Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (focal adhesion kinase)
44,029 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity and acceptability of self-taken vulval-introital (VI) samples, first-catch urine (FCU) samples and clinician-obtained cervical samples for the presence of genital Chlamydia trachomatis infections in women using the ligase chain reaction (LCR) assay. One hundred and four patients were enrolled, of whom 54 patients had chlamydial DNA in at least one of the samples tested. The sensitivity of the cervical sample was 96.3%, vulval-introital sample in LCR buffer 92.6%, vulval-introital swab collected dry 88.9%, FCU stored at +2-8 degrees C 81.5%, FCU stored at room temperature 77.8% and FCU stored with 2% w/v boric acid at room temperature 87.0%. Self-taken vulval-introital LCR samples were shown to be an acceptable alternative to a clinician-obtained LCR sample. The addition of boric acid may overcome the need for a continuous cold chain for FCU samples.
Int J STD AIDS 1999 Dec
PMID:Evaluation of self-taken samples for the presence of genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection in women using the ligase chain reaction assay. 1063 56

The effects of initial thermal state on thermoregulatory responses to cold (-10 degrees C) in a 0.2 (still air), 1.0, and 5.0 m. S(-1) wind speed were studied. Eight young male subjects were first preconditioned in thermoneutral (+20 degrees C, TN) or cool (-5 degrees C, CO) environment for 60 min. After preconditioning the subjects were exposed to wind at -10 degrees C in a standing position, facing the wind, for 30 min. Precooling decreased mean skin temperature (Tsk) by 4.0 (SEM 0.1) degrees C (P < 0.001) and increased heat flux by 57 (SEM 2) W x m(-2) (P < 0.001) in comparison to TN. Cooling rate of Tsk was faster (P < 0.001) in TN than in CO at every wind speed. Even so, Tsk ended up at a lower level in CO (P < 0.001-0.01) than in TN at every wind speed. Local skin temperatures of hand, finger, foot and toe were significantly lower in CO than in TN at the end of all exposures to wind. Heat flux from the skin was 8% higher (NS) in TN at 5.0 m x s(-1) wind speed in comparison to CO. A 5.0 m x s(-1) wind speed increased oxygen consumption significantly (P < 0.001) in both CO and TN in comparison to still air. At 5.0 m x s(-1) wind speed the general thermal sensation was the same (cold) in both TN and CO, despite the higher Tsk in TN. In conclusion, Tsk decreased more rapidly in TN, probably due to rapid skin vasoconstriction and redistribution of circulation to the central body. Probably for the same reason, dry heat loss from the skin was at nearly the same level in both TN and CO. Although the initial thermal state did not affect the amount of heat loss, it significantly affected the peripheral temperatures and thermal sensations and should therefore be taken into consideration in the prediction of thermophysiological responses to wind.
...
PMID:Thermal responses to cold wind of thermoneutral and cooled subjects. 1075 Nov 1

A simple and rugged reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic method with ultraviolet absorbance detection at 263 nm was developed and validated for the analysis of novel triazole antifungal agents SYN-2869 and its derivatives in tissues. The method involved homogenization with 0.01 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.8) for lung, brain and spleen tissues. The liver and kidneys were homogenized with acetonitrile:acetone (1:1). The plasma proteins were precipitated with ice-cold acetonitrile and supernatent was evaporated to dryness. The reconstituted samples were injected onto an HPLC system. SYN-2869 was separated from the matrix components on a symmetry C(18) column using a aqueous mobile phase of acetonitrile and water with a flow rate of 1 mL/min. A step gradient of 40-80% acetonitrile eluted SYN-2869 and the internal standard (SYN-2506). The linear range was 0.5-10 microgram/g (r(2) > 0.99). The limit of quantitation was 0.5 microgram/g. The inter-day precision and accuracy for SYN 2869 standard concentration were from 2.6 to 7.4% and from -1.56 to +3.29%, respectively. The method was applied to tissue samples collected from single intravenous administration to mice to evaluate the distribution of these novel antifungal agents to different tissues.
...
PMID:High-performance liquid chromatographic assay for the determination of novel triazole antifungal agents in tissue. Application to tissue distribution studies. 1096 Aug 32

