Rapidity

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Voltammetric Assay of Naproxen in Pharmaceutical Formulations Using Boron-Doped Diamond Electrode

ELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 11 2005
V. Suryanarayanan
Abstract The electrooxidation of naproxen was studied, for the first time, using boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode by cyclic and differential pulse voltammetry (CV and DPV) in nonaqueous solvent supporting electrolyte system. The results were also compared with glassy carbon electrode (GC) under the same conditions. Naproxen undergoes one electron transfer resulting in the formation of cation radical for the first electrooxidation step, which follows other chemical and electrochemical steps such as deprotonation, removal of another electron and the attack of nucleophile (ECEC mechanism). BDD electrode provided higher signal to background ratio, well resolved and highly reproducible cyclic voltammograms than the GC electrode. With a scan rate of 50,mV s,1 and pulse height of 50,ms, respectively, the DPV technique was able to determine the naproxen concentrations in the range of 0.5 to 50,,M with a detection limit of 30,nM. The influence of interference compounds namely 2-acetyl-6-methoxy naphthalene (AMN) on naproxen oxidation can also be followed successfully. Moreover, the percentage of AMN present in the standard chemical form of a mixture containing naproxen can be found accurately. Rapidity, precise and good selectivity were also found for the determination of naproxen in pharmaceutical formulations. [source]


Powered Liposuction: An Evaluation of Currently Available Instrumentation

DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 5 2002
Timothy Corcoran Flynn MD
background. Over the past several years, powered liposuction instruments have become available to the dermatologic surgeon. These instruments all move the cannula forward and backward 2,12 mm with rapidity. This motion simulates the standard human movement of the cannula and facilitates movement through the tissue. Powered liposuction may help to prevent surgeon fatigue and has recently been shown to aid in the efficacy of fat removal. objective. To compare and contrast currently available powered liposuction instruments, to obtain objective engineering data on the instruments, and to compare the instruments when used on actual liposuction cases. methods. Five currently available powered liposuction systems were evaluated by the author. Each instrument was used with a 3 mm dual side port cannula on patients undergoing tumescent liposuction. An independent engineering firm, who collected objective measurements such as weight, stroke force, temperature, and vibration measurements on the instruments, evaluated the units. Noise measurements were obtained. results. Each of the five systems showed advantages and disadvantages. Important issues were the size and weight of the units, as well as whether they were driven electrically or pneumatically. Stroke force is variable (range 9.5,30 pounds). The noise of the units ranged between 60 and 87 dB. Vibration measurements varied from instrument to instrument. Units produced a variable amount of heat ranging from 77°F to 102°F. Most instruments are autoclavable, and one system is disposable. Build quality and reliability varied with the instrument. conclusion. Instruments for powered liposuction have emerged in the last 2 years, with each instrument having distinct advantages and disadvantages. This article reviews five currently available powered liposuction instruments and presents objective measurements as well as the author's experience using the instruments. [source]


Rapid evolution and the convergence of ecological and evolutionary time

ECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 10 2005
Nelson G. Hairston Jr
Abstract Recent studies have documented rates of evolution of ecologically important phenotypes sufficiently fast that they have the potential to impact the outcome of ecological interactions while they are underway. Observations of this type go against accepted wisdom that ecological and evolutionary dynamics occur at very different time scales. While some authors have evaluated the rapidity of a measured evolutionary rate by comparing it to the overall distribution of measured evolutionary rates, we believe that ecologists are mainly interested in rapid evolution because of its potential to impinge on ecological processes. We therefore propose that rapid evolution be defined as a genetic change occurring rapidly enough to have a measurable impact on simultaneous ecological change. Using this definition we propose a framework for decomposing rates of ecological change into components driven by simultaneous evolutionary change and by change in a non-evolutionary factor (e.g. density dependent population dynamics, abiotic environmental change). Evolution is judged to be rapid in this ecological context if its contribution to ecological change is large relative to the contribution of other factors. We provide a worked example of this approach based on a theoretical predator,prey interaction [Abrams, P. & Matsuda, H. (1997). Evolution, 51, 1740], and find that in this system the impact of prey evolution on predator per capita growth rate is 63% that of internal ecological dynamics. We then propose analytical methods for measuring these contributions in field situations, and apply them to two long-term data sets for which suitable ecological and evolutionary data exist. For both data sets relatively high rates of evolutionary change have been found when measured as character change in standard deviations per generation (haldanes). For Darwin's finches evolving in response to fluctuating rainfall [Grant, P.R. & Grant, B.R. (2002). Science, 296, 707], we estimate that evolutionary change has been more rapid than ecological change by a factor of 2.2. For a population of freshwater copepods whose life history evolves in response to fluctuating fish predation [Hairston, N.G. Jr & Dillon, T.A. (1990). Evolution, 44, 1796], we find that evolutionary change has been about one quarter the rate of ecological change , less than in the finch example, but nevertheless substantial. These analyses support the view that in order to understand temporal dynamics in ecological processes it is critical to consider the extent to which the attributes of the system under investigation are simultaneously changing as a result of rapid evolution. [source]


Minimizing energy expenditure facilitates vertebrate persistence on oceanic islands

