 3 min and after a 3-min pause in stimulation. Results:, In 41 units, there was a partial recovery of latency during repetitive stimulation. These were classified as ,type-4' units, and identified as sympathetic efferents, since they exhibited spontaneously activity, which was enhanced by manoeuvres that increase sympathetic outflow (15 of 16 cases) and/or suppressed by a proximal anaesthetic block (eight of eight cases). The peak slowing during 2 Hz trains averaged 6.47 ± 2.06% (mean ± SD, n = 41), but after 3 min the slowing had reduced to 4.90 ± 2.20%, which was less than in all type 1 (nociceptor) fibres but similar to that in type 2 (cold) fibres. Compared with cold fibres, type-4 sympathetic fibres slowed more after the first 10 impulses at 2 Hz (2.57 ± 0.45%) and also after a pause in stimulation (1.66 ± 0.51%). Conclusions:, The distinctive activity-dependent slowing profiles of these type-4 sympathetic C units may help identification in vitro, and suggest that hyperpolarization-activated channels have a particularly prominent role in the axonal membrane. [source]


    Influence of neurohumoral blockade on heart rate and blood pressure responses to haemorrhage in isoflurane anaesthetized rats

    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2000
    UllmanArticle first published online: 24 DEC 200
    Four groups of Sprague,Dawley rats were anaesthetized with isoflurane (ISO) (1.7% end-tidal concentration) in 40% oxygen, and mechanically ventilated. The animals were bled 15 mL kg,1 b.w. from the femoral vein over 10 min, followed by an observation period of 30 min. Ten minutes before haemorrhage each group of animals was pre-treated with intravenous injection/infusion of either: isotonic saline (Group B; CON; n=7), vasopressin V1 -receptor antagonist [d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)AVP; 10 ,g kg,1] (Group C; AVP-a; n=7), the non-selective angiotensin II receptor antagonist saralasin (10 ,g kg,1 min,1) (Group D; SAR; n=7) or hexamethonium (10 mg kg,1) (Group E; HEX; n=7). A separate group of conscious animals were pre-treated with isotonic NaCl and subjected to the same haemorrhage protocol (Group A; AW; n=7). Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR) and blood gases were observed during the experiments. Only pre-treatment with SAR and HEX reduced MAP significantly. The pre-haemorrhage HR was only affected by HEX, which caused a reduction by 17%. The HR was significantly lower at the end of haemorrhage compared with pre-haemorrhage levels in all groups except that group treated with HEX. In that group the HR changed in the opposite direction. The ability to maintain MAP during haemorrhage, and the post-haemorrhage period, was significantly impaired in the groups treated with AVP-a, SAR or HEX compared with the group receiving NaCl. It is concluded that autonomic nervous activity is of major importance for the maintenance of MAP during isoflurane anaesthesia, whereas circulating angiotensin II and vasopressin levels contribute to a much smaller degree in this regard. General anaesthesia in combination with different degrees of neurohumoral blockade impairs the haemodynamic responses to blood loss, seen in conscious individuals. The impairment involves both the early and late phases during haemorrhage, as well as the post-bleeding recovery period. All three neurohumoral systems (autonomic nervous activity, angiotensin II and vasopressin) are of importance for regulating MAP during and after haemorrhage, although the autonomic nervous outflow appears to contribute to a larger extent. [source]


    Diabetes: insulin resistance and derangements in lipid metabolism.

