603 research outputs found

    Change in blood glucose level in rats after immobilization

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    Experiments were carried out on male white rats divided into four groups. In group one the blood glucose level was determined immediately after immobilization. In the other three groups, two hours following immobilization, the blood glucose level was determined every 20 minutes for 3 hours 40 minutes by the glucose oxidase method. Preliminary immobilization for 2 hours removed the increase in the blood glucose caused by the stress reaction. By the 2nd hour of immobilization in the presence of continuing stress, the blood glucose level stabilized and varied within 42 + or - 5.5 and 47 + or - 8.1 mg %. Within 2 hours after the immobilization, the differences in the blood glucose level of the rats from the control groups were statistically insignificant

    Manifestation of interface anisotropy in CdTe quantum wells

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    Photoluminescence and polarized reflection spectra of quantum well structures with symmetric Cd0.9_{0.9}Zn0.1_{0.1}Te/CdTe/Cd0.9_{0.9}Zn0.1_{0.1}Te and asymmetric Cd0.9_{0.9}Zn0.1_{0.1}Te/CdTe/Cd0.4_{0.4}Mg0.6_{0.6}Te barriers were studied. The Stokes parameters of the reflected light from these structures were measured. In the structures with symmetric barriers, exciton resonances were found in the reflection spectra and were not present in the photoluminescence spectra. In structures with asymmetric barriers, in the region of exciton resonances, the phenomenon of light birefringence was detected, caused by a lower symmetry of the interfaces compared to the symmetry of bulk crystals. A discussion of both phenomena was given

    The influence of HfO2 additives on the optical properties of Nd3+-doped Y2O3 ceramics

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    Transparent yttria ceramics were fabricated by sintering a mixture of 1 at.% Nd:Y2O3 and HfO2 nanopowders produced by laser synthesis method. The best transmittance was 80.96% at the wavelength of λ=1080 nm in 6 mol.% HfO2 doped sample (1.5 mm thick). The additives of hafnium broaden both pumping and luminescence bands of Nd3+ ion in yttria ceramics. The luminescence intensity of 4F3/2→4I11/2 transition was little affected by hafnium concentration. The effective lifetime of 4F3/2 level in Nd:Y2O3 ceramics enhanced by 30% at 10 mol.% HfO2 doping concentration and the decay kinetics of laser transition attains Förster's behavior. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

    The method of manufacture of nylon dental partially removable prosthesis using additive technologies

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    © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. The article is devoted to the topic of creating new methods of dental prosthesis. The aim of this work is to investigate the possibility of using additive technology to create nylon prosthesis. As a result of experimental studies, was made a sample of nylon partially removable prosthesis using 3D printing has allowed to simplify, accelerate and reduce the coat of manufacturing high-precision nylon dentures

    Phase Transitions in Terbium Oxide Nanopowders Synthesized by Laser Ablation under Various Buffer Gases

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    Synthesis of nanosized particles of terbium oxide by laser ablation under various buffer gases is reported. Influence of the gas composition (air, Ar, Ar+H2) on the morphology, average particle size and phase evolution during heating up was investigated.The reported study was carried out with the use of grant № 22-23-00658 of the Russian Science Foundation, https://rscf.ru/en/project/22-23-00658

    Non-invasive evaluation of the effect of metoprolol on the atrioventricular node during permanent atrial fibrillation.

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    During atrial fibrillation (AF), conventional electrophysiological techniques for assessment of refractory period or conduction velocity of the atrioventricular (AV) node cannot be used. We aimed at evaluating changes in AV nodal properties during administration of metoprolol from electrocardiogram data, and to support our findings with simulated data based on results from an electrophysiological study

    Signal-averaged P wave analysis for delineation of interatrial conduction – Further validation of the method

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The study was designed to investigate the effect of different measuring methodologies on the estimation of P wave duration. The recording length required to ensure reproducibility in unfiltered, signal-averaged P wave analysis was also investigated. An algorithm for automated classification was designed and its reproducibility of manual P wave morphology classification investigated.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Twelve-lead ECG recordings (1 kHz sampling frequency, 0.625 <it>μ</it>V resolution) from 131 healthy subjects were used. Orthogonal leads were derived using the inverse Dower transform. Magnification (100 times), baseline filtering (0.5 Hz high-pass and 50 Hz bandstop filters), signal averaging (10 seconds) and bandpass filtering (40–250 Hz) were used to investigate the effect of methodology on the estimated P wave duration. Unfiltered, signal averaged P wave analysis was performed to determine the required recording length (6 minutes to 10 s) and the reproducibility of the P wave morphology classification procedure. Manual classification was carried out by two experts on two separate occasions each. The performance of the automated classification algorithm was evaluated using the joint decision of the two experts (i.e., the consensus of the two experts).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The estimate of the P wave duration increased in each step as a result of magnification, baseline filtering and averaging (100 ± 18 vs. 131 ± 12 ms; P < 0.0001). The estimate of the duration of the bandpass-filtered P wave was dependent on the noise cut-off value: 119 ± 15 ms (0.2 <it>μ</it>V), 138 ± 13 ms (0.1 <it>μ</it>V) and 143 ± 18 ms (0.05 <it>μ</it>V). (P = 0.01 for all comparisons).</p> <p>The mean errors associated with the P wave morphology parameters were comparable in all segments analysed regardless of recording length (95% limits of agreement within 0 ± 20% (mean ± SD)). The results of the 6-min analyses were comparable to those obtained at the other recording lengths (6 min to 10 s).</p> <p>The intra-rater classification reproducibility was 96%, while the interrater reproducibility was 94%. The automated classification algorithm agreed with the manual classification in 90% of the cases.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The methodology used has profound effects on the estimation of P wave duration, and the method used must therefore be validated before any inferences can be made about P wave duration. This has implications in the interpretation of multiple studies where P wave duration is assessed, and conclusions with respect to normal values are drawn.</p> <p>P wave morphology and duration assessed using unfiltered, signal-averaged P wave analysis have high reproducibility, which is unaffected by the length of the recording. In the present study, the performance of the proposed automated classification algorithm, providing total reproducibility, showed excellent agreement with manually defined P wave morphologies.</p
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