This investigation evaluated the influence of gender and phase of menstrual cycle [follicular (FOL): Days 2-6) and luteal (LUT: Days 19-24)] on a cold air tolerance test (CATT: 90-min of exposure to 5 degrees C air) in 8 females (22.7 +/- 3.0 yr) and 15 males (22.3 +/- 2.9 yr). In addition, central thermosensitivity (beta; W x kg(-1) x degrees C(-1) [i.e., the slope of the relationship between the decrease in esophageal temperature (Tes) and the increase in heat production (HP)], gathered during a separate water trial in 20 degrees C water, was correlated to the change (delta) in Tes and HP across the 90 min of resting exposure during the CATT. Analysis of variance revealed no significant differences between phase of menstrual cycle or gender for HP, mean skin temperature (Tsk), and insulation; however, a main effect for time for these parameters was demonstrated. Despite these similarities, Tes differed (P < 0.05) between males and females. Additionally, no relationship was found between beta and deltaHP and deltaTes in the males and females. Also, there was no relationship between beta and thermoregulation during the CATT in these subjects. These data suggest that menstrual cycle phase did not cause a differential response in Tes, Tsk, and HP during a CATT. Furthermore, women maintained a higher Tes than men during the CATT despite similarities in HP and Tsk.
...
PMID:Influence of gender and menstrual cycle on a cold air tolerance test and its relationship to thermosensitivity. 1101 97

The effects of exercise intensity on thermoregulatory responses in cold (-10 degrees C) in a 0.2 (still air, NoWi), 1.0 (Wi1), and 5.0 (Wi5) m x s(-1) wind were studied. Eight young and healthy men, preconditioned in thermoneutral (+20 degrees C) environment for 60 min, walked for 60 min on the treadmill at 2.8 km/h with different combinations of wind and exercise intensity. Exercise level was adjusted by changing the inclination of the treadmill between 0 degrees (lower exercise intensity, metabolic rate 124 W x m(-2), LE) and 6 degrees (higher exercise intensity, metabolic rate 195 W x m(-2), HE). Due to exercise increased heat production and circulatory adjustments, the rectal temperature (T(re)), mean skin temperature (Tsk) and mean body temperature (Tb) were significantly higher at the end of HE in comparison to LE in NoWi and Wi1, and T(re) and Tb also in Wi5. Tsk and Tb were significantly decreased by 5.0 m x s(-1) wind in comparison to NoWi and Wi1. The higher exercise intensity was intense enough to diminish peripheral vasoconstriction and consequently the finger skin temperature was significantly higher at the end of HE in comparison to LE in NoWi and Wi1. Mean heat flux from the skin was unaffected by the exercise intensity. At LE oxygen consumption (VO2) was significantly higher in Wi5 than NoWi and Wi1. Heart rate was unaffected by the wind speed. The results suggest that, with studied exercise intensities, produced without changes in walking speed, the metabolic rate is not so important that it should be taken into consideration in the calculation of wind chill index.
...
PMID:Effects of metabolic rate on thermal responses at different air velocities in -10 degrees C. 1128 19

An isotope dilution cold vapor inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ID-CV-ICPMS) method featuring gaseous introduction of mercury via tin chloride reduction has been developed and applied to the quantification and certification of mercury in various NIST standard reference materials: SRM 966 Toxic Metals in Bovine Blood (30 ng x mL(-1)); SRM 1641d Mercury in Water (1.6 microg x mL(-1)); and SRM 1946 Lake Superior Fish Tissue (436 ng x g(-1)). Complementary mercury data were generated for SRMs and NIST quality control standards using cold vapor atomic absorption spectroscopy (CVAAS). Certification results for the determination of mercury in SRM 1641d using two independent methods (ID-CV-ICPMS and CVAAS) showed a degree of agreement of 0.3% between the methods. Gaseous introduction of mercury into the ICPMS resulted in a single isotope sensitivity of 2 x 10(6) counts x s(-1)/ng x g(-1) for 201Hg and significantly reduced the memory and washout effects traditionally encountered in solution nebulization ICPMS. Figures of merit for isotope ratio accuracy and precision were evaluated at dwell times of 10, 20, 40, 80, and 160 ms using SRM 3133 Mercury Spectrometric Solution. The optimum dwell time of 80 ms yielded a measured 201Hg/202Hg isotope ratio within 0.13% of the theoretical natural value and a measurement precision of 0.34%, on the basis of three replicate injections of SRM 3133.
...
PMID:Development of isotope dilution cold vapor inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and its application to the certification of mercury in NIST standard reference materials. 1139 40