ECOLOGY LETTERS, Issue 5 2002
Brian K. McNab
Abstract The characteristics of terrestrial vertebrates on oceanic islands are examined. They often include a reduced body size, a tolerance of conspecifics, flightlessness, a reduced basal rate of metabolism, and a propensity to enter torpor. On oceanic islands ectotherms frequently replace endotherms. These changes reduce the energy expenditure and resource requirements of vertebrates. Such reductions are permitted by the absence of mammalian predators and facilitate the survival of island endemics in the face of a restricted resource base and a variable environment through an increase in population size. Some insular species increase body size, but this occurs only when the resource base is large, due either to a fortuitously abundant resource, or to the absence of other species that exploit normally abundant resources. Some questions are posed to guide future work. They examine of the characteristics that permit species to disperse over water barriers, the conditions that require a reduction in resource use, the rapidity of response by immigrants to island conditions, whether supertramps show physiological differentiation with respect to island distance or size, and whether island size is absolute or relative to the size of the immigrants. [source]


Efficiency of the German electricity wholesale market

EUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL POWER, Issue 4 2009
Christian Growitsch
Abstract One of the major challenges of liberalising European electricity markets is to create competitive and efficient power trading markets. In this paper, we assess the overall efficiency of the German electricity wholesale market using cointegration analysis and error correction modelling. Applying these techniques allows us to evaluate the wholesale market efficiency in terms of price adjustments and the rapidity towards the adjustment in the price discovery and adjustment process. We show that the wholesale market seems to be inefficient and not well functioning. The inability of European Energy Exchange spot market in providing an efficient price reference to the power market suggest that the power exchange still lacks liquidity. Second, our results indicate that bilateral contracts keep the wholesale electricity prices intact with the EEX prices and also stabilise the volatility in the German wholesale market. Also, the econometric results suggest that the existence of the OTC market along with power exchange is creating a competitive effect in the wholesale market in Germany. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Factors influencing the scope and quality of science and management decisions

FISH AND FISHERIES, Issue 1 2002
(The good, the bad, the ugly)
Abstract The lecture traces the historical path to overfishing of the world's fish and shellfish stocks, and provides an assessment of marine fish resources in the later half of the 1990s. The basis of overfishing as noted by various fishery scientists is reviewed. Four factors, including institutional paralysis, the rapidity of technological developments, uncertainty of science, and the inability to monitor and enforce regulations are identified as the major problems leading to overfishing. The failure of the world community to deal with extensive overfishing, appears to have motivated managers and scientists to promote a new fishery management paradigm that focuses on a broader set of problems resulting from fishing, and establishes a more conservative decision-making process founded on precautionary principle and uncertainty. The author feels that the evolving paradigm will result in the rebuilding of a number of stocks in the United States, but is less certain of its adoption on a global scale, and whether or not science will play a more useful role in fisheries management. It is noted that the support for fisheries science and the status of fisheries have followed opposite courses. Over the past half century marine science has boomed, diversified and become intellectually and materially enriched, while the number of overfished stocks and ecological disasters has increased. Looking ahead it is expected that fisheries management will move into a more conservative era. The focus of fisheries has moved from full use of ocean resources to establishing yields that take into account the impacts of fisheries on target and non-target species and the ecosystem in general. Although there has been wide-spread abuse in the use of the world's fishery resources and condemnation of the fishing industries, the author feels that the government institutions must bear the primary responsibility for the historical course of fishery management and its failure. [source]


Histo-cytochemistry and scanning electron microscopy of lavender glandular trichomes following conventional and microwave-assisted hydrodistillation of essential oils: a comparative study

FLAVOUR AND FRAGRANCE JOURNAL, Issue 4 2006
Marcello Iriti
Abstract The conventional hydrodistillation method (HD) has been compared with three different variants of the microwave-assisted hydrodistillation technique (MADH), on Lavandula angustifolia flowers, both in terms of oil yield and effects on the glandular trichome morpho-structure. The amount and composition of essential oil extracted in 4 h by HD was similar to that obtained in only 20 min by MADH and even lower than that extracted with a steam variant (MASD) of MADH itself. Histo-cytochemical investigations and scanning electron microscopy showed that glandular trichome, after 4 h of HD, appeared swollen, with a deeply wrinkled surface and empty of essential oil, however maintaining the integrity of their cuticle. Many oil droplets were stuck to the outside of the trichome cuticle, sometimes arranged in large aggregates. After 20 min of MADH or MASD, trichomes appeared empty as well, but also particularly disrupted, or at least with holes in their head cuticle. Oil droplets were present outside the glands and in the inter-rib regions of the flower calyx, except in the case of MASD. After this extraction method, neither oil droplets nor other lipid staining were present in the samples, confirming the effectiveness of this particular MADH technique. These investigations suggest that the rapidity of MADH and MASD in extracting essential oil is mainly due to the collapse of trichome structure and the consequent direct release of its content, without which it has to slowly permeate through membranes and cuticle, as in the case of HD. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Biodiversity and ecosystem function in soil

FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
A. H. FITTER
Summary 1Soils are one of the last great frontiers for biodiversity research and are home to an extraordinary range of microbial and animal groups. Biological activities in soils drive many of the key ecosystem processes that govern the global system, especially in the cycling of elements such as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. 2We cannot currently make firm statements about the scale of biodiversity in soils, or about the roles played by soil organisms in the transformations of organic materials that underlie those cycles. The recent UK Soil Biodiversity Programme (SBP) has brought a unique concentration of researchers to bear on a single soil in Scotland, and has generated a large amount of data concerning biodiversity, carbon flux and resilience in the soil ecosystem. 3One of the key discoveries of the SBP was the extreme diversity of small organisms: researchers in the programme identified over 100 species of bacteria, 350 protozoa, 140 nematodes and 24 distinct types of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Statistical analysis of these results suggests a much greater ,hidden diversity'. In contrast, there was no unusual richness in other organisms, such as higher fungi, mites, collembola and annelids. 4Stable-isotope (13C) technology was used to measure carbon fluxes and map the path of carbon through the food web. A novel finding was the rapidity with which carbon moves through the soil biota, revealing an extraordinarily dynamic soil ecosystem. 5The combination of taxonomic diversity and rapid carbon flux makes the soil ecosystem highly resistant to perturbation through either changing soil structure or removing selected groups of organisms. [source]


Biogeochemical modelling of the rise in atmospheric oxygen

GEOBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2006
M. W. CLAIRE
ABSTRACT Understanding the evolution of atmospheric molecular oxygen levels is a fundamental unsolved problem in Earth's history. We develop a quantitative biogeochemical model that simulates the Palaeoproterozoic transition of the Earth's atmosphere from a weakly reducing state to an O2 -rich state. The purpose is to gain an insight into factors that plausibly control the timing and rapidity of the oxic transition. The model uses a simplified atmospheric chemistry (parameterized from complex photochemical models) and evolving redox fluxes in the Earth system. We consider time-dependent fluxes that include organic carbon burial and associated oxygen production, reducing gases from metamorphic and volcanic sources, oxidative weathering, and the escape of hydrogen to space. We find that the oxic transition occurs in a geologically short time when the O2 -consuming flux of reducing gases falls below the flux of organic carbon burial that produces O2. A short timescale for the oxic transition is enhanced by a positive feedback due to decreasing destruction of O2 as stratospheric ozone forms, which is captured in our atmospheric chemistry parameterization. We show that one numerically self-consistent solution for the rise of O2 involves a decline in flux of reducing gases driven by irreversible secular oxidation of the crust caused by time-integrated hydrogen escape to space in the preoxic atmosphere, and that this is compatible with constraints from the geological record. In this model, the timing of the oxic transition is strongly affected by buffers of reduced materials, particularly iron, in the continental crust. An alternative version of the model, where greater fluxes of reduced hydrothermal cations from the Archean seafloor consume O2, produces a similar history of O2 and CH4. When climate and biosphere feedbacks are included in our model of the oxic transition, we find that multiple ,Snowball Earth' events are simulated under certain circumstances, as methane collapses and rises repeatedly before reaching a new steady-state. [source]


Amygdala damage affects event-related potentials for fearful faces at specific time windows

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 7 2010
Pia Rotshtein
Abstract The amygdala is known to influence processing of threat-related stimuli in distant brain regions, including visual cortex. The time-course of these distant influences is unknown, although this information is important for resolving debates over likely pathways mediating an apparent rapidity in emotional processing. To address this, we recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) to seen fearful face expressions, in preoperative patients with medial temporal lobe epilepsy who had varying degrees of amygdala pathology, plus healthy volunteers. We found that amygdala damage diminished ERPs for fearful versus neutral faces within the P1 time-range, ,100,150 ms, and for a later component at ,500,600 ms. Individual severity of amygdala damage determined the magnitude of both these effects, consistent with a causal amygdala role. By contrast, amygdala damage did not affect explicit perception of fearful expressions nor a distinct emotional ERP effect at 150,250 ms. These results demonstrate two distinct time-points at which the amygdala influences fear processing. The data also demonstrate that while not all aspects of expression processing are disrupted by amygdala damage, there is a crucial impact on an early P1 component. These findings are consistent with the existence of multiple processing stages or routes for fearful faces that vary in their dependence on amygdala function. Hum Brain Mapp, 2010. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Rapid detection of metastasis of gastric cancer using reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 5 2007
Daisuke Horibe
Abstract Tailor-made surgeries for patients with solid malignancies have been under consideration on the basis of the development of new approaches for minor metastatic foci of malignant tumors. Accurate and reliable methods to detect metastases in biopsy specimens with certain rapidity are essential for the performance of these surgeries. The aim of this study was to develop a rapid and practical method to detect metastasis in specimens from patients with gastric carcinoma with the use of reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) reaction, a novel technique for detecting mRNA expressions of targeted sequences with high sensitivity, specificity and rapidity under isothermal conditions. RT-LAMP primers to detect cytokeratin19 (CK19) mRNA were generated and 92 lymph nodes (LNs) obtained from 9 patients with gastric cancer were tested for tumor metastases with this technique. Among 92 LNs, 15 were metastasis-positive by routine histopathological examination. RT-LAMP reaction detected CK19 expression in all of the pathologically positive LNs and in 16 of 77 negative LNs. Nested RT-PCR assay for CK19 expression was also performed on 2 of the 9 cases including 32 LNs. The agreement rate of CK19 expression detection by RT-LAMP and RT-PCR analysis was 31/32 (97%). The RT-LAMP technique showed similar sensitivity to detect metastases as nested RT-PCR assay, with a rapidity comparable to that of intraoperative histopathological examination with frozen sectioning and hematoxylin and eosin staining. This method is expected to play an essential role in the performance of tailor-made surgeries in the near future. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Adaptive joint beamforming and B-MMSE detection for CDMA signal reception under multipath interference

