36 research outputs found
Slowing of Motor Nerve Conduction Velocity in Streptozotocin-induced Diabetic Rats is Preceded by Impaired Vasodilation in Arterioles that Overlie the Sciatic Nerve
Diabetes mellitus produces marked abnormalities in
motor nerve conduction, but the mechanism is not
clear. In the present study we hypothesized that in
the streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rat impaired
vasodilator function in arterioles that provide
circulation to the region of the sciatic nerve is
associated with reduced endoneural blood flow
(EBF) and that these defects precede slowing of
motor nerve conduction velocity, and thereby may
contribute to nerve dysfunction. As early as three
days after the induction of diabetes endoneural
blood flow was reduced in the STZ-induced diabetic
rat. Furthermore, after 1 week of diabetes acetylcholine-
induced vasodilation was found to be impaired.
This was accompanied by an increase in the superoxide
level in arterioles that provide circulation to
the region of the sciatic nerve as well as changes in
the level of other markers of oxidative stress
including an increase in serum levels of thiobarbituric
acid reactive substances and a decrease in lens
glutathione level. In contrast to the vascular related
changes that occur within 1 week of diabetes, motor
nerve conduction velocity and sciatic nerve Na+/k+
ATPase activity were significantly reduced following
2 and 4 weeks of diabetes, respectively.
These studies demonstrate that changes in vascular function
in the STZ-induced diabetic rat precede the
slowing of motor nerve conduction velocity (MNCV)
and are accompanied by an increase in superoxide
levels in arterioles that provide circulation to the
region of the sciatic nerve
Space Environment Effects on Silicone Seal Materials
A docking system is being developed by the NASA to support future space missions. It is expected to use redundant elastomer seals to help contain cabin air during dockings between two spacecraft. The sealing surfaces are exposed to the space environment when vehicles are not docked. In space, the seals will be exposed to temperatures between 125 to -75 C, vacuum, atomic oxygen, particle and ultraviolet radiation, and micrometeoroid and orbital debris (MMOD). Silicone rubber is the only class of space flight-qualified elastomeric seal material that functions across the expected temperature range. NASA Glenn has tested three silicone elastomers for such seal applications: two provided by Parker (S0899-50 and S0383-70) and one from Esterline (ELA-SA-401). The effects of atomic oxygen (AO), UV and electron particle radiation, and vacuum on the properties of these three elastomers were examined. Critical seal properties such as leakage, adhesion, and compression set were measured before and after simulated space exposures. The S0899-50 silicone was determined to be inadequate for extended space seal applications due to high adhesion and intolerance to UV, but both S0383-70 and ELA-SA-401 seals were adequate
Characteristics of Elastomer Seals Exposed to Space Environments
A universal docking and berthing system is being developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to support all future space exploration missions to low-Earth orbit (LEO), to the Moon, and to Mars. The Low Impact Docking System (LIDS) is being designed to operate using a seal-on-seal configuration in numerous space environments, each having unique exposures to temperature, solar radiation, reactive elements, debris, and mission duration. As the LIDS seal is likely to be manufactured from an elastomeric material, performance evaluation of elastomers after exposure to atomic oxygen (AO) and ultraviolet radiation (UV) was conducted, of which the work presented herein was a part. Each of the three candidate silicone elastomer compounds investigated, including Esterline ELA-SA-401, and Parker Hannifin S0383-70 and S0899-50, was characterized as a low outgassing compound, per ASTM E595, having percent total mass loss (TML) less than 1.0 percent and collected volatile condensable materials (CVCM) less than 0.1 percent. Each compound was compatible with the LIDS operating environment of -50 to 50 C. The seal characteristics presented include compression set, elastomer-to-elastomer adhesion, and o-ring leakage rate. The ELA-SA-401 compound had the lowest variation in compression set with temperature. The S0383-70 compound exhibited the lowest compression set after exposure to AO and UV. The adhesion for all of the compounds was significantly reduced after exposure to AO and was further decreased after exposure to AO and UV. The leakage rates of o-ring specimens showed modest increases after exposure to AO. The leakage rates after exposure to AO and UV were increased by factors of up to 600 when compared to specimens in the as-received condition
Global Conformational Dynamics of a Y-Family DNA Polymerase during Catalysis
High-resolution analysis of protein, and DNA conformational changes during DNA polymerization, established relationships between the enzymatic function and conformational dynamics of individual domains for a DNA polymerase