The purpose of the study was to determine types of general cold adaptation and to reveal adaptation-compensatory regulation mechanisms of heat exchange and breathing. 24 healthy subjects were tested. Thermoregulation and gas exchange was measured before, during and after a 10-day cold exposure (13 degrees C, 2 h). Before and after cold exposures the ventilatory CO2 and O2 sensitivity was measured by the rebreathing method. The gas-analyser Eos Sprint ("Erich Jaeger", Germany) was used. The whole group exhibited the hypothermic isoinsulative adaptation type: during cold exposure Tre decreased (P < 0.01), Tsk did not change, the delay for the onset of shivering increased (P < 0.001), Tre of the onset of shivering decreased (P < 0.01). According to Tre measured at 120 min of the 10th day the group was divided in two. In the first group the adaptive response was based on thermoregulation changes only. In the second group adaptive response was based on both thermoregulation changes and breathing regulation changes: ventilatory CO2 and O2 sensitivity increased (P < 0.01), the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve moved to the right (P < 0.01). Thus we can propose that subjects of the first group will be more successful in cold adaptation, whereas the second group will be unsuccessful in cold adaptation and at risk for respiratory diseases.
...
PMID:Ten-day cold exposures develop adaptation-compensatory mechanisms of regulation of heat exchange and breathing. 1150 88

A method based on isotope dilution cold-vapor inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ID-CV-ICPMS) has been developed for high-accuracy determinations of mercury in bituminous and sub-bituminous coals. A closed-system digestion process employing a Carius tube is used to completely oxidize the coal matrix and chemically equilibrate the mercury in the sample with a 201Hg isotopic spike. The digestates are diluted with high-purity quartz-distilled water, and the mercury is released as a vapor by reduction with tin(II) chloride. Measurements of 201Hg/202Hg isotope ratios are made using a quadrupole ICPMS system in time-resolved analysis mode. The new method has some significant advantages over existing methods. The instrument detection limit is less than 1 pg/mL. The average blank (n = 17) is 30 pg, which is roughly 1 order of magnitude lower than the equivalent microwave digestion procedure. The detection limit in coal is blank limited and is approximately 40 pg/g. Memory effects are very low. The relative reproducibility of the analytical measurements is approximately 0.5% for mercury concentrations in the range 10-150 ng/g. The method has been used to measure mercury concentrations in six coal reference materials, SRM 1632b (77.4 ng/g), SRM 1632c (94.3 ng/g), BCR 40 (433.2 ng/g), BCR 180 (125.0 ng/g), BCR 181 (135.8 ng/g), and SARM 20 (252.6 ng/g), as well as a coal fly ash, SRM 1633b (143.1 ng/g). The method is equally applicable to other types of fossil fuels including both crude and refined oils.
...
PMID:Determination of mercury in coal by isotope dilution cold-vapor generation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. 1203 33

In this paper a new electronically controlled year-round wet-only sampler for wet deposition of trace organic compounds (e.g. airborne PAHs) is described. The sampler provides in situ filtration of the precipitation as well as preconcentration of nonpolar organic compounds by means of a C18-PAH modified silica gel cartridge. The whole assembly is insulated and equipped with heating elements which permit collection of wet deposition as ice or snow and insure correct function of the sampling system even during cold weather. Concurrent chemical analysis of both the particulate and the dissolved phases is performed by high resolution gas chromatography with flame ionization detection or HPLC with fluorescence detection. The reliability of the method was proved by analyzing PAH spiked water (simulated rain) and using NIST SRM 1649 ('urban dust') as certified material for particle-bound PAHs in precipitation. This study proved satisfactorily recoveries of as both particle-bound and unbound aqueous PAH, with only small losses to collector surfaces. It was proved that this new wet-only precipitation sampler can successfully be used for long-time monitoring of PAH in wet depositions in urban areas.
...
PMID:Description and evaluation of a sampling system for long-time monitoring of PAHs wet deposition. 1236 13

Since human thermoregulation at rest is altered by cold exposure, it was hypothesized that physical training under cold conditions would alter thermoregulation. Three groups (n = 8) of male subjects (mean age 24.3 +/- 0.9 years) were evaluated: group T (interval training at 21 degrees C), group CT (interval training at 1 degrees C), and group C (no training, equivalent exposure to 1 degrees C). Each group was submitted, before and after 4 weeks of interval training (5 d/week), to a cold air test at rest (SCAT) (dry bulb temperature (Tdb) = 1 degrees C) for a 2-h period for evaluation of the thermoregulatory responses. During SCAT, after the training/acclimation period, group T exhibited a higher rectal temperature (Tre) (P < 0.05) without significant change in mean skin temperature (Tsk) whereas metabolic heat production (M) was higher at the beginning of the SCAT (P < 0.05). For group CT, no thermoregulatory change was observed. Group C showed a lower Tre (P < 0.05) without significant change in either Tsk or in M, suggesting the development of a hypothermic general cold adaptation. This study showed, first, that the cold thermoregulatory responses induced by an interval training differed following the climatic conditions of the training and, second, that this training performed in the cold prevented the development of a general cold adaptation.
...
PMID:Thermoregulation in the cold after physical training at different ambient air temperatures. 1243 Sep 80


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>