31 research outputs found

    Perception of urban park soundscape

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    A number of studies have been initiated to explore how to improve the soundscape quality in urban parks. However, good soundscape quality in parks cannot be provided without a thorough understanding of the complex relationships among sound, environment, and individuals. As acoustic comfort is considered to be an important outcome of soundscape quality, this study investigates the relative impacts of the factors influencing acoustic comfort evaluation by formulating a multivariate ordered logit model. This study also explores the inter-relationships among acoustic comfort evaluation, acceptability of the environment, and preference to stay in a park using a path model. A total of 595 valid responses were obtained from interview surveys administered in four parks in Hong Kong while objective sound measurements were carried out at the survey spots concurrently. The findings unveil that acoustic comfort evaluation, besides visual comfort evaluation of landscape, also plays an important role on users’ acceptability of the urban park environment. Compared with all the studied acoustic related factors, acoustic comfort evaluation serves as a better proxy for park users’ preference to stay in urban parks. Hearing the breeze will significantly increase the likelihood of individuals in giving high acoustic comfort evaluation. Conversely, hearing the sounds from heavy vehicles or sounds from bikes will significantly reduce the likelihood in giving a high acoustic evaluation.Department of Building Services EngineeringDepartment of Mechanical Engineerin

    Percepção sonora e conforto acĂșstico em espaços urbanos do municĂ­pio de Belo Horizonte, MG

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    Resumo O presente artigo tem como objetivo apresentar e analisar as respostas dos usuĂĄrios de espaços urbanos abertos com relação Ă  percepção do volume sonoro e Ă  avaliação de conforto acĂșstico, com base em dados coletados em campo durante o ano de 2013, em duas praças do municĂ­pio de Belo Horizonte, MG. Durante os levantamentos, dados acĂșsticos foram medidos simultaneamente Ă  aplicação de questionĂĄrios, utilizados para coleta de variĂĄveis subjetivas e individuais. O LAeq,T foi o Ă­ndice utilizado para caracterização dos ambientes sonoros. Os resultados demonstram que, sob as mesmas condiçÔes acĂșsticas, tanto no que diz respeito Ă  percepção do volume sonoro quanto Ă  avaliação de conforto acĂșstico, os indivĂ­duos tendem a ser mais tolerantes na praça que possui a melhor ambiĂȘncia e as melhores condiçÔes de conforto tĂ©rmico. As faixas de percepção do volume sonoro definidas neste estudo foram: Baixo, LAeq < 35 dB(A); Normal, 36 < LAeq < 67 dB(A); Alto, LAeq > 68 dB(A). Com relação Ă  avaliação do conforto acĂșstico, as faixas definidas foram: ConfortĂĄvel, LAeq < 67 dB(A); e DesconfortĂĄvel, LAeq > 68 dB(A). Espera-se que esses resultados contribuam para um maior entendimento das questĂ”es relativas ao conforto acĂșstico urbano

    Rifampicin and isoniazid increase acetaminophen and isoniazid cytotoxicity in human HepG2 hepatoma cells.

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    International audienceAcetaminophen (APAP) induced a concentration-dependent (0-30 mM) cytotoxic effect in human HepG2 hepatoma cells which was significantly increased when intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) content was decreased. The cytotoxic effect of APAP (0-30 mM) was significantly lower in a day 3-treated compared to day 1-treated HepG2 cells. A 3-day preincubation of HepG2 cells with 5 microM 3-methylcholanthrene (3MC), 50 microM rifampicin (RFP) or 1 mM isoniazid (INH) significantly increased 15-30 mM APAP cytotoxicity, of about 15-20% for INH and RFP and 35-50% for 3MC. The cytotoxicity of 10 mM APAP was also increased (about 20%) by a 3-day preincubation with INH but was not affected by 3MC and RFP. INH induced a concentration-dependent (0-40 mM) cytotoxic effect in day-1 treated HepG2 cells and not significantly affected by decreases in intracellular GSH concentrations. INH was not cytotoxic in day 3-treated HepG2 cells. A 3-day preincubation of HepG2 cells with 50 mM RFP or 1 mM INH significantly increased 10-40 mM INH cytotoxicity, respectively of about 10% and 10-25%. A 3-day preincubation with 3MC did not modify the cytotoxic effect of INH at these concentrations. This is to our knowledge the first report of increases by INH and RFP of APAP of INH cytotoxicity in vitro in hepatocellular cells of human origin. It is in accordance with clinical observations of severe hepatotoxicity associated with APAP or INH usage in patients receiving multiple drug therapy (INH, RFP) for tuberculosis or in alcoholics

    Effects of model inducers on thyroxine UDP-glucuronosyl-transferase activity in vitro in rat and mouse hepatocyte cultures.

