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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Calcium: A Simple Guide

Farrell, Vanessa A. 01 1900 (has links)
3 pp. / Originally published: 2002 / It is important to know how much calcium you need to consume each day as more than 2500 mg of calcium each day can be harmful. Calcium should be obtained from foods and beverages first, then from supplements if necessary. Taking more than 500 mg of calcium at one time should be avoided. If you choose to take a calcium supplement, calcium citrate or calcium carbonate should be chosen.
22

The effect of clomiphene citrate

Thomson, Karren Judith 26 October 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Science School of Anatomical Sciences 9901061h karrenthomson@yahoo.co.uk / Clomiphene citrate (CC), a synthetic estrogen, is an efficient superovulator used in infertility treatment. However pregnancy rates resulting from CC treatment are low. Research has suggested that this may be due to an aberrant effect on implantation; CC binds to estrogen receptors (ER) and may affect estrogen responsive gene expression and thus implantation. This study investigates the effect of CC on ERa, 90kDa heat shock protein (Hsp90) and Hoxa10 expression in the rat uterus. Hsp90 binds to ERa in the absence of ligand and is involved in inducing a high affinity ligand binding conformation in the ER and in transactivation of the ER. Hoxa10 has been shown to be essential for uterine receptivity to implantation. CC (0.25mg) was given to ovariectomized rats, either alone or prior to a hormonal regime known to induce uterine receptivity for implantation. Expression of ERa, Hsp90 and Hoxa10 was determined by Western blotting, fluorescence immunocytochemistry and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. The single dose CC treated rats were compared to the controls as well as to ovariectomized rats treated with 0.5mg 17b estradiol (E2). The CC treated pseudopregnant rats (CCPPPE treated) were compared to 5½ day pregnant and pseudopregnant rats without CC (PPPE treated), to determine CCs effect at implantation. E2 upregulated ERa and Hsp90 expression in the rat uterus compared to controls (p<0.05). The finding for ERa was unexpected as other studies have shown that E2 decreases ERa levels a few hours after administration in the uterus. The present study therefore suggests a biphasic effect of E2 on ERa expression in the rat uterus. The effect of E2 on Hsp90 and ERa also proposes a balance between the levels of these two proteins in the uterus, to keep ERa in its optimal state and suggests that too high and too low a concentration of Hsp90 may both be inhibitory to ERa functioning. No significant difference was found in ERa and Hsp90 expression between the non-receptive (vehicle treated) and the receptive (PPPE treated) rat uteri, suggesting that these two genes are not markers for receptivity. However E2 is known to induce implantation of donor blastocysts in progesterone (P4) primed uteri. Therefore it is still essential for ERa to be present at implantation. It is of interest that CC downregulated ERa levels both in ii the absence of ovarian hormones and at implantation in the rat uterus. It is therefore proposed that this antiestrogenic effect would render the uterus less sensitive to the E2 required to induce implantation, thus accounting for low pregnancy rates with CC use. Although CC did not alter the expression of Hsp90 in this study, the reduction in ERa levels in response to CC may also upset the balance in the expression of these two genes, which may affect the transcriptional activity of ERa, and further prevent implantation. No clear results were obtained for Hoxa10 expression with the Western blots. However based on the ICC results, CC did not appear to affect Hoxa10 expression. Since P4 and not E2 is known to have the predominant effect on Hoxa10 expression, it is likely that E2 analogs, such as CC, would also not affect Hoxa10 expression to a significant degree. Future work will aim to separate the different uterine compartments and to determine the effects of CC on the expression of other implantation specific genes in the uterus.
23

Lipoprotein lipase activity is reduced in dialysis patients. Studies on possible causal factors.

