861 research outputs found
The survival and proliferation of fibroblasts on orthodontic miniscrews with different surface treatment: an in vitro study
It is of fundamental importance for prosthodontic and orthodontic applications
that there is a short osseointegration time of dental implants without inflammation
of the surrounding tissue. In addition to the chemical properties of the
implant material, the surface morphology is an equally critical parameter. The
objective of this work was to study the effect of two simple surface treatments
on the survival and proliferation of fibroblasts.
Three groups of orthodontic miniscrews (Mondeal®) were used. One group was
given an airflow (EMS, Schweiz) treatment, the second was sand-blasted in the
area of the threading and a third group served as a control. After preparation
sterilised screws were cultured in vitro with fibroblasts (L-929). The metabolic
cell activity on the implant surface was determined after 24, 48 and 120 hours
using the alamarBlue assay and a count of DAPI labelled fibroblasts was performed
with a fluorescence microscope.
After 24 hours, but not at 48 hours and 120 hours, the metabolic activity of the
fibroblasts was slightly decreased for the airflow screw group. Generally, no
significant difference was found regarding metabolic activity and proliferation
of fibroblasts within the different groups
Sub-daily Statistical Downscaling of Meteorological Variables Using Neural Networks
AbstractA new open source neural network temporal downscaling model is described and tested using CRU-NCEP reanal ysis and CCSM3 climate model output. We downscaled multiple meteorological variables in tandem from monthly to sub-daily time steps while also retaining consistent correlations between variables. We found that our feed forward, error backpropagation approach produced synthetic 6 hourly meteorology with biases no greater than 0.6% across all variables and variance that was accurate within 1% for all variables except atmospheric pressure, wind speed, and precipitation. Correlations between downscaled output and the expected (original) monthly means exceeded 0.99 for all variables, which indicates that this approach would work well for generating atmospheric forcing data consistent with mass and energy conserved GCM output. Our neural network approach performed well for variables that had correlations to other variables of about 0.3 and better and its skill was increased by downscaling multiple correlated variables together. Poor replication of precipitation intensity however required further post-processing in order to obtain the expected probability distribution. The concurrence of precipitation events with expected changes in sub ordinate variables (e.g., less incident shortwave radiation during precipitation events) were nearly as consistent in the downscaled data as in the training data with probabilities that differed by no more than 6%. Our downscaling approach requires training data at the target time step and relies on a weak assumption that climate variability in the extrapolated data is similar to variability in the training data
Nanoscale strain mapping in battery nanostructures
Coherent x-ray diffraction imaging is used to map the local three dimensional strain inhomogeneity and electron density distribution of two individual LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4-δ cathode nanoparticles in both ex-situ and in-situ environments. Our reconstructed images revealed a maximum strain of 0.4%. We observed different variations in strain inhomogeneity due to multiple competing effects. The compressive/tensile component of the strain is connected to the local lithium content and, on the surface, interpreted in terms of a local Jahn-Teller distortion of Mn 3+. Finally, the measured strain distributions are discussed in terms of their impact on competing theoretical models of the lithiation process. © 2014 AIP Publishing LLC
Biochemistry and functional aspects of human glandular kallikreins
Human urinary kallikrein was purified by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200 and affinity chromatography on aprotinin-Sepharose, followed by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose. In dodecylsulfate gel electrophoresis two protein bands with molecular weights of 41,000 and 34,000 were separated. The amino acid composition and the carbohydrate content of the kallikrein preparation were determined; isoleucine was identified as the only aminoterminal amino acid. The bimolecular velocity constant for the inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate was determined as 9±2 l mol–1 min–1. The hydrolysis of a number of substrates was investigated and AcPheArgOEt was found to be the most sensitive substrate for human urinary kallikrein. Using this substrate an assay method for kallikrein in human urine was developed.
It was shown by radioimmunoassay that pig pancreatic kallikrein can be absorbed in the rat intestinal tract. Furthermore, in dogs the renal excretion of glandular kallikrein from blood was demonstrated by radioimmunological methods
Calibrating and testing tissue equivalent proportional counters with 37Ar
A method for testing and calibrating tissue equivalent proportional counters with37Ar is described.37Ar is produced by exposure of argon in its normal isotope composition to thermal neutrons. It is shown that - up to volume ratios of 0.01 of argon to the tissue equivalent gas - there is no appreciable effect of the argon admixture on the function of the proportional counter. Conventional calibration methods with characteristic x-rays or with -particles require modifications of the detectors, and they test only small sub-volumes in the counters. In contrast, argon permits calibrations and tests of the resolution that are representative for the entire counter volume and that do not require changes in detector construction. The method is equally applicable to multi-element proportional counters; it is here exemplified by its application to a long cylindrical counter of simplified design that is part of such a multi-element configuration
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