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    International audienceThyroxine (T(4))-UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) activity was measured directly in cultured male Sprague-Dawley rat and OF-1 mouse hepatocyte monolayers. The activity of T(4)-UGT (pmol/min/g liver) in vitro in hepatocyte cultures was, after 24 hr in culture, equivalent to that previously measured in vivo in rat and mouse liver microsomes (Viollon-Abadie et al., 1999). A progressive decline in T(4)-UGT activity occurred over time in both rat and mouse hepatocyte cultures. Treatment of cultures with various model inducers such as phenobarbital (PB), beta-naphthoflavone (NF) and clofibric acid (CLO) induced a strong increase in T(4)-UGT activity in rat hepatocyte monolayers. In addition, and as expected from available in vivo data, treatment of rat hepatocyte cultures with NF also increased p-nitrophenol (PNP)-UGT activity and treatment with PB or CLO increased bilirubin (Bili)-UGT activity. In contrast, T(4)-UGT activity in mouse hepatocyte monolayers was not affected by the treatments, neither were PNP- and Bili- UGT activities. These in vitro data confirm our previous in vivo observations that these inducers increase rat but not mouse liver T(4)-UGT activities (Viollon-Abadie et al., 1999). The present study thus demonstrates that hepatocyte monolayers are appropriated for the evaluation and inter-species comparison of the effects of xenobiotics on T(4)-UGT activities

    Comparison of the effects of various peroxisome proliferators on peroxisomal enzyme activities, DNA synthesis, and apoptosis in rat and human hepatocyte cultures.

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    International audiencePeroxisome proliferators (PPs) are a class of rodent nongenotoxic hepatocarcinogens that cause hepatocyte peroxisome proliferation, increased DNA synthesis, and decreased spontaneous apoptosis. We examined the effects of various PPs such as the hypolipidemic agents clofibric acid (CLO), bezafibrate (BEZA), ciprofibrate (CIPRO), and nafenopin (NAFE) and the plasticizer di-(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) on the various parameters in vitro in rat and human hepatocyte cultures. In rat hepatocyte cultures, after 72 h of treatment with the various PPs at 100-500 microM, a compound-dependent increase in acyl CoA oxidase (ACO) and carnitine acetyl transferase (CAT) activities, markers of peroxisome proliferation, was observed with the following potencies: CIPRO = NAFE > BEZA > CLO > DEHP. A minor (120-150%), but significant, no concentration-dependent increase in DNA synthesis and a marked, no compound-dependent and, with the exception of NAFE, no concentration-dependent 60-80% decrease in spontaneous apoptosis was observed with all tested compounds (50-250 microM) after 48 h of treatment. Inhibition of spontaneous apoptosis in PP-treated versus control rat hepatocyte cultures was also observed morphologically. Furthermore, PPs inhibited transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta)-induced apoptosis but not tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha)/alpha Amanitine (alphaAma)-induced apoptosis in rat hepatocyte cultures. In human hepatocyte cultures, the various PPs at 50-500 microM did not affect peroxisomal enzyme activities, DNA synthesis, or spontaneous and induced (TGFbeta or TNFalpha/alphaAma) apoptosis. The compound-dependent peroxisome proliferation but no compound-dependent disruption of the mitogenic/apoptotic balance elicited by PPs in primary rat hepatocyte cultures supports the hypothesis that oxidative stress is directly linked to the hepatocarcinogenic potential of a given PP in rodents and that disruption of the mitogenic/apoptotic balance contributes to the development of PP-induced hepatocarcinogenesis. In addition, the absence of effects of all PPs on both peroxisome proliferation-associated parameters and mitogenic/apoptotic balance supports the hypothesis that human liver cells are refractory to PP-induced hepatocarcinogenesis

    Phenobarbital, beta-naphthoflavone, clofibrate, and pregnenolone-16alpha-carbonitrile do not affect hepatic thyroid hormone UDP-glucuronosyl transferase activity, and thyroid gland function in mice.

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    International audienceThe effects of representative liver enzyme inducers such as clofibrate (CLO), phenobarbital (PB), pregnenolone-16alpha-carbonitrile (PCN), and beta-naphthoflavone (NF) on hepatic microsomal thyroxin (T4)- UDP-glucuronosyl transferase (UGT) and triiodothyronine (T3)- UGT activities and thyroid function were evaluated in OF-1 male mice after a 14-day po administration. CLO, PB, and PCN induced histological liver hypertrophy, increases in liver weights, in microsomal protein and cytochrome P450 contents as well as increases in specific UGT activities. Despite this, no significant changes in T4-UGT and T3-UGT activities occurred after treatment by any of these compounds. Furthermore, no significant changes in serum T4 and T3 levels were observed and thyroid histology was not affected. NF treatment induced microvacuolation of hepatocytes but did not affect any of the other tested parameters. The results show that, in contrast to the widely described effects in rats, liver enzyme inducers do not affect hepatic thyroid hormone metabolism and thyroid function in mice, suggesting that this species should be less sensitive to thyroid tumor promotion by hepatic microsomal enzyme inducers than rats

    Clofibric acid or diethylmaleate supplemented diet decrease blood pressure in DOCA-salt treated male Sprague Dawley rats--relation with liver antioxidant status.