Mahmood, Dana January 2012 (has links)
Cardiovascular disease is a major cause of mortality and morbidity in patients on chronic haemodialysis (HD). One main contributing factor is renal dyslipidaemia, characterized by an impaired catabolism of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins with accumulation of atherogenic remnant particles. The enzyme lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is a key molecule in the lipolysis of TG-rich lipoproteins into free fatty acids. The activity of LPL is reduced in HD-patients. This study was performed to elucidate various conditions and factors that may have an impact on LPL-related lipid metabolism. I. The functional pool of LPL is located at the vascular surface. The enzyme is released by heparin and low molecular weight heparins (LMWH) into the circulating blood and extracted and degraded by the liver. Heparin and LMWH are used for anticoagulation during HD to avoid clotting in the extracorporeal devices. This raises a concern that the LPL system may become exhausted by repeated administration of LMWH in patients on HD. In a randomized cross over designed study twenty patients on chronic HD were switched from a primed infusion of heparin to a single bolus of LMWH (tinzaparin).  The LPL activity in blood was higher on HD with LMWH at 40 minutes but lower at 180 minutes compared to HD with heparin. These values did not change during the 6-month study period. With heparin a significant TG reduction was found at 40 minutes and a significantly higher TG value at 180 and 210 minutes than at start. TG was higher during the HD-session with tinzaparin than with heparin. Our data demonstrate that repeated HD with heparin or with LMWH does not exhaust the LPL-system in the long term but does disturb the LPL system and TG metabolism during every HD session. II. In this study HD patients were compared with patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD) in a case control fashion. PD patients showed the same reaction of the LPL system to LMWH as HD patients. This confirmed that both HD and PD patients had the same, reduced, heparin-releasable LPL pool. The main difference was that in PD patients the TG continued to be cleared effectively even at 180 minutes after the bolus of LMWH injection. This may be due to a slower removal of the released LPL by the liver in PD patients.  III. In recent years, citrate (Citrasate) in the dialysate has been used in Sweden as a local anticoagulant for chronic HD. We performed a randomized cross over study that included 23 patients (16 men and 7 women) to investigate if citrate in the dialysate is safe and efficient enough as anticoagulant. The study showed that citrate anticoagulation eliminated the need of heparin or LMWH as anticoagulation for HD in half of the patients. However, individual optimization of doses of anticoagulants used together with citrate have to be made. IV. Recently angiopoietin-like proteins, ANGPTL3 and 4 have emerged as important modulators of lipid metabolism as potent inhibitors of LPL. Twenty-three patients on chronic HD and 23 healthy persons were included as case and controls to investigate the levels of these proteins in plasma of HD-patients and to evaluate if HD may alter these levels. The data showed that plasma levels of ANGPTL3 and 4 were increased in patients with kidney disease compared to controls. This may lead to inactivation of LPL. High flux-HD, but not low flux-HD, reduced the levels of ANGPTL4, while the levels of ANGPTL3 were not significantly influenced.  On HD with local citrate as anticoagulant, no LPL activity was released into plasma during dialysis in contrast to the massive release of LPL with heparin (LMWH). Citrate HD was not associated with a significant drop in plasma TG at 40 minutes, while both HD with citrate and heparin resulted in significantly increased TG levels at 180 minutes compared to the start values. Conclusions:  Citrate as a local anticoagulant during haemodialysis eliminates the need of heparin or LMWH in about half of the HD patients. Citrate does not induce release of LPL from its endothelial binding sites. We have shown that although HD with heparin causes release of the endothelial pool of LPL during each dialysis session, the basal pool is similarly low in PD patients that do not receive heparin. This indicates that the LPL pool is lowered as a consequence of the uraemia, per se. One explanation could be the increased levels of ANGPTL3 and 4. HD with high flux filters can temporarily lower the levels of ANGPTL4. Further studies are, however, needed to understand why LPL activity is low in patients with kidney disease.
24

Sample cradle prevents pre-analytic error on platelet counts but is not essential for hemoglobin measurement and prothrombin time

Karlsson, Jessica January 2012 (has links)
Introduction: It is recommended to place all the vacuum tubes directly on a sample cradle after vein puncture to prevent analytic error. This recommendation is not always easy to follow because the samples are taken by different professionals under different situations.  The three most common analyses, platelets count, haemoglobin and prothrombin time were tested.  Therefore, it was interesting to compare results from the three most common analyses with or without sample cradle, to evaluate the influence of this step on the result. Methods: Three analyses were preformed, using blood from 50 different persons. Each person gave two vacuum tubes, each contained 4.5mL of venous blood for the study. Tubes containing EDTA were used for platelet counts and measurement of haemoglobin and tubes containing citrate were used for prothrombin time-analysis. One of the tubes was placed, as recommended, directly on the sample cradle while the other tube was placed flat on a bench for 10 minutes before it was placed on the sample cradle. Results: There was a clear difference in platelet counts with and without immediate cradling but only minor difference between the results for haemoglobin and International Normalized Ratio. Conclusion: Some analyses seem to be more sensitive for variation in cradling than others. For platelet count it was important to immediately rock the tubes but for determination of prothrombine time and hemoglobin it had a small impact. The small impact on the results is probably due to the efficiency of the anticoagulant in the vacuum tubes.
25