    DIABETES/METABOLISM: RESEARCH AND REVIEWS, Issue 1 2005
    Cure through intervention in fat transport, storage
    Abstract We present multiple findings on derangements in lipid metabolism in type 2 diabetes. The increase in the intracellular deposition of triglycerides (TG) in muscles, liver and pancreas in subjects prone to diabetes is well documented and demonstrated to attenuate glucose metabolism by interfering with insulin signaling and insulin secretion. The obesity often associated with type 2 diabetes is mainly central, resulting in the overload of abdominal adipocytes with TG and reducing fat depot capacity to protect other tissues from utilizing a large proportion of dietary fat. In contrast to subcutaneous adipocytes, the central adipocytes exhibit a high rate of basal lipolysis and are highly sensitive to fat mobilizing hormones, but respond poorly to lipolysis restraining insulin. The enlarged visceral adipocytes are flooding the portal circulation with free fatty acids (FFA) at metabolically inappropriate time, when FFA should be oxidized, thus exposing nonadipose tissues to fat excess. This leads to ectopic TG accumulation in muscles, liver and pancreatic beta-cells, resulting in insulin resistance and beta-cell dysfunction. This situation, based on a large number of observations in humans and experimental animals, confirms that peripheral adipose tissue is closely regulated, performing a vital role of buffering fluxes of FFA in the circulation. The central adipose tissues tend to upset this balance by releasing large amounts of FFA. To reduce the excessive fat outflow from the abdominal depots and prevent the ectopic fat deposition it is important to decrease the volume of central fat stores or increase the peripheral fat stores. One possibility is to downregulate the activity of lipoprotein lipase, which is overexpressed in abdominal relatively to subcutaneous fat stores. This can be achieved by gastrointestinal bypass or gastroplasty, which decrease dietary fat absorption, or by direct means that include surgical removal of mesenteric fat. Indirect treatment consists of the compliant application of drastic lifestyle change comprising both diet and exercise and pharmacotherapy that reduces mesenteric fat mass and activity. The first step should be an attempt to effectively induce a lifestyle change. Next comes pharmacotherapy including acarbose, metformin, PPAR,, or PPAR,, agonists, statins and orlistat, estrogens in postmenopausal women or testosterone in men. Among surgical procedures, gastric bypass has been proven to produce beneficial results in advance of other surgical techniques, the evidence basis of which still needs strengthening. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction: role of sphincterotomy

    DIGESTIVE ENDOSCOPY, Issue 4 2001
    Choichi Sugawa
    Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction (SOD) is one of the causes of post-cholecystectomy syndrome and biliary pain and is a challenge from both the diagnostic and therapeutic points of view. Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction is typically diagnosed months to years after cholecystectomy. Continued biliary type pain after cholecystectomy may occur in as many as 10,20% of patients. Ten percent or more of these patients may eventually be shown to have SOD. The syndrome is often associated with a variety of other gastrointestinal disorders thought to be caused by dysmotility. According to the Milwaukee classification, patients with biliary pain can be divided into three types. Type I patients show all the objective signs suggestive of a disturbed bile outflow (i.e. elevated liver function tests, dilated common bile duct and delayed contrast drainage during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography). Type II patients have biliary type pain along with one or two of the criteria from type I. Type III patients have biliary pain only, with no other abnormalities. The present paper will focus primarily on SOD syn-drome, papillary stenosis and the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches, in particular endoscopic sphincterotomy. [source]


    Bimatoprost, a novel efficacious ocular hypotensive drug now recognized as a member of a new class of agents called prostamides

    DRUG DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, Issue 4 2007
    Robert M. Burk
    Pursuit of a new FP-agonist prodrug led to the identification of an interesting series of neutral C1-substituted prostaglandin F2, analogues. Although these initial analogues were devoid of any inherent pharmacological activity at the FP-receptor, two compounds AGN-190910 and AGN-191129, were found to have pronounced effects in lowering intraocular pressure (IOP) in normotensive dogs and monkeys. The cat iris sphincter assay was quickly developed as a primary screen for these analogues, leading to rapid identification of AGN-192024 (17-phenyl PGF2, ethyl amide, bimatoprost). While bimatoprost is structurally similar to naturally occurring mammalian hormones of the prostanoid family, surprisingly it demonstrates no significant activity at any of the known prostanoid receptors. Furthermore, results of considerable additional pharmacological studies provide evidence that it may indeed act through a unique receptor yet to be identified. The effect of Bimatoprost on lowering IOP has also been found to be unique in comparison to prostanoids. Bimatoprost reduces human IOP by increasing aqueous humor outflow through a dual mechanism of action where it improves both pressure-dependent and pressure-independent outflow pathways. First introduced to the market in 2002, bimatoprost is currently the most potent single therapy available for control of ocular hypertension. Drug Dev Res 68:147,155, 2007. ©2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Effectiveness of grass strips in trapping suspended sediments from runoff

