50 research outputs found
Physiological and biochemical adaptations to training in Rana pipiens
Fifteen Rana pipiens were trained on a treadmill thrice weekly for 6.5 weeks to assess the effects of training on an animal that supports activity primarily through anaerobiosis. Endurance for activity increased 35% in these frogs as a result of training ( P =0.006, Fig. 1). This increased performance was not due to enhanced anaerobiosis. Total lactate produced during exercise did not differ significantly for the trained or untrained animals in either gastrocnemius muscle (2.77±0.21 and 2.82±0.13 mg/g, respectively) or whole body (1.32±0.10 and 1.47±0.06 mg/g, respectively). Glycogen depletion also did not differ between the two groups (Fig. 2c). The primary response to training appeared to involve augmentation of aerobic metabolism, a response similar to that reported for mammals. Gastrocnemius muscles of trained frogs underwent a 38% increase over those of untrained individuals in the maximum activity of citrate synthase (14.5±1.0 and 10.5±0.9 μmoles/(g wet wt·min); P =0.008). This enzyme was also positively correlated with the level of maximum performance for all animals tested ( r =0.61, P <0.01) and with the degree of improvement in the trained animals ( r =0.72, P <0.05). In addition to an increased aerobic capacity, the trained animals demonstrated a greater removal of lactate from the muscle 15 min after fatigue (Fig. 2b).Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47124/1/360_2004_Article_BF00710002.pd
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The stability of ecosystems: a brief overview of the paradox of enrichment
In theory, enrichment of resource in a predator-prey model leads to destabilization of the system, thereby collapsing the trophic interaction, a phenomenon referred to as "the paradox of enrichment". After it was first proposed by Rosenzweig (1971), a number of subsequent studies were carried out on this dilemma over many decades. In this article, we review these theoretical and experimental works and give a brief overview of the proposed solutions to the paradox. The mechanisms that have been discussed are modifications of simple predator-prey models in the presence of prey that is inedible, invulnerable, unpalatable and toxic. Another class of mechanisms includes an incorporation of a ratio-dependent functional form, inducible defence of prey and density-dependent mortality of the predator. Moreover, we find a third set of explanations based on complex population dynamics including chaos in space and time. We conclude that, although any one of the various mechanisms proposed so far might potentially prevent destabilization of the predator-prey dynamics following enrichment, in nature different mechanisms may combine to cause stability, even when a system is enriched. The exact mechanisms, which may differ among systems, need to be disentangled through extensive field studies and laboratory experiments coupled with realistic theoretical models
The Search for the Sidereal and Solar Diurnal Modulations in the Total MACRO Muon Data Set
We have analyzed 44.3M single muons collected by MACRO from 1991 through 2000
in 2,145 live days of operation. We have searched for the solar diurnal,
apparent sidereal, and pseudo-sidereal modulation of the underground muon rate
by computing hourly deviations of the muon rate from 6 month averages. We find
evidence for statistically significant modulations with the solar diurnal and
the sidereal periods. The amplitudes of these modulations are <0.1%, and are at
the limit of the detector statistics. The pseudo-sidereal modulation is not
statistically significant.
The solar diurnal modulation is due to the daily atmospheric temperature
variations at 20 km, the altitude of primary cosmic ray interactions with the
atmosphere; MACRO is the deepest experiment to report this result. The sidereal
modulation is in addition to the expected Compton-Getting modulation due to
solar system motion relative to the Local Standard of Rest; it represents
motion of the solar system with respect to the galactic cosmic rays toward the
Perseus spiral arm.Comment: 18 pages, 8 of which are figures, 1 is a table. Accepted by Phys.
Rev.
The IASLC/ITMIG thymic epithelial tumors staging project: Proposals for the T component for the forthcoming (8th) edition of the TNM classification of malignant tumors
Despite longstanding recognition of thymic epithelial neoplasms, there is no official American Joint Committee on Cancer/ Union for International Cancer Control stage classification. This article summarizes proposals for classification of the T component of stage classification for use in the 8th edition of the tumor, node, metastasis classification for malignant tumors. This represents the output of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer and the International Thymic Malignancies Interest Group Staging and Prognostics Factor Committee, which assembled and analyzed a worldwide database of 10,808 patients with thymic malignancies from 105 sites. The committee proposes division of the T component into four categories, representing levels of invasion. T1 includes tumors localized to the thymus and anterior mediastinal fat, regardless of capsular invasion, up to and including infiltration through the mediastinal pleura. Invasion of the pericardium is designated as T2. T3 includes tumors with direct involvement of a group of mediastinal structures either singly or in combination: lung, brachiocephalic vein, superior vena cava, chest wall, and phrenic nerve. Invasion of more central structures constitutes T4: aorta and arch vessels, intrapericardial pulmonary artery, myocardium, trachea, and esophagus. Size did not emerge as a useful descriptor for stage classification. This classification of T categories, combined with a classification of N and M categories, provides a basis for a robust tumor, node, metastasis classification system for the 8th edition of American Joint Committee on Cancer/Union for International Cancer Control stage classification
Prolonged hypoxaemia after nebulised salbutamol.
Pulse oximetry is increasingly used to assess hypoxaemia in respiratory illnesses. Six children presenting with acute asthma and prolonged falls in oxygen saturation values after treatment with salbutamol are described who were subsequently shown to have pneumonic consolidation on chest radiography