CV Values (cv + value)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Pharmacokinetic study of p -coumaric acid in mouse after oral administration of extract of Ananas comosus L. leaves

BIOMEDICAL CHROMATOGRAPHY, Issue 9 2006
Zhen Meng
Abstract Quantification of p- coumaric acid in mouse plasma following oral administration of Ananas comosus L. leaves was achieved by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography using a mobile phase of water,acetonitrile (82:18, v/v) and UV detection at 310 nm. The method was linear (determination coefficient, r2 = 0.9997) within the tested range (0.04,1.28 µg/mL). Intra- and inter-day precision coefficients of variation and accuracy bias were acceptable (maximal CV value was 4.06% for intra-day and 4.19% for inter-day) over the entire range. The recoveries were 90.63, 97.98 and 100.01% for concentrations of 0.04, 0.32 and 1.28 µg/mL, respectively. This is a very rapid, sensitive and economical way to determine p- coumaric acid concentration in mouse plasma after oral administration of A. comosus leaves. The concentration,time curve was fitted to the one-compartment model. This is the first time that p- coumaric acid extracted from A. comosus leaves was detected by HPLC-UV method and its pharmacokinetic characteristic was comprehensively studied. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Expression of mitochondrial HMGCoA synthase and glutaminase in the colonic mucosa is modulated by bacterial species

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 1 2004
Claire Cherbuy
The expression of the colonic mitochondrial 3-hydroxy 3-methyl glutaryl CoA (mHMGCoA) synthase, a key control site of ketogenesis from butyrate, is lower in germ-free (GF) than in conventional (CV) rats. In contrast, the activity of glutaminase is higher. The objective of this study was to investigate whether the intestinal flora can affect gene expression through short chain fatty acid (SCFA) and butyrate production. GF rats were inoculated with a conventional flora (Ino-CV) or with a bacterial strain producing butyrate (Clostridium paraputrificum, Ino- Cp) or not (Bifidobacterium breve, Ino- Bb). In the Ino-CV rats, mHMGCoA synthase expression was restored to the CV values 2 days after the inoculation, i.e. concomitantly with SCFA production. In the Ino- Cp group, but not in the Ino- Bb group, mHMGCoA synthase and glutaminase were expressed at the level observed in the CV rats. These data suggest that the intestinal flora, through butyrate production, could control the expression of colonic mHMGCoA synthase and glutaminase. These modifications in gene expression by butyrate in vivo seem unrelated to a modification of histone acetylation. [source]


Assessment of the increase in variability when combining volumetric data from different scanners

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 2 2009
Santiago Reig
Abstract In multicenter MRI studies, pooling of volumetric data requires a prior evaluation of compatibility between the different machines used. We tested the compatibility of five different scanners (2 General Electric Signa, 2 Siemens Symphony, and a Philips Gyroscan) at five different sites by repeating the scans of five volunteers at each of the sites. Using a semiautomatic method based on the Talairach atlas, and SPM algorithms for tissue segmentation (multimodal T1 and T2, or T1-only), we obtained volume measurements of the main brain lobes (frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal) and for each tissue type. Our results suggest that pooling of multisite data adds small error for whole brain measurements, intersite coefficient of variation (CV) ranging from 1.8 to 5.2%, respectively, for GM and CSF. However, in the occipital lobe, intersite CV can be as high as 11.7% for WM and 17.3% for CSF. Compared with the intersite, intrasite CV values were always much lower. Whenever possible, T1 and T2 tissue segmentation methods should be used because they yield more consistent volume measurements between sites than T1-only, especially when some of the scans were obtained with different sequence parameters and pixel size from those of the other sites. Our study shows that highest compatibility among scanners would be obtained using equipments of the same manufacturer and also image acquisition parameters as similar as possible. After validation, data from a specific ROI or scanner showing values markedly different from the other sites might be excluded from the analysis. Hum Brain Mapp, 2009. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Analysis of Volatile Compounds in Beef Fat by Dynamic-Headspace Solid-Phase Microextraction Combined with Gas Chromatography,Mass Spectrometry

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 5 2008
A. Watanabe
ABSTRACT:, A solid-phase microextraction (SPME) technique has been applied to the determination of the volatile compounds, including diterpenoids and lactones, in cooked beef fat. The ability of static-headspace SPME to extract lactones was disappointing, regardless of the type of SPME fiber or the temperature used. Dynamic-headspace SPME extraction with 50-/30-,m divinylbenzene-Carboxen on a polydimethylsiloxane fiber at 100 °C, by contrast, enabled the analysis of volatiles, including delta-lactones, gamma-lactones, and diterpenoids, with 50-/30-,m divinylbenzene-Carboxen on a polydimethylsiloxane fiber at 100 °C. Fifty-three compounds were identified from only 0.20 g of rendered beef fat, and 76% of these showed reliable peak size repeatability: the coefficient of variation was less than 10% on the total ion chromatograms obtained from gas chromatography,mass spectrometry (GC,MS) analysis. Some lactones showed higher CV values (>10%), but single-ion mode GC,MS analysis reduced them to 10% or less. In a study of beef samples available to the Japanese market, our analytical procedure revealed significantly higher levels of 1-hexanol, octadecane, ethyl tetradecanoate, gamma-nonalactone, but lower levels of delta-decalactone, delta-dodecalactone, and neophytadiene, in Japanese Black cattle than in beef imported from Australia. [source]


RTVue Fourier-domain OCT: reproducibility of RNFLT and macular thickness measurements

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2009
A GARAS
Purpose To evaluate the reproducibility of peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) and macular thickness (MT) measurements with the RTVue-100 Fourier-domain optical coherence tomography, and to determine the influence of pupil dilation, patients' experience in examinations and severity of glaucoma. Methods One eye of 14 normal subjects, 11 patients with moderate, 12 patients with severe glaucoma and 40 screening trial participants were imaged 5 times on the same day. For the hospital-based patients, the measurement series was repeated after pupil dilation and 3 months later. Results For the RNFLT and the MT parameters, intrasession intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) varied between 93.9 and 99.0%, intrasession coefficient of variation (CV) between 1.95 and 5.69 %, and intratest variability between 3.11 and 9.13 µm. Most thickness values, all intrasession CV and intratest variability values and the signal strength index remained unchanged after pupil dilation. Most intrasession CV values increased significantly with increasing disease severity. Patients' experience in imaging examinations had no influence on intrasession CV. Intratest variability and intrasession CV represented 79.1 to 98.6 % and 77.1 to 95.0 % of test-retest variability and intervisit CV, respectively. Conclusion Reproducibility of RNFLT and MT measurement with the RTVue-100 OCT are satisfactory for clinical purposes both in normals and glaucoma patients. Pupil dilation and patients' experience in imaging examinations do not influence the reproducibility of the measurements clinically significantly. Commercial interest [source]