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Lag Time (lag + time)
Kinds of Lag Time Selected AbstractsVARIATION OF LAG TIME AND SPECIFIC GROWTH RATE AMONG 11 STRAINS OF SALMONELLA INOCULATED ONTO STERILE GROUND CHICKEN BREAST BURGERS AND INCUBATED AT 25C,JOURNAL OF FOOD SAFETY, Issue 4 2000THOMAS P. OSCAR ABSTRACT One strain of 11 serotypes or 11 strains of Salmonella, which were isolated from the ceca of broilers, were surveyed for their growth kinetics on sterile ground chicken breast burgers incubated at 25C to determine the variation of lag time and specific growth rate. Growth curves, four per strain, were fit to a two-phase linear model to determine lag time (h) and specific growth rate (log10/h). Repeatability of growth kinetics measurements for individual strains had a mean coefficient of variation of 11.7% for lag time (range: 5.8 to 17.3%) and a mean coefficient of variation of 6.7% for specific growth rate (range: 2.7 to 13.3%). Lag time among strains ranged from 2.2 to 3.1 h with a mean of 2.8 h for all strains, whereas specific growth rate among strains ranged from 0.3 to 0.38 log10 per h with a mean of 0.35 log10per h for all strains. One-way analysis of variance indicated that lag time (P =0.029) and specific growth rate (P =0.025) differed slightly among strains. S. Haardt had a shorter (P < 0.05) lag time than S. Agona and S. Brandenburg, whereas the specific growth rate of S. Enteritidis was less than (P < 0.05) the specific growth rates of S. Typhimurium and S. Brandenburg. All other strains had similar lag times and specific growth rates. The coefficient of variation among strains was 9.4% for lag time and 5.7% for specific growth rate. These results indicate that there were only minor differences in the lag times and specific growth rates among the strains of Salmonella surveyed. Thus, the growth kinetic values obtained with one strain of Salmonella may be useful for predicting the growth of other strains of Salmonella for which data do not currently exist. [source] Human skin permeation of ,8 -tetrahydrocannabinol, cannabidiol and cannabinolJOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 3 2004Audra L. Stinchcomb ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to quantify the in-vitro human skin transdermal flux of ,8 -tetrahydrocannabinol (,8 -THC), cannabidiol (CBD) and cannabinol (CBN). These cannabinoids are of interest because they are likely candidates for transdermal combination therapy. Differential thermal analysis and in-vitro diffusion studies with human tissue were completed for the compounds. Heats of fusion, melting points and relative thermodynamic activities were determined for the crystalline compounds, CBD and CBN. Flux, permeability, tissue concentration and lag times were measured in the diffusion experiments. CBN had a lower heat of fusion and corresponding higher calculated relative thermodynamic activity than CBD. Ethanol concentrations of 30 to 33% significantly increased the transdermal flux of ,8 -THC and CBD. Tissue concentrations of ,8 -THC were significantly higher than for CBN. Lag times for CBD were significantly smaller than for CBN. The permeabilities of CBD and CBN were 10-fold higher than for ,8 -THC. Combinations of these cannabinoids with ethanol will be further studied in transdermal patch formulations in vitro and in vivo, as significant flux levels of all the drugs were obtained. CBD, the most polar of the three drugs, and other more polar cannabinoids will also be the focus of future drug design studies for improved transdermal delivery rates. [source] Tectonic evolution of the Himalaya constrained by detrital 40Ar,39Ar, Sm,Nd and petrographic data from the Siwalik foreland basin succession, SW NepalBASIN RESEARCH, Issue 4 2006A. G. Szulc ABSTRACT 40Ar,39Ar dating of detrital white micas, petrography and heavy mineral analysis and whole-rock geochemistry has been applied to three time-equivalent sections through the Siwalik Group molasse in SW Nepal [Tinau Khola section (12,6 Ma), Surai Khola section (12,1 Ma) and Karnali section (16,5 Ma)]. 40Ar,39Ar ages from 1415 single detrital white micas show a peak of ages between 20 and 15 Ma for all the three sections, corresponding to the period of most extensive exhumation of the Greater Himalaya. Lag times of less than 5 Myr persist until 10 Ma, indicating Greater Himalayan exhumation rates of up to 2.6 mm year,1, using one-dimensional thermal modelling. There are few micas younger than 12 Ma, no lag times of less than 6 Myr after 10 Ma and whole-rock geochemistry and petrography show a significant provenance change at 12 Ma indicating erosion from the Lesser Himalaya at this time. These changes suggest a switch in the dynamics of the orogen that took place during the 12,10 Ma period whereby most strain began to be accommodated by structures within the Lesser Himalaya as opposed to the Greater Himalaya. Consistent data from all three Siwalik sections suggest a lateral continuity in tectonic evolution for the central Himalayas. [source] Prescribed Burning to Restore Mixed-Oak Communities in Southern Ohio: Effects on Breeding- Bird PopulationsCONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001Vanessa L. Artman We studied the effects of repeated burning (1,4 years of annual burning) and recovery (1 year after burning,) on the breeding bird community. Burning resulted in incremental but temporary reductions in the availability of leaf litter, shrubs, and saplings, but it did not affect trees, snags, or understory vegetation cover. Of 30 bird species monitored, 4 were affected negatively and 2 were affected positively by burning. Population densities of Ovenbirds ( Seiurus aurocapillus), Worm-eating Warblers ( Helmitheros vermivorus), and Hooded Warblers ( Wilsonia citrina) declined incrementally in response to repeated burning and did not recover within 1 year after burning, suggesting a lag time in response to the changes in habitat conditions. Densities of Northern Cardinals ( Cardinalis cardinalis) fluctuated among years in the control units, but remained low in the burned units. Densities of American Robins ( Turdus migratorius) and Eastern Wood-Pewees ( Contopus virens) increased in response to burning, but these increases were apparent only after several years of repeated burning. In general, burning resulted in short-term reductions in the suitability of habitat for ground- and low-shrub-nesting birds, but it improved habitat for ground- and aerial-foraging birds. Overall, there were no changes in the composition of the breeding-bird community. Total breeding bird population levels were also unaffected by burning. Our results suggest that prescribed burning applied on a long-term basis or across large spatial scales is likely to have adverse effects on ground- and low-shrub-nesting bird species, but other changes in the composition of the breeding-bird community