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Query: EC:4.1.1.6 (
CAD
)
4,420
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intrinsic laryngeal muscles of the horse, donkey, sheep, ox, pig, dog and cat were examined for myosin ATPase, following acid and alkali pre-incubation, SDH and M-alphaGPDH activities. In all laryngeal muscles two fibre types, betaR and alphaR, belonging to slow and fast-contracting,
fatigue
-resistant motor units (types S and FR) were present in different proportions. The alphaW fibre type, belonging to fast-contracting and
fatigue
-resistant motor units was absent (type FF). The alphaR fibres of the dog and the cat were subdivided into groups by the various degrees of acid stable myosin ATPase, oxidative and glycolytic activities. In the ox and pig laryngeal muscles, the same fibres showed an atypical myosin ATPase activity, as high as the fast-contracting fibres but acid-resistant like the slow-twitch fibres. The most uniform muscle was the
CAD
, which was formed of a higher percentage of slow-twitch fibres than the other laryngeal muscles of the same species. Also the VE muscle was very uniform in the dog, horse and donkey but the fast-twitch fibres were by far the most numerous, the highest in fact among all the laryngeal muscles. In the TA muscle of the cat, sheep and ox, the percentage of fast-twitch fibres was very high in the rostral portion decreasing gradually towards the caudal portion. Thus it was possible to separate histochemically the TA muscle in the rostral (pars ventricularis) and caudal (pars vocalis) portions which are related to the VE and the VO muscles of the dog, horse and donkey. In the VO muscle the slow-twitch fibres are more numerous than in the VE. The two portions of the TA were not detected by histochemical methods in the pig. However, this muscle has the highest percentage of fast-twitch fibres. The qualitative and quantitative data presented in this paper together with the data reported in the literature, enable us to correlate morphological and functional aspects of fibre composition among the species.
...
PMID:A comparative histochemical study of intrinsic laryngeal muscles of ungulates and carnivores. 53 8
Aim of this study was to analyze the cardiovascular response to graded physical exercise in patients who have undergone cardiac transplantation and to assess the ability of exercise stress testing in early detection of coronary artery disease. We studied 114 transplanted subjects (100 men and 14 women, mean age 46.6 +/- 11.3 years), who performed exercise stress testing 6 months after bypass and then every 6 (+/- 1) months during a 5-year follow-up. Variations of hearth rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), heart rate-pressure product (RPP) values and exercise stress tolerance were studied both in basal and maximum workload conditions. Mean HR values at basal conditions (103.9 +/- 11.3 b/min at 6 months and 89 +/- 12.7 b/min at 60 months, p < 0.05) and maximum workload tolerance (67.7 +/- 20.4 W at 6 months and 100 +/- 17 W at 60 months, p < 0.05) were significantly different at the beginning and at the end of follow-up. SBP values both at basal conditions and at peak exercise had always been constant. Exercise was stopped for leg muscle
fatigue
in 92% and dyspnea in 7% of the subjects; isolated T-wave and ST segment changes were found in 29.8% and in 10.5% of the patients respectively, whereas 11.4% exhibited both ST-T variations. Angiographic examination (performed in 80/114 patients) showed significant coronary disease (stenosis > 50%) in 8, coronary atherosclerosis (
CAD
) of minor degree in 4 and provoked spasm in 2 subjects. In this subgroup exercise stress testing induced ischemic ECG changes (ST segment depression > or = 1 mm) without angina in 1 patient, ST-T segment variations only in 5 and no electrocardiographic alterations (negative tests) in 2 patients. Four subjects with
CAD
and 1 with coronary spasm induced by angiography showed isolated ST segment and T-wave changes. Our work demonstrated that exercise stress testing plays a relevant role in the study of the denervated heart response to dynamic exercise. The rise in workload tolerated, observed in our population, seems to be related to time elapsed from surgery, improvement in clinical conditions, psychological stability and patient's confidence in his own abilities. The tolerance to exercise 6 months after graft seems to predict the quality of performance in the following tests. Our angiographic results reveal a low sensitivity of the exercise stress test in detecting
CAD
in this population according to traditional electrocardiographic criteria for myocardial ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The ergometric test after a heart transplant: its usefulness and limits]. 808 12
High cardiac output failure/state (HCOF) is regular feature of some illnesses e.g. thiamine deficiency, hyperthyroidism, severe anemia, Paget's disease or arteriovenous fistulae. HCOF in multiple myeloma is reported quite rarely. 31-year-old man was admitted because of
fatigue