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, Issue 7 2004
Hsiao-Hwa Chen
Abstract The combination of antenna array beamforming with multiuser detection can effectively improve the detection efficiency of a wireless system under multipath interference, especially in a fast-fading channel. This paper studies the performance of an adaptive beamformer incorporated with a block-wise minimum mean square error(B-MMSE) detector, which works on a unique signal frame characterized by training sequence preamble and data blocks segmented by zero-bits. Both beam-former weights updating and B-MMSE detection are carried out by either least mean square (LMS) or recursive least square (RLS) algorithm. The comparison of the two adaptive algorithms applied to both beamformer and B-MMSE detector will be made in terms of convergence behaviour and estimation mean square error. Various multipath patterns are considered to test the receiver's responding rapidity to changing multipath interference. The performance of the adaptive B-MMSE detector is also compared with that of non-adaptive version (i.e. through direct matrix inversion). The final performance in error probability simulation reveals that the RLS/B-MMSE scheme outperforms non-adaptive B-MMSE by 1,5 dB, depending on the multipath channel delay profiles of concern. The obtained results also suggest that adaptive beamformer should use RLS algorithm for its fast and robust convergence property; while the B-MMSE filter can choose either LMS or RLS algorithm depending on antenna array size, multipath severity and implementation complexity. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


The role of zoos in the 21st century,

INTERNATIONAL ZOO YEARBOOK, Issue 1 2003
W. Conway
Zoos have been overtaken by the rapidity of wildlife extinction and most of their conservation programmes are unresponsive. To fulfil their obligations to society, and to survive, zoos must become proactive conservation organizations, applying their popularity to win support for wildlife protection and their expertise to help sustain reduced numbers of wildlife in marginal habitats. [source]


Assessing the ecological integrity of a grassland ecosystem: the applicability and rapidity of the SAGraSS method

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2009
W. Kaiser
Abstract The Grassland Biome is currently one of the most threatened biomes in South Africa and is in dire need of a biomonitoring protocol. The components of ecological integrity in these ecosystems are, however, too diverse and time-consuming to measure scrupulously. It is therefore necessary to develop a set of grassland indicators that are efficient and rapid in their assessment of grassland ecosystem integrity. The South African Grassland Scoring System (SAGraSS), based on the grassland insect community, is such a suggested indicator. The present study is the first to investigate the applicability and rapidity of this proposed method. Although SAGraSS scores correlated significantly with Ecological Index values (the most commonly used index by which veld condition is evaluated in central South Africa), the method proved to be tedious and the identification of insects taxing. We offer a number of changes to make the SAGraSS method a more rapid method of assessment. Résumé Le Biome « Prairies » est aujourd'hui un des plus menacés d'Afrique du Sud et a sérieusement besoin d'un protocole de biomonitoring. Les composantes de l'intégritéécologique de ces écosystèmes sont cependant trop diverses, et il faudrait trop de temps pour les mesurer scrupuleusement. Il est donc nécessaire de mettre au point un ensemble d'indicateurs pour les prairies qui soient efficaces et permettent d'évaluer rapidement l'intégrité de ces écosystèmes. Le système sud-africain South African Grassland Scoring System (SAGraSS), basé sur la communauté des insectes des prairies, est un des indicateurs qui fut proposé. Cette étude est la première qui analyse l'applicabilité et la rapidité de cette méthode. Bien que les résultats du SAGraSS soient significativement reliés aux valeurs de l'Indice Ecologique (EI , l'indice le plus utilisé pour évaluer les conditions écologiques du Veld au centre de l'Afrique du Sud), la méthode s'est avérée fastidieuse, et l'identification des insectes assez longue. Nous proposons un certain nombre de changements à apporter pour faire de la méthode SAGraSS une méthode d'évaluation plus rapide. [source]


Lifespan extension in genetically modified mice

AGING CELL, Issue 4 2009
Warren Ladiges
Summary Major advances in aging research have been made by studying the effect of genetic modifications on the lifespan of organisms, such as yeast, invertebrates (worms and flies) and mice. Data from yeast and invertebrates have been the most plentiful because of the ease in which genetic manipulations can be made and the rapidity by which lifespan experiments can be performed. With the ultimate focus on advancing human health, testing genetic interventions in mammals is crucial, and the mouse has proven to be the mammal most amenable to this task. Lifespan studies in mice are resource intensive, requiring up to 4 years to complete. Therefore, it is critical that a set of scientifically-based criteria be followed to assure reliable results and establish statistically significant findings so other laboratories can replicate and build on the data. Only then will it be possible to confidently determine that the genetic modification extends lifespan and alters aging. [source]


A sensitive loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) method for detection of Renibacterium salmoninarum, causative agent of bacterial kidney disease in salmonids