are likely to be minimal as long as the closed-canopy forest structure is maintained within the context of prescribed burning. Resumen: Se está reintroduciendo fuego artificialmente en los bosque del sur de Ohio para determinar su efectividad para restaurar y mantener comunidades de bosques mixtos de encino ( Quercus spp.). Estudiamos los efectos de quemas repetidas (1,4 años de quema anual,) y de recuperación (1 año después de la quema) sobre la comunidad de aves reproductivas. La quema resultó en reducciones temporales en la disponibilidad de hojarasca, arbustos y renuevos, pero no afectó a los árboles, tocones o la cubierta vegetal del sotobosque. De 30 especies de aves monitoredas, 4 fueron afectadas negativamente por la quema y 2 fueron afectadas positivamente. Las densidades de población de Seiurus aurocapillus, de Helmitheros vermivorus y de Wilsonia citrina declinaron incrementalmente en respuesta a quemas repetidas y no se recuperaron en un año después de la quema, sugiriendo un retraso en el tiempo de respuesta a los cambios en las condiciones del hábitat. Las densidades de Cardinalis cardinalis fluctuaron entre años en las unidades control, pero permanecieron bajas en las unidades quemadas. Las densidades de Turdus migratorius y de Contopus virens aumentaron en respuesta a la quema, pero estos incrementos fueron evidentes sólo hasta varios años después de quemas repetidas. En general, en el corto plazo la quema resultó en reducciones en la calidad del hábitat para aves que anidan sobre el suelo y en arbustos bajos, pero mejoró el hábitat para aves que forrajean en el suelo y el aire. En general, no hubo cambios en la composición de la comunidad de aves reproductivas. Los niveles totales de poblaciones de aves reproductivas tampoco fueron afectados por la quema. Nuestros resultados sugieren la posibilidad de que la quema prescrita aplicada a largo plazo o en escalas espaciales grandes tenga efectos adversos sobre especies de aves que anidan sobre el suelo y en arbustos bajos, pero la posibilidad de cambios en la composición de la comunidad de aves reproductivas es mínima. [source] The continuing rise of contact dermatitis, Part 2: The scientific journalCONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 4 2009Derek R. Smith Background: Although citation analysis represents an increasingly common method for examining the performance of scientific journals, few longitudinal studies have been conducted in the specialist fields of dermatology. Objectives: The objective of this study was to provide the first comprehensive bibliometric analysis of Contact Dermatitis for the 30-year period between 1977 and 2006. Materials and Methods: Detailed historical data were extracted from the Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Reports® and systematically analysed. The most highly cited articles published in the journal were also identified and then examined for citation frequency and lag time. Results: Citation analysis showed that the impact factor of Contact Dermatitis has increased significantly over the past 30 years, experiencing a sixfold improvement between 1977 and 2006. Conclusions: Bibliometric trends as identified in the current study clearly demonstrate the ongoing rise of Contact Dermatitis, from early beginnings in the mid-1970s, into the leading scientific periodical we know today. [source] Primary mesenchyme cell-ring pattern formation in 2D-embryos of the sea urchinDEVELOPMENT GROWTH & DIFFERENTIATION, Issue 1 2000Hideki Katow Primary mesenchyme cell (PMC) migration during PMC-ring pattern formation was analyzed using computer-assisted time-lapse video microscopy in spread embryos (2D-embryo) of the sea urchin, Mespilia globulus, and a computer simulation. The PMC formed a near normal ring pattern in the 2D-embryos, which were shown to be an excellent model for the examination of cell behavior in vivo by time-lapse computer analysis. The average migration distance of the ventro-lateral PMC aggregate-forming cells (AFC) and that of the dorso-ventral PMC cable-forming cells (CFC) showed no significant difference. All PMC took a rather straightforward migration path to their destinations with little lag time after ingression. This in vivo cell behavior fitted well to a computer simulation with a non-diffusable chemotaxis factor in the cyber-cell migration field. This simulation suggests that PMC recognize their destination from a very early moment of cell migration from the vegetal plate, and implicates that a chemoattractive region is necessary for making the PMC migration pattern. The left- and right-lateral AFC and dorso and ventral CFC were each derived from an unequally divided one-quarter segment of the vegetal plate. This suggests that AFC and CFC have a distinctive ancestor in the vegetal plate, and the PMC are a heterogeneous population at least in terms of their destination in the PMC-ring pattern. [source] Dating young geomorphic surfaces using age of colonizing Douglas fir in southwestern Washington and northwestern Oregon, USA,EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 6 2007Thomas C. Pierson Abstract Dating of dynamic, young (<500 years) geomorphic landforms, particularly volcanofluvial features, requires higher precision than is possible with radiocarbon dating. Minimum ages of recently created landforms have long been obtained from tree-ring ages of the oldest trees growing on new surfaces. But to estimate the year of landform creation requires that two time corrections be added to tree ages obtained from increment cores: (1) the time interval between stabilization of the new landform surface and germination of the sampled trees (germination lag time or GLT); and (2) the interval between seedling germination and growth to sampling height, if the trees are not cored at ground level. The sum of these two time intervals is the colonization time gap (CTG). Such time corrections have been needed for more precise dating of terraces and floodplains in lowland river valleys in the Cascade Range, where significant eruption-induced lateral shifting and vertical aggradation of channels can occur over years to decades, and where timing of such geomorphic changes can be critical to emergency planning. Earliest colonizing Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) were sampled for tree-ring dating at eight sites on lowland (<750 m a.s.l.), recently formed surfaces of known age near three Cascade volcanoes , Mount Rainier, Mount St. Helens and Mount Hood , in southwestern Washington and northwestern Oregon. Increment cores or stem sections were taken at breast height and, where possible, at ground level from the largest, oldest-looking trees at each study site. At least ten trees were sampled at each site unless the total of early colonizers was less. Results indicate that a correction of four years should be used for GLT and 10 years for CTG