76 research outputs found

    First operations of the LNS heavy ions facility

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    Abstract A heavy ion facility is now available at Laboratorio Nazionale del Sud (LNS) of Catania. It can deliver beams with an energy up to 100 MeV/amu. The facility is based on a 15MV HVEC tandem and a K = 800 superconducting cyclotron as booster. During the last year, the facility came into operation. A 58Ni beam delivered by the tandem has been radially injected in the SC and then has been accelerated and extracted at 30 MeV/amu. In this paper the status of the facility together with the experience gained during the commissioning will be extensively reported

    EEG Markers in Emotionally Unstable Personality Disorder-A Possible Outcome Measure for Neurofeedback: A Narrative Review.

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    Objectives. There is growing evidence for the use of biofeedback (BF) in affective disorders, dissocial personality disorder, and in children with histories of abuse. Electroencephalogram (EEG) markers could be used as neurofeedback in emotionally unstable personality disorder (EUPD) management especially for those at high risk of suicide when emotionally aroused. This narrative review investigates the evidence for EEG markers in EUPD. Methods. PRISMA guidelines were used to conduct a narrative review. A structured search method was developed and implemented in collaboration with an information specialist. Studies were identified via 3 electronic database searches of MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO. A predesigned inclusion/exclusion criterion was applied to selected papers. A thematic analysis approach with 5 criteria was used. Results. From an initial long list of 5250 papers, 229 studies were identified and screened, of which 44 met at least 3 of the predesigned inclusion criteria. No research to date investigates EEG-based neurofeedback in EUPD. A number of different EEG biomarkers are identified but there is poor consistency between studies. Conclusions. The findings heterogeneity may be due to the disorder complexity and the variable EEG related parameters studied. An alternative explanation may be that there are a number of different neuromarkers, which could be clustered together with clinical symptomatology, to give new subdomains. Quantitative EEGs in particular may be helpful to identify more specific abnormalities. EEG standardization of neurofeedback protocols based on specific EEG abnormalities detected may facilitate targeted use of neurofeedback as an intervention in EUPD

    Relative effects of furosemide and ethacrynic acid on ion transport and energy metabolism in slices of rat kidney-cortex

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    The effects of furosemide and ethacrynic acid have been studied using slices of rat kidney cortex incubated in a Ringer medium. At concentrations from 0.2–2.0 mM, furosemide had no significant effect on the tissue ATP content or on the metabolism-dependent net movements of intracellular Na + , K + and Ca 2+ . It did, however, induce an increase in the net, outward movement of Cl − ; we suggest that this may have srisen from inhibition of a Cl − accumulating mechanism. In contrast, ethacrynic acid in the same concentration range caused marked reduction of cell respiration and ATP content and virtually total inhibitition of several processes of ion transport (Na + , Cl − and Ca 2+ loss, and K + uptake). Concentrations of furosemide greater than 5 mM caused marked inhibition of energy metabolism and transport of ions, and 10 mM furosemide had quantitatively similar effects to 2 mM ethacrynic acid. Electron micrographs of kidney-cortex slices treated with the diuretics at 2 mM show that the ultrastructure was well maintained in the presence of furosemide but that ethacrynic acid caused severe structural disorganisation and necrosis. The mitochondria were generally in the orthodox configuration in the presence of furosemide, but swollen in ethacrynic acid in accord with the marked effects of 2 mM ethacrynate on mitochondrial energy metabolism. Of the effects we have detected, that of low concentrations of furosemide on Cl − movement appears to be rather specific. Higher concentrations of this agent (5 mM and above), and all concentrations of ethacrynic acid studied (0.1–5.0 mM), have several inhibitory effects which seem to result from primary inhibition of mitochondrial activities and are presumably manifestations of toxicity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46309/1/210_2004_Article_BF00506264.pd

    Cellular mechanisms of inorganic phosphate transport in kidney

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    Calcium ion transport across plasma membranes isolated from rat kidney cortex.

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    Basal-lateral-plasma-membrane vesicles and brush-border-membrane vesicles were isolated from rat kidney cortex by differential centrifugation followed by free-flow-electrophoresis. Ca2+ uptake into these vesicles was investigated by a rapid filtration method. Both membranes show a considerable binding of Ca2+ to the vesicle interior, making the analysis of passive fluxes in uptake experiments difficult. Only the basal-lateral-plasma-membrane vesicles exhibit an ATP-dependent pump activity which can be distinguished from the activity in mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum by virtue of the different distribution during free-flow electrophoresis and its lack of sensitivity to oligomycin. The basal-lateral plasma membranes contain in addition a Na+/Ca2+-exchange system which mediates a probably rheogenic counter-transport of Ca2+ and Na+ across the basal cell border. The latter system is probably involved in the secondary active Na+-dependent and ouabain-inhibitable Ca2+ reabsorption in the proximal tubule, the ATP-driven system is probably more important for the maintenance of a low concentration of intracellular Ca2+

    What are the driving forces for the proximal tubular H<sup>+</sup> and Ca<sup>++</sup> transport? The electrochemical gradient for Na<sup>+</sup> and/or ATP

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    The H+ ion secretion in the proximal tubule as revealed by the reabsorption of the glycodiazine buffer vanishes when the ambient solutions are sodium-free. The same holds for other Na+-dependent transport processes such as Ca++, phosphate, glucose and amino acid reabsorption. If Na+ transport is blocked by ouabain the latter transport processes are abolished, the secretion of H+ ions, however, remains unchanged suggesting H+ to be not exclusively driven by active Na+ transport. These observations agree with electrical measurements which show an electrogenic component of H+ secretion to exist in rat proximal tubule. In experiments with isolated membrane vesicles an electroneutral Na+/H+-exchange mechanism could be demonstrated in the brush border membrane and an ATP-driven Ca++ pumpt as well as Na+-Ca++ countertransport in the baso-lateral cell membrane. These data suggest that both, the Na+ gradient and ATP, are used to drive H+ ion secretion across the luminal brush border and Ca++ reabsorption across the baso-lateral cell side. The biochemical nature of the various systems and their relative importance for the transepithelial ion movement remain to be elucidated
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