JOURNAL OF FISH DISEASES, Issue 6 2009
S K Gahlawat
Abstract Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a novel technique for nucleic acid amplification with high specificity, sensitivity and rapidity and does not require expensive equipment or reagents. In the present study, we developed and evaluated a LAMP method for the rapid detection of Renibacterium salmoninarum causing the bacterial kidney disease in salmonids. This method was more sensitive than quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Using DNA template extracted from cultured R. salmoninarum, the LAMP method gave an amplification signal from template diluted to 10,8 while the limit of detection of qPCR was10,7. The LAMP method was also highly specific and did not amplify DNA purified from five other Gram-positive and -negative bacterial fish pathogens. The method also worked well using extracts of macrophages infected with R. salmoninarum and kidney material from rainbow trout, which were positive for R. salmoninarum by qPCR and crude R. salmoninarum culture. There was some evidence for inhibitors of the LAMP reaction in the kidney samples, which was overcome by diluting the sample. [source]


Detection of koi herpesvirus in common carp, Cyprinus carpio L., by loop-mediated isothermal amplification

JOURNAL OF FISH DISEASES, Issue 10 2004
I Gunimaladevi
Abstract Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a novel method that amplifies DNA with high specificity and rapidity under isothermal conditions. In this study, using the LAMP method, a protocol for koi herpes virus (KHV) detection in common carp was designed. A set of four primers, two inner and two outer, were designed based on the sequence of the thymidine kinase (tk) gene of KHV. Time and temperature conditions for detection of KHV were optimized for 60 min at 65 °C. The detection limit using LAMP was found to be similar to that by polymerase chain reaction. In this study, we have developed a highly sensitive and rapid diagnostic procedure for detection of KHV infection in common carp. [source]


DETECTION OF OLIVE OIL ADULTERATION WITH RAPESEED AND SUNFLOWER OILS USING MOS ELECTRONIC NOSE AND SMPE-MS

JOURNAL OF FOOD QUALITY, Issue 1 2010
SYLWIA MILDNER-SZKUDLARZ
ABSTRACT The study analyzed the effectiveness of two types of electronic nose systems to detect adulteration of extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) with rapeseed and sunflower oils. Tested methods included volatile analysis with the electronic nose based on MOS sensors (HS-E nose) and by direct coupling of SPME to MS (SPME-MS). Volatile compounds were analyzed also by SPME-GC/MS. Samples of EVOO were mixed with different proportions, ranging from 5 to 50% (v/v), of seed oils and fingerprints of volatile profiles of all samples were generated. In order to obtain as much chemical information as possible and to find a volatile marker to detect adulterations of EVOO with seed oils, principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least squares (PLS) analyses were applied to the data. The application of PCA and PLS analyses to the data from two electronic noses and SMPE-GC/MS were sufficient to differentiate the adulterated samples from pure EVOO. Excellent results were obtained in the prediction of the percentage of adulteration by PLS analysis. SPME-GC-MS analysis with subsequent PCA yielded good results; however, it was time-consuming. The two electronic noses, with subsequent PCA treatment of data, offering the advantages of rapidity and reliability, enabled detection of olive oil adulteration with different contents of seed oils. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS Virgin olive oil is highly appreciated by consumers due to its nutritional benefits. Thus, its adulteration with low-grade olive oils or cheaper vegetable oils could potentially be very profitable for sellers or raw material suppliers and may yield large economic profits. In this way, authentication of virgin olive oils has become an interesting subject from both commercial and health perspectives. It has been proved that the two proposed types of electronic nose systems facilitate reliable detection of rapeseed and sunflower oils in extra virgin olive oil. Both MOS and MS electronic noses are faster than the conventional SMPE-GC/MS analysis. These well-correlated methodologies, offering the advantages of rapidity and reliability, opened up a new way of detecting adulteration of virgin olive oils. [source]


Transatrial Access to the Normal Pericardial Space For Local Cardiac Therapy: Preclinical Safety Testing with Aspirin and Pulmonary Artery Hypertension

JOURNAL OF INTERVENTIONAL CARDIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001
TODD C. PULERWITZ M.D.
The reliability, rapidity, and safety of nonsurgical, transatrial pericardial access for local cardiac therapy have been demonstrated in healthy animals. Since many patients take aspirin or have increased right-sided pressures, we evaluated the procedure's safety under these conditions. Transatrial pericardial access was performed in anesthetized pigs following aspirin administration (162 mg po, n = 6) or during experimental pulmonary artery hypertension (n = 4 different animals) and required only 3 minutes following guide catheter positioning. Platelet aggregability testing with arachidonic acid confirmed aspirin effectiveness. Mean pericardial fluid hematocrit was 0.1 ± 0.1% after 2 days of aspirin therapy and 1.9 ± 1.1% at sacrifice 24 hours later (NS). Mean pericardial fluid hematocrit was 1.0 ± 0.5% after 45 minutes of pulmonary artery hypertension and 4.3 ± 0.8% at sacrifice 30 minutes later (NS). Histologic analysis in both groups revealed a small thrombus and localized inflammation at the site of puncture. Neither aspirin use nor pulmonary artery hypertension causes significant bleeding into the pericardial space following transatrial access and thus does not preclude this route for local cardiac drug delivery. [source]