if the single largest (and presumed oldest) Douglas fir growing on a surface of unknown age is sampled. This approach would have a potential error of up to 20 years. Error can be reduced by sampling the five largest Douglas fir instead of the single largest. A GLT correction of 5 years should be added to the mean ring-count age of the five largest trees growing on the surface being dated, if the trees are cored at ground level. This correction would have an approximate error of ±5 years. If the trees are cored at about 1·4 m above the ground surface (breast height), a CTG correction of 11 years should be added to the mean age of the five sampled trees (with an error of about ±7 years). Published in 2006 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] DISORDER WITH LAW: A PRELIMINARY STUDY OF VIOLENCE IN RESPONSE TO WATER RIGHTS VIOLATION IN COLONIAL NEW SOUTH WALESECONOMIC PAPERS: A JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECONOMICS AND POLICY, Issue 2 2008EDWYNA HARRIS Scholars argue that violence will not occur in the presence of efficient property rights institutions. Empirical evidence from the Riverina district in New South Wales between 1855 and 1870 contradicts this claim. This paper provides a preliminary analysis of evidence to explain this apparent inconsistency. Violence was directed at upstream users who dammed rivers, preventing flow to downstream users. Evidence suggests violence was a form of social control referred to as self-help employed to enforce conventions of fairness. Dams were perceived as unfair because they reduced the distributive equity embodied in the common law of riparian rights that established water-use rules to allocate water between competing users. Violence in the form of dam destruction occurred primarily during drought years and was the preferred over common law remedies because of the lag time between seeking court intervention and obtaining a remedy. Coasean bargaining was not possible because of high transaction costs. The findings suggest that violence may occur in the presence of efficient property rights institutions if actors violate conventions of fairness. Violence may be more likely if property rights themselves embody these conventions. [source] Integration of continuous-flow sampling with microchip electrophoresis using poly(dimethylsiloxane)-based valves in a reversibly sealed deviceELECTROPHORESIS, Issue 14 2007Michelle W. Li Abstract Here we describe a reversibly sealed microchip device that incorporates poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS)-based valves for the rapid injection of analytes from a continuously flowing stream into a channel network for analysis with microchip electrophoresis. The microchip was reversibly sealed to a PDMS-coated glass substrate and microbore tubing was used for the introduction of gas and fluids to the microchip device. Two pneumatic valves were incorporated into the design and actuated on the order of hundreds of milliseconds, allowing analyte from a continuously flowing sampling stream to be injected into an electrophoresis separation channel. The device was characterized in terms of the valve actuation time and pushback voltage. It was also found that the addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to the buffer system greatly increased the reproducibility of the injection scheme and enabled the analysis of amino acids derivatized with naphthalene-2,3-dicarboxaldehyde/cyanide. Results from continuous injections of a 0.39,nL fluorescein plug into the optimized system showed that the injection process was reproducible (RSD of 0.7%, n,=,10). Studies also showed that the device was capable of monitoring off-chip changes in concentration with a device lag time of 90,s. Finally, the ability of the device to rapidly monitor on-chip concentration changes was demonstrated by continually sampling from an analyte plug that was derivatized upstream from the electrophoresis/continuous flow interface. A reversibly sealed device of this type will be useful for the continuous monitoring and analysis of processes that occur either off-chip (such as microdialysis sampling) or on-chip from other integrated functions. [source] Influence of heavy metals on microbial growth kinetics including lag time: Mathematical modeling and experimental verification,ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 10 2009S. Sevinç, engör Abstract Heavy metals can significantly affect the kinetics of substrate biodegradation and microbial growth, including lag times and specific growth rates. A model to describe microbial metabolic lag as a function of the history of substrate concentration has been previously described by Wood et al. (Water Resour Res 31:553,563) and Ginn (Water Resour Res 35:1395,1408). In the present study, this model is extended by including the effect of heavy metals on metabolic lag by developing an inhibitor-dependent functional to account for the metabolic state of the microorganisms. The concentration of the inhibiting metal is explicitly incorporated into the functional. The validity of the model is tested against experimental data on the effects of zinc on Pseudomonas species isolated from Lake Coeur d'Alene sediments, Idaho, USA, as well as the effects of nickel or cobalt on a mixed microbial culture collected from the aeration tank of a wastewater treatment plant in Athens, Greece. The simulations demonstrate the ability to incorporate the effect of metals on metabolism through lag, yield coefficient, and specific growth rates. The model includes growth limitation due to insufficient transfer of oxygen into the growth medium. [source] Methylmercury uptake and distribution kinetics in sheepshead minnows, Cyprinodon variegatus, after exposure to CH3Hg-spiked foodENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 9 2004Joy J. Leaner Abstract The distribution kinetics of methylmercury (CH3Hg[II]) was determined in sheepshead minnows (Cyprinodon variegatus) after a single dose of different CH3Hg(II)-spiked food to determine what factors influence the bioavailability, uptake, and redistribution of CH3Hg(II) to various organs of C. variegatus. The kinetics of CH3Hg(II) distribution was measured in the different organs during a period of 0.1 to 35 d after dosage. The CH3Hg(II) distribution kinetics in the different tissues was modeled using a simple multicompartmental pharmacokinetic model, which assumed that blood was the conduit linking the CH3Hg(II) exchange between the different organs. The CH3Hg(II) was taken up into the intestinal tissue within hours after feeding, followed by a slow release to the blood and the other organs of the body. Exchange between the blood and the visceral organs was relatively slow, with maximum CH3Hg(II) uptake in the liver and gill occurring at 1.5 d following dietary exposure. Subsequently, the majority of the CH3Hg(II) was channeled