, dyspnea and subfebrilities. Heart rate was 116/min, sinus rythm blood pressure 110/60 mmHg. Chest film showed cardiomegaly with sings of interstitial pulmonary edema, echocardiography mild dilatation of the left ventricle with hyperkinetic wall motion and small pericardial effusion. Hemoglobin was 104 g/l, leukocyte count 13.5 x 10(9)/l with 30% of plasmatic cells. Serum protein electrophoresis demonstrated a monoclonal gammapathy, X ray studies of the skelet multiple osteolytic lesions. Diagnosis of plasmocytic leukemia-form of multiple myeloma was established and chemotherapy (vincristine + adriamycine + dexamethason) was started. Patient cardiac status deteriorated. Cardiac catheterisation demonstrated mean righ atrial pressure of 25 mmHg, mean pulmonary artery pressure of 28 mmHg and pulmonary artery wedge pressure of 24 mmHg. Co was 20.0 l/min (C.I. 11.5 l/min/m2). In continuing of chemotherapy and symptomatic therapy for heart failure patients status gradually improved and complete remission of the myeloma and normalisation of cardiac parameters was achieved. Heart failure in multiple myeloma patients has been attributed to amyloidosis of myocardium, hyperviscosity syndrome, co-existing
CAD
or anthracycline toxicity. HCOF should be considered in patients with clinical evidence of heart failure and normal left ventricular function.
...
PMID:[Hypercirculatory heart failure in a patient with plasmacytic leukemia]. 855 97
The biaxial flexural strength and cyclic
fatigue
biaxial flexural strength of
CAD
/CAM ceramics polished with #220, 400, 600 and 1000 diamond pads were measured in an effort to determine the effect of surface roughness on
fatigue
behavior of dental ceramics. The surface roughness was improved after polishing with a smaller diamond grain pad. The flexural strengths of the specimens polished with #220, 400, 600 and 1000 diamond pad were 75.2, 76.6, 82.2, and 83.3 MPa, respectively; the
fatigue
flexural strength of those with #220, 400, 600 and 1000 were 53.0, 58.1, 60.0, and 61.5 MPa, respectively. Both the flexural and
fatigue
flexural strengths increased with improvement of surface profile. These results suggest the importance of polishing of dental ceramics for not only the static strength but also the cyclic
fatigue
strength.
...
PMID:Effect of polishing on cyclic fatigue strength of CAD/CAM ceramics. 1078 60
The question of whether prosthesis/abutment tooth interface debonding is associated with inappropriate occlusal force is investigated in this study. A new modeling approach was employed to perform the interfacial stress analyses. Solid models of resin-bonded (RB) prosthesis and abutment teeth were constructed by stacking serious section contours that were obtained from CT images. A 3-D finite element (FE) model of RB prosthesis/abutment teeth was generated in a
CAD
system after assembling and meshing procedures. An in-house program was developed to combine the FE package (ANSYS) to calculate the interfacial (normal and shear) stresses at the prosthesis/molar interface with the bonding and debonding conditions. After 10 different occlusal force(s) evaluations, three initial opening gaps at the distal margin of the retainer were assumed to examine the possible interface debonding mechanism under the worst loading case. The results indicated that a more accurate FE model of the posterior RB prosthesis/abutments could be generated through combining several computer-aided techniques. The maximum interfacial stresses were obtained when the occlusal force was applied on the buccal slope of the distolingual cusp of the molar. For interface debonding simulations, peak normal and shear stresses were found near the debonding areas and stress values increased gradually with small to large initial opening gaps. From these results, prosthesis/abutment tooth interfacial
fatigue
damage might arise or accelerate the interface to debond under adequate bonding or initial gap opening conditions after long-term repeated inappropriate occlusal force actions.
...
PMID:Integration of CT, CAD system and finite element method to investigate interfacial stresses of resin-bonded prosthesis. 1285 Feb 97
Robust dental systems obtained by computer-aided design and manufacture (
CAD
/CAM) have been introduced and, in parallel, the strength of the ceramic materials used in fabricating dental crowns has improved. Yet all-ceramic crowns suffer from near-surface damage, limiting their clinical success, especially on posterior teeth. Factors directly associated with
CAD
/CAM fabrication that contribute to the degree of damage include material selection and machining parameters and strategies. However, a number of additional factors also either create new damage modes or exacerbate subcritical damage, potentially leading to catastrophic failure of the crown. Such factors include post-fabrication manipulations in the laboratory or by the clinician,
fatigue
associated with natural occlusal function, and stress fields created by compliance or distortion within the supporting tooth structure and/or adhesive material holding the crown to the tooth. Any damage reduces the strength of a crown, increasing the probability of catastrophic failure. The challenge is to understand and manage the combination of competing damage initiation sites and mechanisms, limitations imposed by the demand for aesthetics, and biologically related constraints.