Allometric Scaling in Centrarchid Fish: Origins of Intra- and Inter-specific Variation in Oxidative and Glycolytic Enzyme Levels in Muscle

Davies, Rhiannon 01 November 2007 (has links)
The influence of body size on metabolic rate, muscle enzyme activities, and the underlying patterns of mRNA for these enzymes were explored in an effort to explain the genetic basis of allometric variation in metabolic enzymes. Two pairs of sister species of centrarchid fishes were studied: black bass (largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides and smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieui), and sunfish (pumpkinseed, Lepomis gibbosus and bluegill, Lepomis macrochirus). The goal was to assess the regulatory basis of both intraspecific and interspecific variation in relation to body size, as well as gain insights into the evolutionary constraints within lineages. Whole animal routine metabolic rate showed scaling coefficients not significantly different from 1, ranging from +0.87 to +0.96. However, there were significant effects of body size on the specific activities of oxidative and glycolytic enzymes. Mass-specific activity of the oxidative enzyme citrate synthase (CS) scaled negatively with body size in each species, with scaling coefficients ranging from -0.15 to -0.19 whereas the glycolytic enzyme pyruvate kinase (PK) showed positive scaling, with scaling coefficients ranging from +0.08 to +0.23. The ratio of mass-specific enzyme activity in PK to CS increased with body size, whereas the ratio of mRNA transcripts of PK to CS was unaffected, suggesting the enzyme relationships were not due simply to transcriptional regulation of both genes. The mass-dependent differences in PK activities were best explained by transcriptional regulation of the muscle PK gene; PK mRNA was a good predictor of PK specific enzyme activity within species and between species. Conversely, CS mRNA did not correlate with CS specific enzyme activities, suggesting post-transcriptional mechanisms may explain the observed inter-specific and intraspecific differences in oxidative enzymes. / Thesis (Master, Biology) -- Queen's University, 2007-10-31 11:55:28.757
26

Cathode Materials Development for Proton Conducting SOFCs

Zhou, Guihua Unknown Date
No description available.
27

Functional analysis of a family of proteins implicated in Trypanosoma brucei lifecycle progression

Dean, Samuel January 2008 (has links)
Bloodstream trypanosomes initiate differentiation to procyclic forms in response to a citrate/ cis-aconitate (CCA) signal. A cell line was previously selected (“defective in differentiation-clone 1”; DiD1) that was unable to differentiate to procyclic forms (Tasker et al. (2000)). Additionally, expression profiling of this line in comparison to the parental line by macroarray hybridisation identified two differentially-expressed transcripts from an 8 gene cluster of highly homologous genes we named PAD genes (Proteins Associated with Differentiation). Members of this family show distinct expression profiles throughout the trypanosome lifecycle at both the mRNA and protein level, and are localised to the cell surface membrane of the cell. At least 1 member of the family (PAD1) shows stumpy form specific RNA and protein expression, representing the first useful molecular marker for this stage, and exhibits biochemical specificity for citrate. Additionally, another member of this family (PAD2) is upregulated in response to low temperature, a condition reported to cause hypersensitivity to CCA. Finally, RNAi mediated ablation of the PAD gene transcripts compromised the capacity of stumpy form trypanosomes to differentiate to the procyclic form in response to CCA. These combined expression, cytological, reverse-genetic and biochemical data make PAD proteins excellent candidates for recognition of the signal to initiate differentiation in response to CCA.
28

Lactate Dehydrogenase and Citrate Synthase activity in cardiac and skeletal muscle of lowland and highland tinamous