from the viscera to the rest of the body with a substantial lag time after feeding. However, the rate of transfer between tissues in the studies reported here were faster than those measured by others for larger fish. [source] Toxicity of lead in aqueous medium to Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 2 2003Rajesh K. Sani Abstract The toxicity of Pb(II) to sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) was studied using Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20 in a medium specifically designed to assess metal toxicity. The effects of Pb(II) toxicity were observed in terms of longer lag times, lower specific growth rates, and in some cases no measurable growth. With an increase in medium pH from 6 to 8, Pb(II) toxicity decreased. At all pH values, in the presence of Pb(II) concentrations ranging from 3 to 15 ,M, specific growth rates decreased and lag times increased. The minimum inhibiting concentration (MIC) of Pb(II) causing a complete inhibition in growth at pH 6 was 10 ,M, as compared to 15 ,M at pH 7.2 and 8. These MIC values are 40 times lower than previously reported for SRB. Results also show that with increases in initial cell protein concentration (inoculum size), soluble Pb(II) removal rates increased and the degree to which Pb(II) caused increased lag times was reduced. In the presence of Pb(II), in all cases in which D. desulfuricans grew (even after a 312-h lag time), the final cell protein concentration was equivalent to that of the Pb-free control. Live/dead staining, based on membrane integrity, indicated that while Pb(II) inhibited growth, Pb(II) did not cause a loss of D. desulfuricans membrane integrity. [source] Using spatial models and kriging techniques to optimize long-term ground-water monitoring networks: a case studyENVIRONMETRICS, Issue 5-6 2002Kirk Cameron Abstract In a pilot project, a spatial and temporal algorithm (geostatistical temporal,spatial or GTS) was developed for optimizing long-term monitoring (LTM) networks. Data from two monitored ground-water plumes were used to test the algorithm. The primary objective was to determine the degree to which sampling, laboratory analysis, and/or well construction resources could be pared without losing key statistical information concerning the plumes. Optimization of an LTM network requires an accurate assessment of both ground-water quality over time and trends or other changes in individual monitoring wells. Changes in interpolated concentration maps over time indicate whether ground-water quality has improved or declined. GTS separately identifies temporal and spatial redundancies. Temporal redundancy may be reduced by lengthening the time between sample collection. Spatial redundancy may be reduced by removing wells from the network which do not significantly impact assessment of ground-water quality. Part of the temporal algorithm in GTS involves computation of a composite temporal variogram to determine the least redundant overall sampling interval. Under this measure of autocorrelation between sampling events, the lag time at which the variogram reaches a sill is the sampling interval at which same-well measurements lack correlation and are therefore non-redundant. The spatial algorithm assumes that well locations are redundant if nearby wells offer nearly the same statistical information about the underlying plume. A well was considered redundant if its removal did not significantly change: (i) an interpolated map of the plume; (ii) the local kriging variances in that section of the plume; and (iii) the average global kriging variance. To identify well redundancy, local kriging weights were accumulated into global weights and used to gauge each well's relative contribution to the interpolated plume map. By temporarily removing that subset of wells with the lowest global kriging weights and re-mapping the plume, it was possible to determine how many wells could be removed without losing critical information. Test results from the Massachusetts Military Reserve (MMR) indicated that substantial savings in sampling, analysis and operational costs could be realized by utilizing GTS. Annual budgetary savings that would accrue were estimated at between 35 per cent and 5 per cent for both LTM networks under study.Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Evaluation of effects of rofecoxib on platelet function in an in vitro model of thrombosis with circulating human bloodEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, Issue 4 2004M. R. Hernandez Abstract Background, Cyclooxygenase (COX)-2-selective non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have been used for anti-inflammatory therapy. However, it has also been described that they may increase risk of cardiovascular events. Objectives, To study the effects of COX2 inhibitor rofecoxib on platelet function using in vitro tests. Results were compared with those obtained in a parallel experiment with acetyl salicylic acid (ASA). Methods, Studies of platelet aggregation, using different agonists, were performed by a turbidimetric method. Adhesive and cohesive function of platelets were analyzed by perfusion techniques, treated blood was exposed to thrombogenic surfaces and platelet interaction was morphometrically evaluated. Results, Twenty-five µM of rofecoxib induced a prolonged lag time and a reduction in the percentage of aggregation when arachidonic acid, ADP or collagen were used as agonists. In perfusion studies with parallel chamber rofecoxib 50 µM and ASA 500 µM reduced overall platelet interaction with the collagen surface (17·4 ± 3·7, P < 0·05; vs. 32·1 ± 2·6%P < 0·05 and 17·9 ± 2·4, vs. 31·9 ± 3·24, P < 0·05, respectively). In studies performed on annular chambers, 25 µM of rofecoxib reduced platelet interaction; values of the thrombus and covered surface were 17·4 ± 4·5%; P < 0·05 and 21·1 ± 4·1%; P < 0·05, respectively, vs. 30·4 ± 7·5% and 33·5 ± 6·5 in the control. ASA did also impair thrombus formation but differences did not reach the levels of statistical significance. Moreover, rofecoxib but not ASA reduced significantly thrombus height and thrombus area (7·4 ± 0·5 µM; P < 0·005 and 96·0 ± 21·2 µM2; P < 0·05 vs. control 11·2 ± 0·9 µM and 220·0 ± 47·7µM2, respectively). Conclusion, We conclude that under our experimental conditions, rofecoxib diminished platelet aggregation induced by different agonists and inhibited platelet-mediated thrombogenesis in an in vitro model of thrombosis. [source] Dynamic characteristics of heart rate control by the autonomic nervous system in ratsEXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 9 2010Masaki Mizuno We estimated the transfer function of autonomic heart rate (HR) control by using random binary sympathetic or vagal nerve stimulation in anaesthetized rats. The transfer function from sympathetic stimulation to HR response approximated a