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 9 2010
    Chengzhong Pan
    Abstract Little information is available concerning the performance of grass strips for erosion control from steep cropland. An experiment was conducted on 5-m-long grass strips with slopes of 3°,15° that were subjected to silt laden runoff and simulated rainfall, to investigate the sediment trapping processes. The grass strips had three treatments including intact grass control (C), no litter (dead grass material covering the soil surface was removed) (NL), and no litter or leaves (only 2,3,cm grass stems and roots were reserved) (NLL). Generally the grass strips had a high effectiveness in trapping sediment from steep cropland runoff. Sediment trapping efficiency (STE) decreased with increasing slope gradient, and even for a 15° slope, STE was still more than 40%. Most sediment deposited in the backwater region before each grass strips. The removal of grass litter or/and leaves had no significant influence on STE. The sediment median size (D50) in inflow was greater than that in outflow, and the difference (,D50) decreased with increasing slope. A positive power relationship between STE and ,D50 can be obtained. Grass strips were more effective in trapping sediments coarser than 10 or 25,µm, but sediments finer than 1,µm were more readily removed from runoff than particles in the range of 2 to approximately 10,µm. Grass litter had less influence on flow velocity than leaves because the deposited sediment partially covered the litter layer. Mean flow velocity and its standard deviation were negatively correlated with STE, and they can help make good estimation of STE. Results from this study should be useful in planting and managing forage grass to effectively conserve soil loss by runoff from steep slopes on the Loess Plateau of China. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Morphodynamics of the exit of a cutoff meander: experimental findings from field and laboratory studies,

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 3 2010
    J. Le Coz
    Abstract The morphological evolution of the entrances and exits of abandoned river channels governs their hydrological connectivity. The study focusses on flow and sediment dynamics in the exit of a cutoff meander where the downstream entrance is still connected to the main channel, but the upstream entrance is closed. Two similar field and laboratory cases were investigated using innovative velocimetry techniques (acoustic Doppler profiling, image analysis). Laboratory experiments were conducted with a mobile-bed physical model of the Morava River (Slovakia). Field measurements were performed in the exit of the Port-Galland cutoff meander, Ain River (France). Both cases yielded consistent and complementary results from which a generic scheme for flow patterns and morphological evolution was derived. A simple analogy with flows in rectangular side cavities was used to explain the recirculating flow patterns which developed in the exit. A decelerating inflow deposits bedload in the downstream part of the cavity, while the upstream part is eroded by an accelerating outflow, leading to the retreat of the upstream bank. In the field, strong secondary currents were observed, especially in the inflow, which may enhance the scouring of the downstream corner of the cavity. Also, fine sediment deposits constituted a silt layer in a transitional zone, located between the mouth of the abandoned channel and the oxbow-lake within the cutoff meander. Attempts at morphological prediction should consider not only the flow and sediment conditions in the cavity, but also the dynamics of the main channel. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd [source]


    Long-term InHM simulations of hydrologic response and sediment transport for the R-5 catchment

    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 9 2007
    Christopher S. Heppner
    Abstract The physics-based model known as the Integrated Hydrology Model (InHM) is used to simulate continuous hydrologic response and event-based sediment transport for the R-5 catchment (Oklahoma, USA). For the simulations reported herein the R-5 boundary-value problem was refined, from that reported by Loague et al. (2005), to include (i) an improved conceptualization of the local hydrogeologic setting, (ii) a more accurate topographical representation of the catchment, (iii) improved boundary conditions for surface-water outflow, subsurface-water outflow and evapotranspiration, (iv) improved characterization of surface and subsurface hydraulic parameters and (v) improved initial conditions. The hydrologic-response simulations were conducted in one-year periods, for a total of six years. The sediment-transport simulations were conducted for six selected events. The multi-year water-balance results from the hydrologic-response simulations match the observed aggregate behavior of the catchment. Event hydrographs were generally simulated best for the larger events. Soil-water content was over-estimated during dry periods compared with the observed data. The sediment-transport simulations were more successful in reproducing the total sediment mass than the peak sediment discharge rate. The results from the effort reported here reinforce the contention that comprehensive and detailed datasets are crucial for testing physics-based hydrologic-response models. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Sabotaging behaviour and minimal latex of Asclepias curassavica incur no cost for larvae of the southern monarch butterfly Danaus erippus

    ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 4 2010
    DANIELA RODRIGUES
    1. The southern monarch, Danaus erippus, uses mainly Asclepias curassavica as its host in the Neotropics, a plant species bearing articulated anastomosing laticifers. When artificially severed, A. curassavica has been shown to release significantly less latex than other Asclepias species. 2. The present study tested the hypothesis that sabotaging behaviour changes during the ontogeny of D. erippus and recorded latex outflow of A. curassavica during sabotaging and feeding. Larvae displayed vein-cutting behaviour, which was initially observed in the second instar, became more pronounced in the third and fourth instars, and less frequent in the fifth instar. When present, latex outflow was never more than 1 µl at a time during either vein cutting or feeding, regardless of the instar. 3. Mandibular and midrib morphometrics revealed that larvae selected thicker midrib sites for severing as instars progressed; however, no correlation between mandibular size and midrib size severed was found within instars. 4. Costs of sabotaging behaviour and the effects of A. curassavica latex outflow on D. erippus larvae were also examined. Sabotaging behaviour did not incur growth costs for larvae, and only latex exudation volumes at least 10-fold greater than those observed due to D. erippus sabotaging or feeding, caused significantly higher larval mortality than controls. 5. Since latex outflow is minimal or non-existent in A. curassavica, sabotaging behaviour in D. erippus is mostly limited by morphological constraints and is probably driven by chemical stimulants rather than latex defence. In turn, latex does not constitute a major defence of A. curassavica against D. erippus. [source]


    Austria's Demand for International Reserves and Monetary Disequilibrium: The Case of a Small Open Economy with a Fixed Exchange Rate Regime

    ECONOMICA, Issue 281 2004
    Harald Badinger
    Using a vector error correction approach, I estimate Austria's demand for international reserves over the period 1985:1,1997:4 and test for short-run effects of the disequilibrium on the national monetary market. I find that Austria's long-run reserve demand can be described as a stable function of imports, uncertainty and the opportunity cost of holding reserves with strong economies of scale. The speed of adjustment takes a value of 38 per cent. The results confirm that an excess of money demand (supply) induces an inflow (outflow) of international reserves as postulated by the monetary approach to the balance of payments. [source]


    Determination and fate of oxytetracycline and related compounds in oxytetracycline production wastewater and the receiving river,

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2008
    Dong Li
    Abstract This study investigated the occurrence and fate of oxytetracycline (OTC) and its related substances, 4-epi-oxytetracycline (EOTC), ,-apo-oxytetracycline (,-apo-OTC), and ,-apo-oxytetracycline (,-apo-OTC), in a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) treating OTC production wastewater and a river receiving the effluent from the WWTP using liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS). The percent removal of OTC in the WWTP was 38.0 ± 10.5%, and the concentration of OTC was still up to 19.5 ± 2.9 mg/L in the treated outflow. The concentration slightly decreased along the river, from 641 ± 118 ,g/L at site R2 (discharging point) to 377 ± 142 ,g/L at site R4 (,20 km from site R2), which was still higher than the minimal inhibition concentration of OTC reported (,250 ,g/L). On the other hand, the total amount of its related substances in the treated effluent was less than 5% of OTC. Concentrations of ,-apo-OTC and ,-apo-OTC increased along the river, from 5.76 ± 0.63 and 2.08 ± 0.30 ,g/L at site R2 to 11.9 ± 4.9 and 12.0 ± 4.6 ,g/L at R4, respectively, although EOTC decreased from 31.5 ± 3.8 to 12.9 ± 1.1 ,g/L, respectively. The mean concentration of ,-apo-OTC in river sediments was 20.8 ± 7.8 mg/kg, and its ratio to OTC was approximately 0.11, nearly twice the ratio of ,-apo-OTC and EOTC to OTC (0.058 ± 0.014 and 0.061 ± 0.015, respectively). [source]