Aira, Naomi January 2013 (has links)
Tinamous (Tinamidae) have the smallest heart in relation to body mass compared to any other flying bird today (Bishop 1997). This means that heart size is likely to restrict aerobic metabolism. Tinamous inhabit areas from sea level to 4800 m a.s.l., which means that the high altitude living species, Nothoprocta ornata (NO), is exposed to hypoxia. In this study the activity of the two metabolic enzymes Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) and Citrate Synthase (CS) was measured and the ratio between the enzyme activities calculated to examine if the small heart of the tinamous affects their aerobic/anaerobic metabolism. The activity of the two enzymes was measured in the heart and the gastrocnemius muscle in the three species Nothoprocta ornata (NO), Nothoprocta perdicaria (NP) and Gallus gallus (GG). CS activity was significantly higher in the heart compared to the skeletal muscle and LDH activity was significant higher in the skeletal muscle than in the heart in all three species. The LDH/CS ratio was significantly higher in NO’s skeletal muscle than in chickens but there was no significant difference between species in the heart. The higher ratio in NO´s muscle could be a sign of a higher anaerobic metabolism that is used in the muscles to compensate for the small heart NO have. In conclusion, the Tinamous
29

Intrauterine insemination (IUI) treatment in subfertility

Nuojua-Huttunen, S. (Sinikka) 12 March 1999 (has links)
Abstract The effectiveness of intrauterine insemination (IUI) combined with controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH) in the treatment of subfertility was investigated in the present study. For this purpose the prognostic factors associated with success of clomiphene citrate (CC)/human menopausal gonadotrophin (HMG)/IUI were identified in 811 treatment cycles. Furthermore, a long gonadotrophin-releasing hormone agonist (GnRHa)/HMG stimulation protocol was compared with a standard CC/HMG protocol. In addition, the usefulness of alternative insemination techniques including fallopian tube sperm perfusion (FSP) and intrafollicular insemination (IFI) was investigated. Finally, the obstetric and perinatal outcome of pregnancies after COH/IUI was examined and compared with those of matched spontaneous and in vitro fertilization(IVF) pregnancies. Female age, duration of infertility, aetiology of infertility, number of large preovulatory follicles and number of the treatment cycle were predictive as regards pregnancy after CC/HMG/IUI. The highest pregnancy rate (PR) was obtained in women of &lt; 40 years of age with infertility duration ≤ 6 years, who did not suffer from endometriosis. A multifollicular ovarian response to CC/HMG resulted in better treatment success than a monofollicular response, indicating the necessity of COH combined with IUI. A significantly higher PR was achieved in the first treatment cycles compared with the others, and 97% of the pregnancies were obtained in the first four treatment cycles. The PR per cycle did not differ significantly between a long GnRHa/HMG and a standard CC/HMG protocol, but the average medication expense of GnRHa/HMG stimulation was four times the cost of CC/HMG stimulation. Therefore, the routine use of a long GnRHa/HMG protocol in IUI treatment remains questionable. The FSP procedure was easy to perform by using a paediatric Foley catheter. The success rate in couples with either FSP or standard IUI did not differ significantly, although there was a trend towards a lower PR in the FSP group. The FSP technique should not replace the simpler and less time-consuming IUI technique in routine use. The IFI technique was also simple to perform and convenient for patients. However, only one normal singleton intrauterine pregnancy resulted in 50 IFI-treated women, indicating that IFI is inefficacious for treating subfertility. The IUI parturients differed from average Finnish parturients in respect to higher maternal age, more frequent primiparity and a higher incidence of multiple pregnancies. The use of antenatal care services was significantly lower in IUI singleton pregnancies compared with IVF singletons, although there were no more complications in IVF pregnancies. The hospitalization and Caesarean section rates were generally high in all pregnancies. The mean birthweight of IUI singletons was significantly lower than that in spontaneous pregnancies, but comparable to that in IVF pregnancies. However, the incidence of preterm birth, low birth weight and other variables describing the outcome of infants were similar in IUI, IVF and spontaneous pregnancies. In summary, the IUI procedure itself does not seem to affect adversely the obstetric and perinatal outcome of pregnancy, and patient characteristics and multiplicity may be more important in this respect.
30

The Effects of Certain Organic Compounds Upon the Bacterial Deposition of Ferric Hydroxide from Ferric Ammonium Citrate

Papadopoulou, Polykarpia C. January 1956 (has links)
This thesis studies the effects of certain organic compounds upon the bacterial deposition of ferric hydroxide from ferric ammonium citrate.

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