second-order, low-pass filter with a lag time (gain, 4.29 ± 1.55 beats min,1 Hz,1; natural frequency, 0.07 ± 0.03 Hz; damping coefficient, 1.96 ± 0.64; and lag time, 0.73 ± 0.12 s). The transfer function from vagal stimulation to HR response approximated a first-order, low-pass filter with a lag time (gain, 8.84 ± 4.51 beats min,1 Hz,1; corner frequency, 0.12 ± 0.06 Hz; and lag time, 0.12 ± 0.08 s). These results suggest that the dynamic characteristics of HR control by the autonomic nervous system in rats are similar to those of larger mammals. [source] Bacterial competition between a bacteriocin-producing and a bacteriocin-negative strain of Streptococcus bovis in batch and continuous cultureFEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, Issue 3 2006Bruno M. Xavier Abstract A bacteriocin-producing Streptococcus bovis strain (HC5) outcompeted a sensitive strain (JB1) before it reached stationary phase (pH 6.4), even though it grew 10% slower and cell-free bovicin HC5 could not yet be detected. The success of bacteriocin-negative S. bovis isolates was enhanced by the presence of another sensitive bacterium (Clostridium sticklandii SR). PCR based on repetitive DNA sequences indicated that S. bovis HC5 was not simply transferring bacteriocin genes to S. bovis JB1. When the two S. bovis strains were coinoculated into minimal medium, bacteriocin-negative isolates predominated, and this effect could be explained by the longer lag time (0.5 vs. 1.5 h) of S. bovis HC5. If the glucose concentration of the minimal medium was increased from 2 to 7 mg mL,1, the effect of lag time was diminished and bacteriocin-producing isolates once again dominated the coculture. When the competition was examined in continuous culture, it became apparent that batch culture inocula were never able to displace a strain that had already reached steady state, even if the inoculum was large. This result indicated that bacterial selection for substrate affinity was even more important than bacteriocin production. [source] Temporal variations of physical and hydrochemical properties of springs in the Mid-Levels area, Hong Kong: results of a 1-year comprehensive monitoring programmeHYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 8 2008Chi-Man Leung Abstract Springs and seeps occur in the spaces around Po Hing Fong Street in the Mid-Levels area, Hong Kong. Most of the springs occur through the drainage weepholes on retaining walls at the street. This paper first examines the geology and history of the springs. The paper then reports the findings from a 1-year comprehensive spring monitoring programme. The temporal variations of flow rate, physiochemical parameters and hydrochemistry of the springs are discussed. The average temperatures of the springs were close to the mean air temperature, although there was a systematic lag time of 40 to 50 days between the peak air temperature and highest water temperatures. Spring waters from two rows of weepholes in the retaining wall showed significantly different physical and hydrochemical responses to the changes in rainfall and temperature, though their vertical distance is only about 1 m. The results suggest that water from the upper row of weepholes may represent a recharge source that is shallow or close to the spring outlets, whereas that from the lower row of weepholes may represent a recharge source that is much deeper or further up the hill. Although the spring flows increased rapidly after rainstorms, analysis of the total dissolved solids showed a delayed response to rainstorm events. The concentration of individual ions in the spring water varied in a unique way in response to rainstorm events. It is clear that the presence of underground man-made drainage systems and the leakage from water mains in the study area may add complexity to the solute responses and transport mechanisms. Further studies are required to constrain the impacts of these man-made structures on the hydrogeology of the springs. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Assessment of flooding in urbanized ungauged basins: a case study in the Upper Tiber area, ItalyHYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 10 2005T. Moramarco Abstract The reliability of a procedure for investigation of flooding into an ungauged river reach close to an urban area is investigated. The approach is based on the application of a semi-distributed rainfall,runoff model for a gauged basin, including the flood-prone area, and that furnishes the inlet flow conditions for a two-dimensional hydraulic model, whose computational domain is the urban area. The flood event, which occurred in October 1998 in the Upper Tiber river basin and caused significant damage in the town of Pieve S. Stefano, was used to test the approach. The built-up area, often inundated, is included in the gauged basin of the Montedoglio dam (275 km2), for which the rainfall,runoff model was adapted and calibrated through three flood events without over-bank flow. With the selected set of parameters, the hydrological model was found reasonably accurate in simulating the discharge hydrograph of the three events, whereas the flood event of October 1998 was simulated poorly, with an error in peak discharge and time to peak of ,58% and 20%, respectively. This discrepancy was ascribed to the combined effect of the rainfall spatial variability and a partial obstruction of the bridge located in Pieve S. Stefano. In fact, taking account of the last hypothesis, the hydraulic model reproduced with a fair accuracy the observed flooded urban area. Moreover, incorporating into the hydrological model the flow resulting from a sudden cleaning of the obstruction, which was simulated by a ,shock-capturing' one-dimensional hydraulic model, the discharge hydrograph at the basin outlet was well represented if the rainfall was supposed to have occurred in the region near the main channel. This was simulated by reducing considerably the dynamic parameter, the lag time, of the instantaneous unit hydrograph for each homogeneous element into which the basin is divided. The error in peak discharge and time to peak decreased by a few percent. A sensitivity analysis of both the flooding volume involved in the shock wave and the lag time showed that this latter parameter requires a careful evaluation. Moreover, the analysis of the hydrograph peak prediction due to error in rainfall input showed that the error in peak discharge was lower than that of the same input error quantity. Therefore, the obtained results allowed us to support the hypothesis on the causes which triggered the complex event occurring in October 1998, and pointed out that the proposed procedure can be conveniently adopted for flood risk evaluation in ungauged river basins where a built-up area is located. The need for a more detailed analysis regarding the processes of runoff generation and flood routing is also highlighted. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] On morphometric properties of basins, scale effects and hydrological responseHYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 1 2003Roger Moussa Abstract One of the important problems in hydrology is the quantitative description of river system structure and the identification of relationships between geomorphological properties and hydrological response. Digital elevation models (DEMs) generally are used to delineate the basin's limits and to extract the channel network considering pixels draining an area greater than a threshold area S. In this paper, new catchment shape descriptors, the geometric characteristics of an equivalent ellipse that has the same centre of gravity, the same principal inertia axes, the same area and the same ratio of minimal inertia moment to maximal inertia moment as the basin, are proposed. They are applied in order to compare and classify the structure of seven basins located in southern France. These descriptors were correlated to hydrological properties of the basins' responses such as the lag time and the maximum amplitude of a geomorphological unit hydrograph calculated at the basin outlet by routing an impulse function through the channel network using the diffusive wave model. Then, we analysed the effects of the threshold area S on the topological structure of the channel network and on the evolution of the source catchment's shape. Simple models based on empirical relationships between the threshold S and the morphometric properties were established and new catchment shape indexes, independent of the observation scale S, were defined. This methodology is useful for geomorphologists dealing with the shape of source basins and for hydrologists dealing with the problem of scale effects on basin topology and on relationships between the basin morphometric properties and the hydrological response. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Modelling the growth of Weissella cibaria as a function of fermentation conditionsJOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2009A. Ricciardi Abstract Aims:, To investigate the effect of pH, water activity (aw) and temperature on the growth of Weissella cibaria DBPZ1006, a lactic acid bacterium isolated from sourdoughs. Methods and Results:, The kinetics of growth of W. cibaria DBPZ1006 was investigated during batch fermentations as a function of pH (4·0,8·0), aw (0·935,0·994) and temperature (10,45°C) in a rich medium. The growth curve parameters (lag time, growth rate and asymptote) were estimated using the dynamic model of Baranyi and Roberts (1994. A dynamic approach to predicting bacterial growth in food. Int J Food Microbiol23, 277,294). The effect of pH, aw and temperature on maximum specific growth rate (,max) were estimated by fitting a cardinal model. ,max under optimal conditions (pH = 6·6, aw = 0·994, T = 36·3°C) was estimated to be 0·93 h,1. Minimum and maximum estimated pH and temperature for growth were 3·6 and 8·15, and 9·0°C and 47·8°C, respectively, while minimum aw was 0·918 (equivalent to 12·2% w/v NaCl). Conclusions:,Weissella cibaria DBPZ1006 is a fast-growing heterofermentative strain, which could be used in a mixed starter culture for making bread. Significance and Impact of the Study:, This is the first study reporting the modelling of the growth of W. cibaria, a species that is increasingly being used as a starter in sourdough and vegetable fermentations. [source] Volume recovery, surface properties and membrane integrity of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus dehydrated in the presence of trehalose or sucroseJOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 6 2007E.E. Tymczyszyn Abstract Aims:, Although the practical importance of adding sugars before drying is well known, the mechanism of protection of bacteria by sugars is not clear. The response of the dehydrated micro-organisms to rehydration is analysed in terms of structural and functional changes, and correlated with their potentiality to grow in rich media. These aspects are related with the membrane integrity and the metabolic state of the rehydrated bacteria, measured by means of surface properties and permeability. To attain this objective, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus was dehydrated in the presence and in the absence of sucrose and trehalose. The bacterial response upon rehydration was investigated by determining: (i) the lag time of the bacterial growing in rich media, (ii) the restoration of the surface properties and the cellular volume and (iii) the membrane integrity. Methods and Results:,Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus was grown in MRS at 37°C overnight [De Man et al. (1960)J Appl Bacteriol 23, 130] and then dehydrated for 10, 20 and 30 min at 70°C in a vacuum centrifuge. The lag time of micro-organisms was determined by optical density changes after rehydration. The surface properties were determined by measuring the zeta potential of the bacteria suspended in aqueous solution. The cellular volume recovery was measured, after stabilization in saline solution, by light scattering and by the haematocrit method [Alemohammad and Knowles (1974)J Gen Microbiol 82, 125]. Finally, the membrane integrity has been determined by using specific fluorescent probes [SYTO 9 and propidium iodide, (PI)] that bind differentially depending on the integrity of the bacterial membrane. The lag time of Lact. delbrueckii subsp bulgaricus, dehydrated by heat in the presence of sucrose or trehalose and after that rehydrated, was significantly shortened, when compared with that obtained for bacteria dried in the absence of sugars. In these conditions, trehalose and sucrose maintained the zeta potential and the cell volume close to the control (nondried) cells. However, the membrane integrity, measured with fluorescent probes, was maintained only when cells were dehydrated for 10 min in the presence of sugars. For larger times of dehydration, the membrane integrity was not preserved, even in the presence of sugars. Conclusions:, When the micro-organisms are dehydrated in the absence of protectants, the membrane damage occurs with a decrease in the absolute value of the zeta potential and a decrease in the cellular volume recovered after rehydration. In contrast, when the zeta potential and the cellular volume are restored after rehydration to that corresponding to nondried cells, the micro-organisms are able to recover and grow with a reduced lag time. This can only be achieved when the dehydration is carried out in the presence of sugars. At short dehydration times, the response is associated with the preservation of the membrane integrity. However, for longer times of dehydration the zeta potential and volume recovery occurs in the presence of sugars in spite of a severe damage