    The long-term fate of polychlorinated biphenyls in San Francisco Bay (USA)

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 10 2004
    Jay A. Davis
    Abstract A simple one-box mass budget model is presented as a first step toward a quantitative understanding of the long-term fate of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in San Francisco Bay (USA). Sensitivity analysis indicated that the most influential input parameters were degradation half-life in sediment, Kow, outflow, average PCB concentration in sediment, and depth of the active sediment layer. Moderately influential parameters included organic carbon content of suspended solids, sediment burial mass transfer coefficient, and Henry's law constant. If external loading could be eliminated entirely, the mass of PCBs in the bay is predicted to drop to half of the present value in 20 years. The model predicts that sustained loading of 10 kg year,1 would prevent the total PCB mass in the bay from ever dropping below 10% of the present mass. With a sustained loading of 20 kg year,1, the model predicts that the total PCB mass would never fall below about 25% of the present mass. The half-lives in the bay for the individual PCB congeners evaluated in this report ranged from four years for PCB 18 to 30 years for PCB 194. [source]


    Constrained multivariate trend analysis applied to water quality variables

    ENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 1 2002
    D. M. Cooper
    Abstract Constrained multivariate regression analysis is used to model trends and seasonal effects in time series measurements of water quality variables. The constraint used ensures that when identifying trends the scientifically important charge balance of model-fitted concentrations is maintained, while accounting for between variable dependencies. The analysis is a special case of linear reduction of dimensionality which preserves the integrity of a subset of the original variables, while allowing the remainder to be identified as linear combinations of this subset. The technique is applied to water quality measurements made at the outflow from Loch Grannoch, an acid-sensitive loch in Scotland. A reduction in marine ion concentrations is observed in water samples collected four times a year over the period 1988,2000. This is identified with long term variability in the marine component in rainfall. Separation of the non-marine component of the solute load shows a reduction in non-marine sulphate and calcium concentrations, and an increase in the non-marine sodium concentration. There is no significant change in either alkalinity or acid neutralizing capacity over the period. The reduction in non-marine sulphate is consistent with reductions in atmospheric inputs of sulphate. However, the reduction in sulphate has not been accompanied by a reduction in the acidity of water samples from Loch Grannoch, but with a reduction in calcium concentration and an apparent increase in organic acids, as evidenced by increased dissolved organic carbon concentrations, with possible increases in nitrate and non-marine sodium concentrations. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Cardiac sympathetic nerve activity during kainic acid,induced limbic cortical seizures in rats

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 4 2009
    Harumi Hotta
    Summary We sought to define changes in cardiac sympathetic nerve activity that occur during seizures. We studied kainic acid,induced limbic cortical seizures in urethane-anesthetized rats using cardiac sympathetic nerve, blood pressure, and electrocardiography (ECG) recordings. We studied changes in ventilation rate before and during seizures. Cardiac sympathetic nerve activity was increased during limbic cortical seizures. The modest increases were similar to changes induced by nitroprusside infusion. The normal relation of cardiac sympathetic nerve activity to ventilation rate was lost during seizure activity. Changes in cardiac sympathetic nerve activity caused by changes in ventilation rate became unpredictable, and could be extreme. We conclude that the modest changes in cardiac sympathetic nerve activity contribute to the predominantly parasympathetic effects on the heart during limbic cortical seizures and periods of asphyxia. Further, ventilation rate changes might be associated with large sudden increases or decreases in cardiac sympathetic outflow during seizures. [source]


    Assessment of idiopathic normal pressure patients in neurological practice: the role of lumbar infusion testing for referral of patients to neurosurgery