Nipah virus RNA synthesis in cultured pig and human cells

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL VIROLOGY, Issue 8 2006
Li-Yen Chang
Abstract Nipah virus infection of porcine stable kidney cells (PS), human neuronal cells (SK-N-MC), human lung fibroblasts cells (MRC-5), and human monocytes (THP-1) were examined. Rapid progression of cytopathic effects (CPE) and cell death were noted in PS cell cultures treated with Nipah virus, followed by MRC-5, SK-N-MC, and THP-1 cell cultures, in descending order of rapidity. Significant increase in the intracellular Nipah virus RNA occurred beginning at 24 hr PI in all the infected cells. Whereas, the extracellular release of Nipah virus RNA increased significantly beginning at 48 and 72 hr PI for the infected MRC-5 cells and PS cells, respectively. No significant release of extracellular Nipah virus RNA was detected from the Nipah virus-infected SK-N-MC and THP-1 cells. At its peak, approximately 6.6 log PFU/µl of extracellular Nipah virus RNA was released from the Nipah virus-infected PS cells, with at least a 100-fold less virus RNA was recorded in the Nipah virus-infected SK-N-MC and THP-1. Approximately 15.2% (±0.1%) of the released virus from the infected PS cell cultures was infectious in contrast to approximately 5.5% (±0.7%) from the infected SK-N-MC cells. The findings suggest that there are no differences in the capacity to support Nipah virus replication between pigs and humans in fully susceptible PS and MRC-5 cells. However, there are differences between these cells and human neuronal cells and monocytes in the ability to support Nipah virus replication and virus release. J. Med. Virol. 78:1105,1112, 2006. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Fast analysis in liquid chromatography using small particle size and high pressure

JOURNAL OF SEPARATION SCIENCE, JSS, Issue 12 2006
Dao T.-T.
Abstract In order to enhance chromatographic performances in terms of efficiency and rapidity, LC has recently evolved in the development of short columns packed with small particles (sub-2 ,m) working at high pressures (>400 bar). This approach has been described 30 years ago according to the fundamental chromatographic equations. However, systems and columns compatible with such high pressures have been introduced in the market in 2004 only. Advantages of small particles working at high pressure will be discussed in terms of sensitivity, efficiency, resolution, and analysis time. Potential problems encountered with high pressure in terms of frictional heating and solvent compressibility will also be discussed even if systems working at a maximum pressure of 1000 bar are not influenced by these parameters and give reliable and reproducible results. Several applications will highlight the potential and interest of this new technology. [source]


Optimization of solid-phase microextraction methods for GC-MS determination of terpenes in wine

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, Issue 7 2005
Rosa M Peña
Abstract Solid-phase microextraction using a 100 µm poly(dimethylsiloxane) fiber, followed by gas chromatography,mass spectrometry determination, has been optimized for the analysis of some terpenes in wine samples. The best results were obtained by direct immersion of the fiber using a sampling period of 15 min with constant magnetic stirring (1100 rpm) and an extraction temperature of 20 °C. The sample volume was 7 ml with 25% NaCl, in a 15 ml capped vial. Desorption was performed directly in the gas chromatograph injector port over 5 min at 250 °C using the splitless mode. The method is sensitive, with detection limits between 11 and 25 µg l,1, precise, with variation coefficients in the range 1.28,3.71%, and linear over more than one order of magnitude. The related conditions were used for wine sample analyses with recoveries between 71.8 and 90.9%. Solid-phase microextraction remains an attractive alternative technique due to its rapidity and because it is a solvent-free extraction. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Unusual preservation of crustaceans and microbial colonies in a vadose zone, northwest Morocco

LETHAIA, Issue 1 2003
MICHAEL J. DUANE
Exceptional fossil preservation is observed in self-sealing microcavities in limestones where lichens, cyanobacteria and fungi together entombed themselves and organic walled microfossils, crustaceans and their eggs. Preservation has been enabled by calcite coating, lining and impregnation of the exoskeleton of the crustaceans, which had a high original calcium content and acted as a nucleus for precipitation. The good preservation was facilitated by the microcavities, the surrounding limestone, the seasonality and rapidity of precipitation, the microbial colonies living on the specimens, and the fluxing of vadose waters through the karst. The microbes and the crustaceans probably became trapped by the very high rate of calcite precipitation promoted within the cavities. Entrapment in mucous-secreting mats of cyanobacteria and fungi preceded the destruction of some of the soft parts of the crustaceans. By the time the mats and the incorporated biota were sealed into the cavities in the limestone, the mucosic mats and their bacterial communities had mediated production of a range of calcite cements promoting preservation of the refractory tissues. This process has important implications for cementation studies in arid zones (and especially in the Martian subsurface), since a range of microbes are involved in progressive biomineralization leading to fossilization within a perched, vadose karst. [source]


Rapid, sensitive and simple detection method for koi herpesvirus using loop-mediated isothermal amplification

MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY, Issue 7 2009
Manabu Yoshino
ABSTRACT New methods were developed for the detection of koi herpesvirus (KHV, CyHV-3) by LAMP, which were compared with the PCR for specificity and sensitivity. We designed two primer sets targeting a specific sequence within the 9/5 PCR amplicon (9/5 LAMP) and the upper region of the SphI-5 PCR amplicon (SphI-5 LAMP), including a sequence highly conserved among the strains. The amplification was monitored in real-time based on the increase in turbidity, with magnesium pyrophosphate as the by-product. The reactions were carried out under isothermal conditions at 65°C for 60 min. The detection limit of both LAMP was six copies, equal to the modified SphI-5 PCR. No cross-reactivity with other fish pathogenic viruses and bacteria was observed. SphI-5 LAMP was found to have a quicker response in terms of the reaction velocity than 9/5 LAMP. Therefore, we consider SphI-5 LAMP to be superior for routine use. Additionally, LAMP was found applicable to crude extract from gills and other organs. LAMP methods are superior in terms of sensitivity, specificity, rapidity and simplicity, and are potentially a valuable diagnostic tool for KHV infections. [source]


