46 research outputs found

    Features of Muscle Tissue Microstructure of Cattle in Industrial Agglomerations under the Environmental Pressure Conditions

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    The intensive development of the industrial sector, intensification of the agro-industrial complex, associated with the use of various fertilizers, active use of modern household chemicals lead to the constant increase in xenobiotics in the environment in both rural and urban agglomerations. There are settlements and farms within the industrial areas, therefore, the issue of accumulation of ecotoxicants in the organs and tissues of an animal, as well as the impact on the state of its health, is of particular importance. In the regions with tough environmental situation associated with anthropogenic contamination, xenobiotics of anthropogenic origin can directly or indirectly modify the activity of various body systems. The integral characteristic that reflects adaptive modifications of biota is the morphological and functional status of organs and tissues of an animal, including the state of muscle tissue. An analysis of the regenerative plastic potential of muscle tissue allows finding innovative approaches to assessing the effects of environmental impacts on animals. Up to the present day, the morphological and functional characteristics of muscle tissue in young animals and adult cattle have not been sufficiently studied in the conditions of the tough environmental situation of the Central Federal District of the Russian Federation. The issue of ecological pathologies of organs in productive animals is quite urgent for the territory of the Central Federal District with its developed agro-industrial complex and industry. The study of animals from the agglomeration of the large chemical plant showed that cattle react differently to pollutants. The animals demonstrated changes not only in hematological and biochemical parameters, but also in the morphological and functional status of muscle tissue

    Effective Hamiltonian and unitarity of the S matrix

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    The properties of open quantum systems are described well by an effective Hamiltonian H{\cal H} that consists of two parts: the Hamiltonian HH of the closed system with discrete eigenstates and the coupling matrix WW between discrete states and continuum. The eigenvalues of H{\cal H} determine the poles of the SS matrix. The coupling matrix elements W~kccâ€Č\tilde W_k^{cc'} between the eigenstates kk of H{\cal H} and the continuum may be very different from the coupling matrix elements Wkccâ€ČW_k^{cc'} between the eigenstates of HH and the continuum. Due to the unitarity of the SS matrix, the \TW_k^{cc'} depend on energy in a non-trivial manner, that conflicts with the assumptions of some approaches to reactions in the overlapping regime. Explicit expressions for the wave functions of the resonance states and for their phases in the neighbourhood of, respectively, avoided level crossings in the complex plane and double poles of the SS matrix are given.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure

    Isomerization dynamics of a buckled nanobeam

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    We analyze the dynamics of a model of a nanobeam under compression. The model is a two mode truncation of the Euler-Bernoulli beam equation subject to compressive stress. We consider parameter regimes where the first mode is unstable and the second mode can be either stable or unstable, and the remaining modes (neglected) are always stable. Material parameters used correspond to silicon. The two mode model Hamiltonian is the sum of a (diagonal) kinetic energy term and a potential energy term. The form of the potential energy function suggests an analogy with isomerisation reactions in chemistry. We therefore study the dynamics of the buckled beam using the conceptual framework established for the theory of isomerisation reactions. When the second mode is stable the potential energy surface has an index one saddle and when the second mode is unstable the potential energy surface has an index two saddle and two index one saddles. Symmetry of the system allows us to construct a phase space dividing surface between the two "isomers" (buckled states). The energy range is sufficiently wide that we can treat the effects of the index one and index two saddles in a unified fashion. We have computed reactive fluxes, mean gap times and reactant phase space volumes for three stress values at several different energies. In all cases the phase space volume swept out by isomerizing trajectories is considerably less than the reactant density of states, proving that the dynamics is highly nonergodic. The associated gap time distributions consist of one or more `pulses' of trajectories. Computation of the reactive flux correlation function shows no sign of a plateau region; rather, the flux exhibits oscillatory decay, indicating that, for the 2-mode model in the physical regime considered, a rate constant for isomerization does not exist.Comment: 42 pages, 6 figure

    Assessment of the bioavailability of minerals and antioxidant activity of the grain bread in the in vivo experiment

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    The aim of the study was to determine the bioavailability of minerals and oxidation-antioxidant status in the laboratory animals fed with bread from regular and bioactivated wheat grain. Material and Methods ― Studies were conducted for 21 days on white inbred BALB/с mice. The animals were organized in three groups with 30 mice in each one. Group 1 (control group) was given the complete compound feed; Group 2 was fed with regular whole wheat bread; and Group 3 was given the bread from the bioactivated wheat grain. Their blood plasma was tested for total protein, cholesterol, glucose, low and high density lipoproteins, phosphorus, calcium, magnesium, iron, zinc, malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, and the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD). Calcium was detected histochemically using McGee-Russell’s method with Alizarin red S. Results ― It was established that the levels of glucose, total protein, cholesterol, and lipids in the blood plasma of animals in all groups were within the physiological norms. There were no significant reliable deviations in the levels of mineral substances in the blood plasma of the animals in the study groups. However, the histochemical response of the bone tissue calcium to the Alizarin red S revealed significant differences in its content in the tissues between the animals of the three groups. At the 21st day of the experiment, the maximum light absorption of the colored specimen was observed in Group 3 which indicated higher calcium content in the bone tissue of the animals fed with the bread from the bioactivated wheat grain. The oxidation-antioxidant status of the animals in Groups 2 and 3 was higher than that of the control group. On the 21st day of the experiment, MDA content in the blood plasma of the animals in Group 3 was 0.04±0.017 mmol/L which is 2.0 and 1.5 times less as compared to Groups 1 and 2 respectively. The activity of SOD in the blood plasma on the 21st day of the experiment was the highest in Group 3 animals. Conclusion ― The experiment on the laboratory mice has shown that the use of the bread from the bioactivated wheat grain makes it possible to improve the bioavailability of minerals and increase the antioxidant activity of blood plasma
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