704 research outputs found
Testosterone insulin-like effects: an in vitro study on the short-term metabolic effects of testosterone in human skeletal muscle cells
Testosterone by promoting different metabolic pathways contributes to short-term homeostasis of skeletal muscle, the largest insulin-sensitive tissue and the primary site for insulin-stimulated glucose utilization. Despite evidences indicate a close relationship between testosterone and glucose metabolism, the molecular mechanisms responsible for a possible testosterone-mediated insulin-like effects on skeletal muscle are still unknown
Reading a GEM with a VLSI pixel ASIC used as a direct charge collecting anode
In MicroPattern Gas Detectors (MPGD) when the pixel size is below 100 micron
and the number of pixels is large (above 1000) it is virtually impossible to
use the conventional PCB read-out approach to bring the signal charge from the
individual pixel to the external electronics chain. For this reason a custom
CMOS array of 2101 active pixels with 80 micron pitch, directly used as the
charge collecting anode of a GEM amplifying structure, has been developed and
built. Each charge collecting pad, hexagonally shaped, realized using the top
metal layer of a deep submicron VLSI technology is individually connected to a
full electronics chain (pre-amplifier, shaping-amplifier, sample and hold,
multiplexer) which is built immediately below it by using the remaining five
active layers. The GEM and the drift electrode window are assembled directly
over the chip so the ASIC itself becomes the pixelized anode of a MicroPattern
Gas Detector. With this approach, for the first time, gas detectors have
reached the level of integration and resolution typical of solid state pixel
detectors. Results from the first tests of this new read-out concept are
presented. An Astronomical X-Ray Polarimetry application is also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, presented at the Xth Vienna Conference on
Instrumentation (Vienna, February 16-21 2004). For a higher resolution paper
contact [email protected]
Synthesis and anti-picornavirus activity of homo-isoflavonoids
Substituted homo-isoflavonoids were synthesized in order to study their in vitro anti-picornavirus activity. The maximum non-toxic concentration of the compounds for susceptible cells (HeLa) was determined, and the ability of non-cytotoxic concentrations to interfere with plaque formation by human rhinovirus (HRV) 1B and 14 and poliovirus (PV) 2 was examined. All the tested compounds were weakly effective against PV-2, while they exhibited a variable degree of activity against HRV-1B and -14 infection. Serotype 1B was much more sensitive than 14 to the action of the compounds, and the presence of one or more chlorine atoms increased the antiviral effect in all homo-isoflavonoids tested, confirming the positive influence of this substituent on activity
Sport, doping and male fertility
It is universally accepted that lifestyle interventions are the first step towards a good overall, reproductive and sexual health. Cessation of unhealthy habits, such as tobacco, alcohol and drug use, poor nutrition and sedentary behavior, is suggested in order to preserve/improve fertility in humans. However, the possible risks of physical exercise per se or sports on male fertility are less known. Being fit does not only improve the sense of well-being, but also has beneficial effects on general health: in fact physical exercise is by all means a low-cost, high-efficacy method for preventing or treating several conditions, ranging from purely physical (diabetes and obesity) to psychological (depression and anxiety), highly influencing male reproduction. If male sexual and reproductive health could be positively affected by a proper physical activity, inadequate bouts of strength - both excessive intensity and duration of exercise training - are more likely to have detrimental effects. In addition, the illicit use of prohibited drugs (i.e. doping) has reached pandemic proportions, and their actions, unfortunately very often underestimated by both amateur and professional athletes, are known to disrupt at different levels and throughout various mechanisms the male hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, resulting in hypogonadism and infertility
On the relevance of surface growth in soot formation in premixed flames
The role of surface growth mechanisms in particle mass accumulation was investigated in rich, premixed, ethylene/air flames from non-sooting to moderately sooting conditions using in situ optical diagnostics and predictions from a detailed chemical kinetic model. Particles formed just after the flame front, which are transparent to the visible light but absorb in the UV range, have been detected in large amounts in nonsooting flames and earlier in the flame than soot particles in sooting-flames, using UV-visible light optical diagnostics. For C/O Ď˝ 0.8, the amount of visible-transparent particles accounts for the total mass of soot detected later in the flame, indicating that surface growth processes are negligible and that soot formation is a rearrangement of the carbonaceous material already present in the form of smaller particles. Furthermore, predictions from the kinetic model, which does not include surface growth reactions, agree well with experiments for C/O Ď˝ 0.8. The model is able to predict the total carbon contained in particles observed in the non-sooting flames and in slightly sooting flames, as well as that observed up to the onset of soot formation in richer flames. For C/O Ďľ 0.8, additional soot growth mechanisms need to be included in the mechanism to account for the amount of soot observed in the later part of the flames. Interestingly enough, this late growth mechanism occurs almost simultaneously with a strong increase in the coagulation rate of the particles, thus indicating that both effects are related and are probably due to a major change in the chemical nature of the particle surface
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