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 6 2008
    A. Brean
    Background and purpose:, In neurological practice patients with tentative idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) usually are referred to neurosurgery based on clinical and radiological findings. Hydrodynamic assessment using lumbar infusion testing might be helpful in selecting patients. To retrospectively analyse lumbar infusion tests done in neurological practice in iNPH patients to see how infusion test results relate to the clinical course and shunt response. Materials and methods:, Sixty-three consecutive patients with Possible/Probable iNPH were tested during a 1-year period. The pre-operative lumbar infusion tests were assessed according to two strategies: (i) Determining the resistance to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) outflow (Rout). (ii) Quantification of the CSF pressure (CSFP) pulsatility during lumbar infusion (Qpulse). The results were related to the prospectively followed clinical course and shunt response after 12 months. Results:, The lumbar infusion-derived parameters Rout and Qpulse related weakly. Shunt response after 12 months was not related to Rout, but was highly related to the Qpulse. False negative results of lumbar infusion testing were observed in 16% of the patients. Discussion:, In neurological practice lumbar infusion testing may be useful for determining which patients to refer to neurosurgery. Our data favour determination of CSFP pulsatility (Qpulse) rather than Rout for prediction of shunt response. [source]


    Conditional involvement of striatal serotonin3 receptors in the control of in vivo dopamine outflow in the rat striatum

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 4 2003
    Grégory Porras
    Abstract Serotonin3 (5-HT3) receptors can affect motor control through an interaction with the nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) neurons, but the neurochemical basis for this interaction remains controversial. In this study, using in vivo microdialysis, we assessed the hypothesis that 5-HT3 receptor-dependent control of striatal DA release is conditioned by the degree of DA and/or 5-HT neuron activity and the means of DA release (impulse-dependent vs. impulse-independent). The different DA-releasing effects of morphine (1 and 10 mg/kg), haloperidol (0.01 mg/kg), amphetamine (1 and 2.5 mg/kg), and cocaine (10 and 20 mg/kg) were studied in the striatum of freely moving rats administered selective 5-HT3 antagonists ondansetron (0.1 mg/kg) or MDL 72222 (0.03 mg/kg). Neither of the 5-HT3 antagonists modified basal DA release by itself. Pretreatment with ondansetron or MDL 72222 reduced the increase in striatal DA release induced by 10 mg/kg morphine but not by 1 mg/kg morphine, haloperidol, amphetamine or cocaine. The effect of 10 mg/kg morphine was also prevented by intrastriatal ondansetron (1 µm) administration. Reverse dialysis with ondansetron also reduced the increase in DA release induced by the combination of haloperidol and the 5-HT reuptake inhibitor citalopram (1 mg/kg). Considering the different DA and 5-HT-releasing properties of the drugs used, our results demonstrate that striatal 5-HT3 receptors control selectively the depolarization-dependent exocytosis of DA only when central DA and 5-HT tones are increased concomitantly. [source]


    ADAPTIVE MIGRATORY DIVERGENCE AMONG SYMPATIRIC BROK CHARR POPULATIONS

    EVOLUTION, Issue 3 2005
    Dylan J. Fraser
    Abstract Ecological processes clearly contribute to population divergence, yet how they interact over complex life cycles remains poorly understood. Notably, the evolutionary consequences of migration between breeding and nonbreeding areas have received limited attention. We provide evidence for a negative association between interpopulation differences in migration (between breeding and feeding areas, as well as within each) and the amount of gene flow (m) among three brook charr (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations inhabitingMistassini Lake, Quebec, Canada. Individuals (n=1166) captured throughout lake feeding areas over two consecutive sampling years were genotyped (10 microsatellites) and assigned to one of the three populations. Interpopulation differences in migration were compared based on spatial distribution overlap, habitat selection, migration distance within feeding areas, and morphology. We observed a temporally stable, heterogeneous spatial distribution within feeding areas among populations, with the extent of spatial segregation related to differential habitat selection (represented by littoral zone substrate). Spatial segregation was lowest and gene flow highest (m=0.015) between two populations breeding in separate lake inflows. Segregation was highest and gene flow was lowest (mean m=0.007) between inflow populations and a third population breeding in the outflow. Compared to outflow migrants, inflow migrants showed longer migration distances within feeding areas(64,70 km vs. 22 km). After entering natal rivers to breed, inflow migrants also migrated longer distances (35,75 km) and at greater elevations (50,150 m) to breeding areas than outflow migrants (0,15 km; ,10,0 m). Accordingly, inflow migrants were more streamlined with longer caudal regions, traits known to improve swimming efficiency. There was no association between the geographic distance separating population pairs and the amount of gene flow they exchanged. Collectively, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that reduced gene flow between these brook charr populations results from divergent natural selection leading to interpopulation differences in migration. They also illustrate how phenotypic and genetic differentiation may arise over complex migratory life cycles. [source]