at membrane level. In this condition, cells are also recovered. In conclusion, to predict the ability of growing after dehydration, other bacterial structural parameters besides membrane integrity, such as zeta potential and cellular volume, should be taken into account. Significance and Impact of the Study:, The correlation of the lag time with the surface and permeability properties is of practical importance because the correlation of these two parameters with cell viability, allow to determine the potential bacterial capacity to grow in a rich medium after the preservation procedure, without necessity of performing a kinetic curve of growth, which is certainly time-consuming. [source] The effects of temperature, water activity and pH on the growth of Aeromonas hydrophila and on its subsequent survival in microcosm waterJOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 4 2003M. Sautour Abstract Aims: The influence of temperature, water activity and pH on the growth of Aeromonas hydrophila, and on its survival after transfer in nutrient-poor water were assessed. Methods and Results: Experiments were carried out according to a Box,Behnken matrix at 10,30°C, 0·95,0·99 water activity (aw) and pH 5,9. The effect of each factor on the kinetic parameters of growth (i.e. the maximal specific growth rate, ,max, and the lag time, ,) and on the decline of the bacteria in microcosm water (time to obtain a reduction of 5 log, T5 log) were studied by applying central composite design. Conclusions: The major effect of temperature and water activity on the growth of A. hydrophila was highlighted, whereas the effect of pH in these experimental conditions was not significant. Models describing the effect of environmental parameters on the growth of A. hydrophila were proposed. The effect of the growth environment, and particularly the incubation temperature, have an influence on the survival ability of the bacteria in nutrient-poor water. Significance and Impact of the Study: The Box,Behnken design was well suited to determine the influence of environmental factors on the growth of A. hydrophila and to investigate the effect of previous growth conditions on its survival in microcosm water. [source] VARIATION OF LAG TIME AND SPECIFIC GROWTH RATE AMONG 11 STRAINS OF SALMONELLA INOCULATED ONTO STERILE GROUND CHICKEN BREAST BURGERS AND INCUBATED AT 25C,JOURNAL OF FOOD SAFETY, Issue 4 2000THOMAS P. OSCAR ABSTRACT One strain of 11 serotypes or 11 strains of Salmonella, which were isolated from the ceca of broilers, were surveyed for their growth kinetics on sterile ground chicken breast burgers incubated at 25C to determine the variation of lag time and specific growth rate. Growth curves, four per strain, were fit to a two-phase linear model to determine lag time (h) and specific growth rate (log10/h). Repeatability of growth kinetics measurements for individual strains had a mean coefficient of variation of 11.7% for lag time (range: 5.8 to 17.3%) and a mean coefficient of variation of 6.7% for specific growth rate (range: 2.7 to 13.3%). Lag time among strains ranged from 2.2 to 3.1 h with a mean of 2.8 h for all strains, whereas specific growth rate among strains ranged from 0.3 to 0.38 log10 per h with a mean of 0.35 log10per h for all strains. One-way analysis of variance indicated that lag time (P =0.029) and specific growth rate (P =0.025) differed slightly among strains. S. Haardt had a shorter (P < 0.05) lag time than S. Agona and S. Brandenburg, whereas the specific growth rate of S. Enteritidis was less than (P < 0.05) the specific growth rates of S. Typhimurium and S. Brandenburg. All other strains had similar lag times and specific growth rates. The coefficient of variation among strains was 9.4% for lag time and 5.7% for specific growth rate. These results indicate that there were only minor differences in the lag times and specific growth rates among the strains of Salmonella surveyed. Thus, the growth kinetic values obtained with one strain of Salmonella may be useful for predicting the growth of other strains of Salmonella for which data do not currently exist. [source] Response Surface Model for the Estimation of Escherichia coli O 157:H7 Growth under Different Experimental ConditionsJOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 1 2005Rose Maria García-Gimeno ABSTRACT: In this study, a Response Surface Model (RSM) of Escherichia coli O157:H7 as affected by pH levels, sodium chloride and nitrite concentrations, temperature, and aerobic/anaerobic conditions is presented. The standard error of prediction (%SEP) obtained was acceptable for the growth rate prediction (33%SEP), although a bit high for lag time (53.01 %SEP). Mathematical validation demonstrated that the RSM predicts growth rate values on the fail-safe side in aerobic conditions and within the acceptable range (bias factor [Bf] = 0.99) with acceptable accuracy (accuracy factor [Af] = 1.15), as well as for lag time (Bf = 1.05; Af = 1.25). Temperature was found to have the greatest effect on the kinetic parameters, followed by NaCl concentration and pH. In the experimental range considered here (0 to 200 ppm), NaNO2 concentration was found to have a significant effect on growth rate but not on lag time. [source] The third parameter in reactive barrier filmsAICHE JOURNAL, Issue 2 2005Eric E. Nuxoll Abstract The lag time of a barrier film can be dramatically increased by the addition of sacrificial scavengers that consume solute before crossing the barrier. This increase in lag time is independent of the scavengers' reaction rate. This reaction rate does affect the amount of solute that crosses the membrane before steady state, a premature leakage that may render the barrier unsuitable regardless of its putative lag time and permeability. A third parameter is needed to characterize the barrier's transient behavior. Guided by experiments, we offer two candidate parameters for quantifying these changes. Correlations of these parameters are determined numerically and compared with experimental results. © 2005 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 51: 456,463, 2005 [source] Design and evaluation of a dry coated drug delivery system with floating,pulsatile releaseJOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 1 2008Hao Zou Abstract The objective of this work was to develop and evaluate a floating,pulsatile drug delivery system intended for chronopharmacotherapy. Floating,pulsatile concept was applied to increase the gastric residence of the dosage form having lag phase followed by a burst release. To overcome limitations of various approaches for imparting buoyancy, we generated the system which consisted of three different parts, a core tablet, containing the active ingredient, an erodible outer shell and a top cover buoyant layer. The dry coated tablet consists in a drug-containing core, coated by a hydrophilic erodible polymer which is responsible for a lag phase in the onset of pulsatile release. The buoyant layer, prepared with Methocel® K4M, Carbopol® 934P and sodium bicarbonate, provides buoyancy to increase the retention of the oral dosage form in the stomach. The effect of the hydrophilic erodible polymer characteristics on the lag time and drug release was investigated. Developed formulations were evaluated for their buoyancy, dissolution and pharmacokinetic, as well gamma-scintigraphically. The results showed that a certain lag time before the drug released generally due to the erosion of the dry coated layer. Floating time was controlled by the quantity and composition of the buoyant layer. Both pharmacokinetic and gamma-scintigraphic data point out the capability of the system of prolonged residence of the tablets in the stomach and releasing drugs after a programmed lag time. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 97:263,273, 2008 [source] Effect of lipid bilayer alteration on transdermal delivery of a high-molecular-weight and lipophilic drug: Studies with paclitaxelJOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 9 2004Ramesh Panchagnula Abstract Skin forms an excellent barrier against drug permeation, due to the rigid lamellar structure of the stratum corneum (SC) lipids. Poor permeability of drugs can be enhanced through alteration in partition and diffusion coefficients, or concentration gradient of drug with an appropriate choice of solvent system, along with penetration enhancers. The aim of the current investigation was to assess applicability of lipid bilayer alteration by fatty acids and terpenes toward the permeation enhancement of a high-molecular-weight, lipophilic drug, paclitaxel (PCL) through rat skin. From among the fatty acids studied using ethanol/isopropyl myristate (1:1) vehicle, no significant enhancement in flux of PCL was observed (p,>,0.05). In the case of cis mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids lag time was found to be similar to control (p,>,0.05). This suggests that the permeation of a high-molecular-weight, lipophilic drug may not be enhanced by the alteration of the lipid bilayer, or the main barrier to permeation could lie in lower hydrophilic layers of skin. A significant increase in lag time was observed with trans unsaturated fatty acids unlike the cis isomers, and this was explained on the basis of conformation and preferential partitioning of fatty acids into skin. From among the terpenes, flux of PCL with cineole was significantly different from other studied terpenes and controls, and after treatment with menthol and menthone permeability was found to be reduced. Menthol and menthone cause loosening of the SC lipid bilayer due to breaking of hydrogen bonding between ceramides, resulting in penetration of water into the lipids of the SC lipid bilayer that leads to creation of new aqueous channels and is responsible for increased hydrophilicity of SC. This increased hydrophilicity of the SC bilayer might have resulted in unfavorable conditions for ethanol/isopropyl myristate (1:1) along with PCL to penetrate into skin, therefore permeability was reduced. The findings of this study suggest that the permeation of a high-molecular-weight and lipophilic drug cannot be enhanced through bilayer alteration by penetration enhancers, and alteration in partitioning of drug into skin could be a feasible mode to enhance the permeation of drug. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 93:2177,2183, 2004 [source] Erratum: Steady-state flux and lag time in the stratum corneum lipid pathway: Results from finite element modelsJOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, Issue 7 2004H. Frederick Frasch No abstract is available for this article. [source] Preparation and evaluation of a novel delayed-onset sustained-release system of propranolol hydrochlorideJOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 7 2008Xue-mei Feng The objective of this work was to prepare and evaluate a new delayed-onset sustained-release system, comprising a sustained-release core tablet with hydroxypropyl methylcellulose as polymer matrix and an ethylcellulose/Eudragit L coating capable of delaying the drug release. The sustained core containing propranolol hydrochloride as the model drug was prepared by granulate tableting and the polymer coating was applied in a computer-controlled coating pan. The dissolution tests demonstrated that the in-vitro drug release was pH-dependent with sufficient gastric resistance, and the lag time (t10%) could be controlled by adjusting the coating level. Three dosage forms including commercial tablet, sustained-release tablet and the delayed-onset sustained-release tablet were administrated to six beagle dogs and the plasma levels of propranolol hydrochloride were measured with high-performance liquid chromatography. The delayed-onset sustained-release tablet had a lag time of 3.0 h in-vitro and 3.5 h in-vivo, and a tmax of 7.0 h. The relative bioavailability for delayed-onset sustained-release tablet was 96.98% compared with commercial tablets. The results indicate that the new propranolol delayed-onset sustained-release system could achieve a relatively constant drug release followed by a programmed lag time, and this may provide a promising drug delivery form for chronopharmacotherapy of certain cardiovascular diseases. [source] Influence of magnesium aluminium silicate on rheological, release and permeation characteristics of diclofenac sodium aqueous gels in-vitroJOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 4 2005Thaned Pongjanyakul The effect of magnesium aluminium silicate (MAS) on rheological, release and permeation characteristics of diclofenac sodium (DS) aqueous gels was investigated. DS aqueous gels were prepared using various gelling agents, such as 15% w/w poloxamer 407 (PM407), 1% w/w hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC), and 1% w/w high and low viscosity grades of sodium alginate (HV-SA and LV-SA, respectively). Different amounts of MAS (0.5, 1.0 and 1.5% w/w) were incorporated into the DS gels. Incorporation of MAS into the DS gels prepared using SA or PM407 caused a statistical increase in viscosity (P<0.05) and a shift from Newtonian flow to pseudoplastic flow with thixotropic property. The DS release rates of these composite gels were significantly decreased (P<0.05) when compared with the control gels. This was due to an interaction between MAS and PM407 or SA, and adsorption of DS onto MAS particles. Moreover, a longer lag time and no change in DS permeation flux were found when MAS was added to the gels. The findings suggest that the rheological characteristics of gels prepared using PM407 or SA could be improved by incorporating MAS. However, the use of MAS could retard the DS release and extend the lag time of DS permeation. [source] |