172 research outputs found

    EFFECTS OF CREATINE AND VITAMIN E ON MUSCLE ENERGETIC METABOLISM, ANTIOXIDANT STABILITY AND MEAT QUALITY OF PIGS

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    Abstract LAHUČKÝ, R., BUČKO, O., HAŠČÍK, P., LIPTAJ, T.: Eff ects of creatine and vitamin E on muscle energetic metabolism, antioxidant stability and meat quality of pigs. Acta univ. agric. et silvic. Mendel. Brun., 2012, LX, No. 5, pp. 151-160 The eff ects of supplementing the diet of pigs with creatine monohydrate (CMH) and vitamin E on blood plasma creatine concentration, vitamin E level in muscle, muscle energy metabolism, antioxidant capacity and meat (musculus longissimus dorsi) quality of pigs (DNA tested and negative on malignant hyperthermia) were investigated. Two treatments were used: supplementation with CMH alone (2 g.kg −1 of feed, 10 days before slaughter); and supplementation with both vitamin E (500 mg -tocopherol.kg −1 of feed for minimum of 30 days) and CMH (2 g.kg −1 of feed, 10 days before slaughter). Pigs supplemented with CMH alone showed elevated plasma creatine concentration (P ≤ 0.05). Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance ( 31 P NMR) measurements on post mortem (15 min.) muscle samples showed the highest phosphocreatine levels and ratio PCr/Pi (P ≤ 0.05) in CMH supplemented pigs alone and in combination with vitamin E. Dietary supplementation with vitamin E signifi cantly (P ≤ 0.05) increased the concentration of -tocopherol in meat. Supplementation with CMH alone or in combination with vitamin E resulted in higher (P = 0.07) a values of loin chops at 5 days of storage. Antioxidative capacity (measured as MDA production a er incubation of longissimus muscle homogenates with Fe 2+ /ascorbate) was substantially improved by vitamin E and somewhat by CMH supplementation. meat quality, pork, creatine monohydrate, vitamin E Previous research has examined the eff ects of supplementing swine fi nishing diets with creatine

    HUMIC ACIDS CHARACTERIZATION BY EDXS AND 13 C NMR SPECTROSCOPY

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    Abstract POSPÍŠILOVÁ, Ľ., FASUROVÁ, N., LIPTAJ, T., JURICA, L.: Humic acids characterization by EDXS and 13 C NMR spectroscopy. Acta univ. agric. et silvic. Mendel. Brun., 2010, LVIII, No. 1, pp. 139-146 Determination of humic acids spectral characteristics performed fast and convenient method for their quality evaluation. Humic acids (HA) were isolated from fi ve diff erent soil types (Luvi-haplic Chernozem, Haplic Luvisol, Haplic Cambisol, Leptic Cambisol and Eutric Cambisol) and from compost. Basic soil characteristics were determined by commonly used methods. Fractional compositon of humus showed that humic acids content was decreasing in order: compost > Luvi-haplic Chernozem > Haplic Luvisol > Eutric Cambisol > Haplic Cambisol > Leptic Cambisol. Isolated humic acids preparations were characterized comparatively by chemical and spectroscopic methods. Elemental analysis showed the highest carbon content in Luvi-haplic Chernozem HA. The lowest carbon amount was in Eutric Cambisol. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy detected elements in situ in HA molecule

    Search for Doubly-Charged Higgs Boson Production at HERA

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    A search for the single production of doubly-charged Higgs bosons H^{\pm \pm} in ep collisions is presented. The signal is searched for via the Higgs decays into a high mass pair of same charge leptons, one of them being an electron. The analysis uses up to 118 pb^{-1} of ep data collected by the H1 experiment at HERA. No evidence for doubly-charged Higgs production is observed and mass dependent upper limits are derived on the Yukawa couplings h_{el} of the Higgs boson to an electron-lepton pair. Assuming that the doubly-charged Higgs only decays into an electron and a muon via a coupling of electromagnetic strength h_{e \mu} = \sqrt{4 \pi \alpha_{em}} = 0.3, a lower limit of 141 GeV on the H^{\pm\pm} mass is obtained at the 95% confidence level. For a doubly-charged Higgs decaying only into an electron and a tau and a coupling h_{e\tau} = 0.3, masses below 112 GeV are ruled out.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl

    Measurement of the charm and beauty structure functions using the H1 vertex detector at HERA

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    Inclusive charm and beauty cross sections are measured in e − p and e + p neutral current collisions at HERA in the kinematic region of photon virtuality 5≤Q 2≤2000 GeV2 and Bjorken scaling variable 0.0002≤x≤0.05. The data were collected with the H1 detector in the years 2006 and 2007 corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 189 pb−1. The numbers of charm and beauty events are determined using variables reconstructed by the H1 vertex detector including the impact parameter of tracks to the primary vertex and the position of the secondary vertex. The measurements are combined with previous data and compared to QCD predictions

    Study of Charm Fragmentation into D^{*\pm} Mesons in Deep-Inelastic Scattering at HERA

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    The process of charm quark fragmentation is studied using D±D^{*\pm} meson production in deep-inelastic scattering as measured by the H1 detector at HERA. Two different regions of phase space are investigated defined by the presence or absence of a jet containing the D±D^{*\pm} meson in the event. The parameters of fragmentation functions are extracted for QCD models based on leading order matrix elements and DGLAP or CCFM evolution of partons together with string fragmentation and particle decays. Additionally, they are determined for a next-to-leading order QCD calculation in the fixed flavour number scheme using the independent fragmentation of charm quarks to D±D^{*\pm} mesons.Comment: 33 pages, submitted to EPJ

    Jet production in ep collisions at high Q(2) and determination of alpha(s)

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    The production of jets is studied in deep-inelastic e(+/-) p scattering at large negative four momentum transfer squared 150 LT Q(2) LT 15000 GeV2 using HERA data taken in 1999-2007, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 395 pb(-1). Inclusive jet, 2-jet and 3-jet cross sections, normalised to the neutral current deep-inelastic scattering cross sections, are measured as functions of Q(2), jet transverse momentum and proton momentum fraction. The measurements are well described by perturbative QCD calculations at next-to-leading order corrected for hadronisation effects. The strong coupling as determined from these measurement
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