10,294 research outputs found
Sex steroids do not affect muscle weight, oxidative metabolism or cytosolic androgen reception binding of functionally overloaded rat Plantaris muscles
The effects of sex steroids on muscle weight and oxidative capacity of rat planaris muscles subjected to functional overload by removal of synergistic muscles were investigated. Ten weeks after bilateral synergist removal, plantaris muscles were significantly hypertrophic compared with unoperated controls. After this period, the ability of the muscles to oxide three substrates of oxidative metabolism was assessed. Experimental procedures are discussed and results are presented herein. Results suggest a lack of beneficial effect of sex hormone status on the process of hypertrophy and on biochemical changes in overloaded muscle. Such findings are not consistent with the idea of synergistic effects of sex steroids and muscle usage
Modulation of the cytosolic androgen receptor in striated muscle by sex steroids
The influence of orchiectomy (GDX) and steroid administration on the level of the cytosolic androgen receptor in the rat levator ani muscle and in rat skeletal muscles (tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus) was studied. Androgen receptor binding to muscle cytosol was measured using H-3 methyltrienolone (R1881) as ligand, 100 fold molar excess unlabeled R1881 to assess nonspecific binding, and 500 fold molar excess of triamcinolone acetonide to prevent binding to glucocorticoid and progestin receptors. Results demonstrate that modification of the levels of sex steroids can alter the content of androgen receptors of rat striated muscle. Data suggest that: (1) cytosolic androgen receptor levels increase after orchiectomy in both levator ani muscle and skeletal muscle; (2) the acute increase in receptor levels is blocked by an inhibitor of protein synthesis; and (3) administration of estradiol-17 beta to castrated animals increases receptor binding in levator ani muscle but not in skeletal muscle
The Libyan civil conflict : selected case series of orthopaedic trauma managed in Malta in 2014
Aim: The purpose of this series of cases was to analyse our management of orthopaedic trauma casualties in the
Libyan civil war crisis in the European summer of 2014. We looked at both damage control orthopaedics and for
case variety of war trauma at a civilian hospital. Due to our geographical proximity to Libya, Malta was the closest
European tertiary referral centre. Having only one Level 1 trauma care hospital in our country, our Trauma and
Orthopaedics department played a pivotal role in the management of Libyan battlefield injuries. Our aims were to
assess acute outcomes and short term mortality of surgery within the perspective of a damage control orthopaedic
strategy whereby aggressive wound management, early fixation using relative stability principles, antibiotic cover
with adequate soft tissue cover are paramount. We also aim to describe the variety of war injuries we came across,
with a goal for future improvement in regards to service providing.Methods: Prospective collection of six interesting cases with severe limb and spinal injuries sustained in Libya
during the Libyan civil war between June and November 2014.Conclusions: We applied current trends in the treatment of war injuries, specifically in damage control orthopaedic
strategy and converting to definitive treatment where permissible. The majority of our cases were classified as most
severe (Type IIIB/C) according to the Gustilo-Anderson classification of open fractures. The injuries treated reflected
the type of standard and improved weaponry available in modern warfare affecting both militants and civilians
alike with increasing severity and extent of damage. Due to this fact, multidisciplinary team approach to patient
centred care was utilised with an ultimate aim of swift recovery and early mobilisation. It also highlighted the
difficulties and complex issues required on a hospital management level as a neighbouring country to war zone
countries in transforming care of civil trauma to military trauma.peer-reviewe
The thermal Hall effect of spin excitations in a Kagome magnet
At low temperatures, the thermal conductivity of spin excitations in a
magnetic insulator can exceed that of phonons. However, because they are charge
neutral, the spin waves are not expected to display a thermal Hall effect in a
magnetic field. Recently, this semiclassical notion has been upended in quantum
magnets in which the spin texture has a finite chirality. In the Kagome
lattice, the chiral term generates a Berry curvature. This results in a thermal
Hall conductivity that is topological in origin. Here we report
observation of a large in the Kagome magnet Cu(1-3, bdc) which
orders magnetically at 1.8 K. The observed undergoes a remarkable
sign-reversal with changes in temperature or magnetic field, associated with
sign alternation of the Chern flux between magnon bands. We show that thermal
Hall experiments probe incisively the effect of Berry curvature on heat
transport.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Molecular Motors Interacting with Their Own Tracks
Dynamics of molecular motors that move along linear lattices and interact
with them via reversible destruction of specific lattice bonds is investigated
theoretically by analyzing exactly solvable discrete-state ``burnt-bridge''
models. Molecular motors are viewed as diffusing particles that can
asymmetrically break or rebuild periodically distributed weak links when
passing over them. Our explicit calculations of dynamic properties show that
coupling the transport of the unbiased molecular motor with the bridge-burning
mechanism leads to a directed motion that lowers fluctuations and produces a
dynamic transition in the limit of low concentration of weak links. Interaction
between the backward biased molecular motor and the bridge-burning mechanism
yields a complex dynamic behavior. For the reversible dissociation the backward
motion of the molecular motor is slowed down. There is a change in the
direction of the molecular motor's motion for some range of parameters. The
molecular motor also experiences non-monotonic fluctuations due to the action
of two opposing mechanisms: the reduced activity after the burned sites and
locking of large fluctuations. Large spatial fluctuations are observed when two
mechanisms are comparable. The properties of the molecular motor are different
for the irreversible burning of bridges where the velocity and fluctuations are
suppressed for some concentration range, and the dynamic transition is also
observed. Dynamics of the system is discussed in terms of the effective driving
forces and transitions between different diffusional regimes
On the number of two-dimensional threshold functions
A two-dimensional threshold function of k-valued logic can be viewed as
coloring of the points of a k x k square lattice into two colors such that
there exists a straight line separating points of different colors. For the
number of such functions only asymptotic bounds are known. We give an exact
formula for the number of two-dimensional threshold functions and derive more
accurate asymptotics.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figure
The Effect of Inflation on Growth - Evidence from a Panel of Transition Countries
The paper examines the effect of inflation on growth in transition countries. It presents panel data evidence for 13 transition countries over the 1990-2003 period; it uses a fixed effects panel approach to account for possible bias from correlations among the unobserved effects and the observed country heterogeniety. The results find a strong, robust, negative effect on growth of inflation or its standard deviation, and one that appears to decline in magnitude as the inflation rate increases, as seen for OECD countries. And the results include a role for a normalized money demand in affecting growth, as well as for a convergence variable, a trade variable and a government share variable. And robustness of the baseline single equation model is examined by expanding this into a three equation simultaneous system of output growth, inflation and money demand that allows for possible simultaneity bias in the baseline model.growth, transition, panel data, inflation, money demand, endogeneity
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