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    International audienceThe effects of 8-week diethylmaleate (DEM) and clofibric acid (CFA) supplemented diet on blood pressure, body and liver weights, liver antioxidant status and nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity were investigated in 8-week DOCA-salt treated and untreated Sprague-Dawley male rats. It appeared that DEM and particularly CFA treatments were associated with a significant decrease in blood pressure in DOCA-salt treated rats, and an accentuation of the decreases in body weights in both diet supplemented groups. This was not associated with increases in NO production in the liver. In contrast, hepatic lipid peroxidation was significantly decreased in both DOCA-salt treated and untreated groups on DEM and particularly on CFA supplemented diet. The protective effects of CFA and DEM against hepatic cellular damage could be involved in the decreases in blood pressure in DOCA-salt treated rats, where CFA was more efficient than DEM. In CFA supplemented groups, there was a strong increase in hepatic superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione-peroxidase (GSH-Px), and catalase (CAT) activities and in DEM supplemented groups, increases in SOD and CAT activities and in GSH levels were observed. Our data suggest that normalization of blood pressure in DOCA-salt treated rats by CFA was due to an enhancement of the half-life of NO while DEM increased its availability

    Strain difference (WKY, SPRD) in the hepatic antioxidant status in rat and effect of hypertension (SHR, DOCA). Ex vivo and in vitro data.

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    International audienceWe assessed the hepatic antioxidant status of spontaneously (SHR) and desoxicorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-induced hypertensive rats and that of respective normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) and Sprague-Dawley (SPRD) rats. For this we evaluated, ex vivo in liver cytosols, reduced glutathione (GSH) content, glutathione-related enzyme (peroxidase, reductase and transferase) activities as well as the rate of lipid peroxidation in 9-11 week-old rats. The antioxidant status and the cytotoxicity of acetaminophen, a radical- and hydrogen peroxide-mediated hepatotoxic compound, were also assessed in vitro in cultured hepatocytes isolated from hypertensive (SHR, DOCA) and normotensive control (WKY, SPRD) rats. Our results suggest that a difference exists in the hepatic antioxidant status between rat strains, with GSH levels being lower (-15%) and lipid peroxidation rate higher (+30%) in WKY compared to SPRD rats. In hepatocyte cultures from WKY rats, both GSH content and catalase activity were lower (-30 and -70% respectively) compared to hepatocyte cultures from SPRD rats. This was associated with a 35% higher cytotoxicity of acetaminophen in cultured hepatocytes from WKY rats compared to that in hepatocytes from SPRD rats. Hypertension in DOCA rats (mmHg: 221+/-9 vs. 138+/-5 in control SPRD rats) was associated with decreases (about 30%) in both glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) and catalase activities, ex vivo in livers and in vitro in hepatocyte cultures. Hypertension in SHR (mmHg: 189+/-7 vs. 130+/-5 in control WKY rats) was also associated with decreases (about 50%) in GSH-Px activity, ex vivo in livers and in vitro in hepatocyte cultures but catalase activity was not modified. The IC50 of acetaminophen was also lower in hepatocytes from hypertensive rats compared to respective controls, which could be related to the weakened antioxidant status in hepatocytes from hypertensive rats. Our data thus suggest that hepatocyte cultures are appropriated tools in which to assess hepatotoxicity and hepatoprotection in hypertension

    Antioxidant status, lipid peroxidation, mixed function oxidase and UDP-glucuronyl transferase activities in livers from control and DOCA-salt hypertensive male Sprague Dawley rats.

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    International audienceThe effects of DOCA-salt hypertensive treatment on hepatic glutathione-dependent defense system, antioxidant enzymes, lipid peroxidation, mixed function oxidase and UDP-glucuronyl transferase activities were investigated in male Sprague Dawley rats. Compared with controls, DOCA-salt hypertensive rats had lower body weights (linked to liver hypertrophy). Mixed function oxidase and p-nitrophenol-UGT activities were not affected by the treatment but a significant lower rate of the glucuronoconjugation rate of bilirubin (p < 0.001) was observed in DOCA-salt hypertensive rats. While cytosolic glutathione contents and glutathione reductase activity were not affected, glutathione peroxidase (p < 0.001), glutathione transferase (p < 0.001) and catalase (p < 0.01) activities were decreased and associated with higher malondialdehyde contents (p < 0.001) in treated rats. The imbalance in liver antioxidant status (increasing generation of cellular radical species), associated with increases in lipid peroxidation, suggests that oxidative stress might be directly related to arterial hypertension in DOCA-salt treated male Sprague Dawley rats
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