Extracellular Arginine Rapidly Dilates In Vivo Intestinal Arteries and Arterioles Through a Nitric Oxide Mechanism

MICROCIRCULATION, Issue 2 2008
Laura Pezzuto
ABSTRACT Objective: Arginine used for nitric oxide formation can be from intracellular stores or transported into cells. The study evaluated the rapidity, and primary site of NO and vascular resistance responses to arginine at near physiological concentrations (100,400 , M). Methods: Arginine was applied to a single arteriole through a micropipette to determine the fastest possible responses. For vascular blood flow and [NO] responses, arginine was added to the bathing media. Results: Dilation of single arterioles to arginine began in 10,15 seconds and application over the entire vasculature increased [NO] in , 60,90 seconds, and flow increased within 120,300 seconds. Resting periarteriolar [NO] for arterioles was 493.6 ± 30.5 nM and increased to 696.1 ± 68.2 and 820.1 ± 110.5 nM at 200 and 400 , M L-arginine. The blood flow increased 50% at 400,1200 , M L-arginine. The reduced arterial resistance during topical arginine was significantly greater than microvascular resistance at 100 and 200 , M arginine. All responses were blocked by L-NAME. Conclusions: This study demonstrated arterial resistance responses are as or more responsive to arginine induced NO formation as arterioles at near physiological concentrations of arginine. The vascular NO and resistance responses occurred rapidly at L-arginine concentrations at and below 400 , M, which predict arginine transport processes were involved. [source]


Apoptosis in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a review of the evidence

NEUROPATHOLOGY & APPLIED NEUROBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
S. Sathasivam
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease primarily affecting the upper and lower motor neurones of the central nervous system. Recently, a lot of interest has been generated by the possibility that a mechanism of programmed cell death, termed apoptosis, is responsible for the motor neurone degeneration in this condition. Apoptosis is regulated through a variety of different pathways which interact and eventually lead to controlled cell death. Apart from genetic regulation, factors involved in the control of apoptosis include death receptors, caspases, Bcl-2 family of oncoproteins, inhibitor of apoptosis proteins (IAPs), inhibitors of IAPs, the p53 tumour suppressor protein and apoptosis-related molecules. The first part of this article will give an overview of the current knowledge of apoptosis. In the second part of this review, we will examine in detail the evidence for and against the contribution of apoptosis in motor neurone cell death in ALS, looking at cellular-, animal- and human post-mortem tissue-based models. In a chronic neurodegenerative disease such as ALS, conclusive evidence of apoptosis is likely to be difficult to detect, given the rapidity of the apoptotic cell death process in relation to the relatively slow time course of the disease. Although a complete picture of motor neurone death in ALS has not been fully elucidated, there is good and compelling evidence that a programmed cell death pathway operates in this disorder. The strongest body of evidence supporting this comes from the findings that, in ALS, changes in the levels of members of the Bcl-2 family of oncoproteins results in a predisposition towards apoptosis, there is increased expression or activation of caspases-1 and -3, and the dying motor neurones in human cases exhibit morphological features reminiscent of apoptosis. Further supporting evidence comes from the detection of apoptosis-related molecules and anti-Fas receptor antibodies in human cases of ALS. However, the role of the p53 protein in cell death in ALS is at present unclear. An understanding of the mechanism of programmed cell death in ALS may provide important clues for areas of potential therapeutic intervention for neuroprotection in this devastating condition. [source]


How predictable are reptile responses to wildfire?

OIKOS, Issue 7 2008
David B. Lindenmayer
Natural disturbances are key processes in the vast majority of ecosystems and a range of ecological theories have been developed in an attempt to predict biotic responses to them. However, empirical support for these theories has been inconsistent and considerable additional work remains to be done to better understand the response of biodiversity to natural disturbance. We tested predictions from the intermediate disturbance hypothesis and the habitat accommodation model of succession for reptile responses to fire history and a single major fire event. We focused our work on a broad range of vegetation types spanning sedgeland to temperate rainforest located within a national park in south-eastern Australia. We found no significant relationships between reptile species richness and the number of fires over the past 35 years, the time since the last fire, or the severity of a major fire in 2003. Thus, we found no strong evidence to support the intermediate disturbance hypothesis. A correspondence analysis of reptile assemblages revealed a gradient in species responses to fire history. However, we found limited evidence for an ordered succession of reptiles. Nor could the responses of individual species be readily predicted from life history attributes. Thus, our findings were generally not consistent with predictions from the habitat accommodation model of succession. A possible explanation for the absence of a predictable sequence of recovery following disturbance might be the rapidity of post-fire recovery of many components of native vegetation cover that were found to be important for reptiles (e.g. the extent of grass cover). This would have limited the time for early successional conditions to prevail and limited opportunities for species associated with such conditions. We found that most reptile species responses were much more strongly linked to vegetation type than fire variables, emphasizing a need to understand relationships with vegetation before being able to understand possible fire effects (if and where they exist). We found the disturbance concepts we examined were limited in their ability to accurately predict reptile responses to past fire history or the impacts of a single major fire in 2003. Practical management might be best guided not by disturbance theory, but by carefully setting objectives to meet conservation goals for particular individual species of reptiles. [source]