    Joining Strategies for Open Porous Metallic Foams on Iron and Nickel Base Materials,

    ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 8 2007
    S. Longerich
    Within the Collaborative Research Centre (SFB) 561 "Thermally highly loaded, porous and cooled multilayer systems for combined cycle power plants" open porous Ni-based structures are developed for the requirements of an effusion cooling. A two-dimensional cooling strategy for the walls of combustion chambers, that allows the outflow of the cooling medium over the complete wall area of the combustion chamber, could be realized by an open porous metallic foam structure. The challenge is to join the porous foam structure with the solid substrate material. Capacitor discharge welding and laser beam welding/-brazing methods seems to be promising methods due to a minimum input of energy and, connected with this, a small joining zone. [source]


    A sympathetic view of the sympathetic nervous system and human blood pressure regulation

    EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 6 2008
    Michael J. Joyner
    New ideas about the relative importance of the autonomic nervous system (and especially its sympathetic arm) in long-term blood pressure regulation are emerging. It is well known that mean arterial blood pressure is normally regulated in a fairly narrow range at rest and that blood pressure is also able to rise and fall ,appropriately' to meet the demands of various forms of mental, emotional and physical stress. By contrast, blood pressure varies widely when the autonomic nervous system is absent or when key mechanisms that govern it are destroyed. However, 24 h mean arterial pressure is still surprisingly normal under these conditions. Thus, the dominant idea has been that the kidney is the main long-term regulator of blood pressure and the autonomic nervous system is important in short-term regulation. However, this ,renocentric' scheme can be challenged by observations in humans showing that there is a high degree of individual variability in elements of the autonomic nervous system. Along these lines, the level of sympathetic outflow, the adrenergic responsiveness of blood vessels and individual haemodynamic patterns appear to exist in a complex, but appropriate, balance in normotension. Furthermore, evidence from animals and humans has now clearly shown that the sympathetic nervous system can play an important role in longer term blood pressure regulation in both normotension and hypertension. Finally, humans with high baseline sympathetic traffic might be at increased risk for hypertension if the ,balance' among factors deteriorates or is lost. In this context, the goal of this review is to encourage a comprehensive rethinking of the complexities related to long-term blood pressure regulation in humans and promote finer appreciation of physiological relationships among the autonomic nervous system, vascular function, ageing, metabolism and blood pressure. [source]


    Water outflow as a cause of changes in trophic conditions for zooplanktivorous fish in reservoirs

    FISHERIES MANAGEMENT & ECOLOGY, Issue 1-2 2000
    L. Pehlivanov
    The seasonal changes and vertical distribution of zooplankton, the export of zooplankters by outflow through water management installations, and the feeding of zooplanktivorous fish were studied in two Bulgarian reservoirs. In a bottom-draining reservoir, planktonic crustacea >,1.0 mm were found to be selectively exported as a result of their diurnal vertical migrations. Increases in water outflow for irrigation resulted in a decrease in total zooplankton abundance, as well as changes in zooplankton size and species composition at the beginning of the summer. At the same time, major changes occurred in the feeding patterns of bleak, Alburnus alburnus (L.), and juvenile pikeperch, Stizostedion lucioperca (L.), the principal zooplanktivores in this reservoir. It is easy for bleak to switch to feeding on an alternative food, but a lack of available large prey organisms is suggested as the main cause of the downstream movement of pikeperch juveniles. In a surface-draining reservoir, the pattern of zooplankton export corresponded to those in natural lakes. Discharged water carried with it mainly small-sized epilimnetic zooplankton from the most numerous groups (i.e. rotifers, juvenile copepods and cladocerans) in the reservoir. Furthermore, outflow exports represent a relatively small part of total zooplankton number, and thus, do not disturb the natural zooplankton succession, and changes in abundance and composition Coincidental changes in the trophic responses for zooplanktivores (mainly juvenile cyprinids and percids) were not found. [source]