Impact of spray application methodology on the development of resistance to cypermethrin and spinosad by fall armyworm Spodoptera frugiperda (JE Smith)

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE (FORMERLY: PESTICIDE SCIENCE), Issue 11 2006
Ali Al-Sarar
Abstract The development of resistance to an insecticide under various types of application method has yet to be reported in the literature. Five fall armyworm Spodoptera armigera (JE Smith) colonies were reared in a chamber for ten generations before starting topical application bioassays. From each colony, 200,500 third,fourth-instar larvae were fed for 72 h on corn plants sprayed with cypermethrin or spinosad at minimum application rate (20 g ha,1) using a small droplet size nozzle XR8001VS (volume median diameter Dv0.5 = 163 µm) or a large droplet size nozzle XR8008VS (Dv0.5 = 519 µm). Surviving larvae were transferred to untreated corn leaves to complete their life cycle. Next-generation third-instar larvae of each colony were topically dosed with technical cypermethrin or spinosad at 1 µL per larva, and mortality was recorded 24 h post-treatment. The results indicated that cypermethrin demonstrated an insecticidal activity greater than that of spinosad, and the cypermethrin regression lines moved to the right faster than those for spinosad, indicating an increased tolerance of cypermethrin. Generally, larvae from all generations (F1,F7) under the XR8008VS treatments were less susceptible to cypermethrin and developed resistance faster and to higher levels than larvae from the XR8001VS treatments. The confidence limits (95%) of LD50 for all spinosad treatments indicated that there was no significant difference from the LD50 value of the susceptible reference strain. The results are a first indication that application technology/insecticide reaction may affect the rapidity of resistance development in certain pest/plant scenarios, but field studies are needed to confirm this conclusion. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Analysis of sesterterpenoids from Aspergillus terreus using ESI-QTOF and ESI-IT

PHYTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS, Issue 4 2010
Zhi-Jun Wu
Abstract Introduction , Biosynthesis of terretonin was studied due to the interesting skeleton of this series of sesterterpenoids. Very recently, López-Gresa reported two new sesterterpenoids (terretonins E and F) which are inhibitors of the mammalian mitochondrial respiratory chain. Mass spectrometry (MS), especially tandem mass spectrometry, has been one of the most important physicochemical methods for the identification of trace natural products due to it rapidity, sensitivity and low levels of sample consumption. The potential application prospect and unique skeleton prompted us to study structural characterisation using MS. Objective , To obtain sufficient information for rapid structural elucidation of this class of compounds using MS. Methodology , The elemental composition of the product ions was confirmed by low-energy ESI-CID-QTOF-MS/MS analyses. The fragmentation pathways were postulated on the basis of ESI-QTOF-MS/MS/MS and ESI-IT-MSn spectra. Common features and major differences between ESI-QTOF-MS/MS and IT-MSn spectra were compared. For ESI-QTOF-MS/MS/MS experiments, capillary exit voltage was raised to induce in-source dissociation. Ammonium acetate or acetic acid were added into solutions to improve the intensity of [M + H]+. The collision energy was optimised to achieve sufficient fragmentation. Some fragmentation pathways were unambiguously proposed by the variety of abundance of fragment ions at different collision energies even without MSn spectra. Results , Fragmentation pathways of five representative sesterterpenoids were elucidated using ESI-QTOF-MS/MS/MS and ESI-IT-MSn in both positive- and negative-ion mode. The key group of characterising fragmentation profiles was ring B, and these fragmentation patterns are helpful to identify different types of sestertepenoids. Conclusion , Complementary information obtained from fragmentation experiments of [M + H]+ (or [M + NH4]+) and [M , H], precursor ions is especially valuable for rapid identification of this kind of sesterterpenoid. [source]


Applications of silver nanoparticles capped with different functional groups as the matrix and affinity probes in surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight and atmospheric pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization ion trap mass spectrometry for rapid analysis of sulfur drugs and biothiols in human urine

RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, Issue 18 2008
Kamlesh Shrivas
A strategy is presented for the analysis of sulfur drugs and biothiols using silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) capped with different functional groups as the matrix and affinity probes in surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SALDI-TOF MS) and atmospheric pressure-matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization ion trap mass spectrometry (AP-MALDI-ITMS). Biothiols adsorbed on the surface of AgNPs through covalent bonding were subjected to ultraviolet (UV) radiation that enabled desorption and ionization due to the excellent photochemical property of NPs. The proposed method has been successfully applied for the determination of cysteine and homocysteine in human urine samples using an internal standard. The limit of detection (LOD) and limit of quantification (LOQ) for cysteine and homocysteine in urine sample are 7 and 22,nM, respectively, with a relative standard deviation (RSD) of <10%. The advantages of the present method compared with the methods reported in the literature for biothiol analysis are simplicity, rapidity and sensitivity without the need for time-consuming separation and tedious preconcentration processes. Additionally, we also found that the bare AgNPs can be directly used as the matrix in MALDI-TOF MS for the analysis of sulfur drugs without the addition of an extra proton source. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]