    Advection of anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) larvae along the Catalan continental slope (NW Mediterranean)

    FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2007
    A. SABATÉS
    Abstract The Gulf of Lions is one of the main anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) spawning areas in the NW Mediterranean. During the spring, low-salinity surface water from the outflow of the Rhône is advected by the shelf-slope current along the continental slope off the Catalan coast. In June 2000, a Lagrangian experiment tracking these low-salinity surface waters was conducted to assess the importance of this transport mechanism for anchovy larvae and to determine the suitability of the tracked surface waters for survival of anchovy larvae. The experiment consisted of sampling the tracked water parcel for 10 days with three drifters launched at the core of the shelf-slope current where low-salinity surface waters were detected. The survey was completed by sampling the surrounding waters. Anchovy larvae from the spawning area in the Gulf of Lions were advected towards the south in the low-salinity waters. The size increase of anchovy larvae throughout the Lagrangian tracking closely followed the general growth rate calculated by otolith analysis (0.65 mm day,1). However, advection by the current was not the only mechanism of anchovy larval transport. A series of anticyclonic eddies, originated in the Gulf of Lions and advected southwards, seemed to play a complementary role in the transport of larvae from the spawning ground towards the nursery areas. These eddies not only contributed to larval transport but also prevented their dispersion. These transport and aggregation mechanisms may be important for anchovy populations along the Catalan coast and require further study. [source]


    Retinoid signaling and cardiac anteroposterior segmentation

    GENESIS: THE JOURNAL OF GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 3 2001
    José Xavier-Neto
    Abstract Summary: Establishment of anterior,posterior polarity is one of the earliest decisions in cardiogenesis. Specification of anterior (outflow) and posterior (inflow) structures ensures proper connections between venous system and inflow tract and between arterial tree and outflow tract. The last few years have witnessed remarkable progress in our understanding of cardiac anteroposterior patterning. Molecular cloning and subsequent studies on RALDH2, the key embryonic retinaldehyde dehydrogenase in retinoic acid (RA) synthesis, provided the missing link between teratogenic studies on RA deficiency and excess and normal chamber morphogenesis. We discuss work establishing the foundations of our current understanding of the mechanisms of cardiac anteroposterior segmentation, the reasons why early evidence pointing to the role of RA in anteroposterior segmentation was overlooked, and the key experiments unraveling the role of RA in cardiac anteroposterior segmentation. We have also integrated recent experiments in a model of cardiac anteroposterior patterning in which RALDH2 expression determines anteroposterior boundaries in the heart field. genesis 31:97,104, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Late Miocene fish otoliths from the Colombacci Formation (Northern Apennines, Italy): implications for the Messinian ,Lago-mare' event

    GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Issue 5 2006
    Giorgio Carnevale
    Abstract A fish otolith assemblage from the Messinian ,Lago-mare' deposits of the Colombacci Formation cropping out in the Montecalvo in Foglia Syncline, Marche, central Italy, is described. The assemblage displays a low diversity and consists of seven taxa belonging to three families: the Gobiidae, Myctophidae and Sciaenidae. Sciaenid otoliths are the most abundant elements representing 88% of the entire assemblage. The palaeoecological analysis reveals a coastal shallow marine environment strongly influenced by continental outflow. The low diversity and high abundance of the euryecious sciaenids are indicative of a very simplified food web, which probably represented an ecological response to the fluctuating environmental parameters and available food resources. The fish remains documented here provide an unambiguous evidence that normal marine conditions were present in the Mediterranean, at least in the upper part of the ,Lago-mare' event, and unquestionably demonstrate that the marine refilling preceded the Mio-Pliocene boundary. These findings clearly demonstrate that fishes, because of their mobility and migratory behaviour, represent a useful tool for the large-scale interpretation of the environmental conditions of the Messinian Mediterranean water body. The necessity of a new scenario of palaeoenvironmental evolution for the post-evaporitic Messinian of the Mediterranean is also discussed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]