...
PMID:Near-surface damage--a persistent problem in crowns obtained by computer-aided design and manufacturing. 1605 Feb 14
Titanium scaffolds with controlled microarchitecture have been developed for load bearing orthopedic applications. The controlled microarchitecture refers to a repeating array of unit-cells, composed of sintered titanium powder, which make up the scaffold structure. The objective of this current research was to characterize the mechanical performance of three scaffolds with increasing porosity, using finite element analysis (FEA) and to compare the results with experimental data. Scaffolds were scanned using microcomputed tomography and FEA models were generated from the resulting computer models. Macroscale and unit-cell models of the scaffolds were created. The material properties of the sintered titanium powders were first evaluated in mechanical tests and the data used in the FEA. The macroscale and unit-cell FEA models proved to be a good predictor of Young's modulus and yield strength. Although macroscale models showed similar failure patterns and an expected trend in UCS, strain at UCS did not compare well with experimental data. Since a rapid prototyping method was used to create the scaffolds, the original
CAD
geometries of the scaffold were also evaluated using FEA but they did not reflect the mechanical properties of the physical scaffolds. This indicates that at present, determining the actual geometry of the scaffold through computed tomography imaging is important. Finally, a
fatigue
analysis was performed on the scaffold to simulate the loading conditions it would experience as a spinal interbody fusion device.
...
PMID:Analysis of the mechanical behavior of a titanium scaffold with a repeating unit-cell substructure. 1936 Aug 88
Clinically, zirconia-supported all-ceramic restorations are failing by veneer-chipping without exposing the zirconia interface. We hypothesized that mouth motion step-stress-accelerated
fatigue
testing of standardized dental crowns would permit this previously unrecognized failure mode to be investigated. Using
CAD
software, we imported the average dimensions of a mandibular first molar crown and modeled tooth preparation. The
CAD
-based tooth preparation was rapid-prototyped as a die for fabrication of zirconia core porcelain-veneered crowns. Crowns were bonded to aged composite reproductions of the preparation and aged 14 days in water. Crowns were single-cycle-loaded to failure or mouth-motion step-stress-
fatigue
-tested. Finite element analysis indicated high stress levels below the load and at margins, in agreement with only single-cycle fracture origins. As hypothesized, the mouth motion sliding contact
fatigue
resulted in veneer chipping, reproducing clinical findings allowing for investigations into the underlying causes of such failures.
...
PMID:Laboratory simulation of Y-TZP all-ceramic crown clinical failures. 1940 62
The purpose of this in vitro study was to compare the quasi-static load-bearing capacity of all-ceramic resin-bonded three-unit inlay-retained fixed dental prostheses (IRFDPs) made from computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (
CAD
/CAM)-manufactured yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystals (Y-TZP) frameworks with two different connector dimensions, with and without
fatigue
loading. Twelve IRFDPs each were made with connector dimensions 3 x 3 mm(2) (width x height) (control group) and 3 x 2 mm(2) (test group). Inlay-retained fixed dental prostheses were adhesively cemented on identical metal-models using composite resin cement. Subgroups of six specimens each were fatigued with maximal 1,200,000 loading cycles in a chewing simulator with a weight load of 25 kg and a load frequency of 1.5 Hz. The load-bearing capacity was tested in a universal testing machine for IRFDPs without
fatigue
loading and for IRFDPs that had not already fractured during
fatigue
loading. During
fatigue
testing one IRFDP (17%) of the test group failed. Under both loading conditions, IRFDPs of the control group exhibited statistically significantly higher load-bearing capacities than the test group.
Fatigue
loading reduced the load-bearing capacity in both groups. Considering the maximum chewing forces in the molar region, it seems possible to use zirconia ceramic as a core material for IRFDPs with a minimum connector dimension of 9 mm(2). A further reduction of the connector dimensions to 6 mm(2) results in a significant reduction of the load-bearing capacity.
...
PMID:Load-bearing capacity of all-ceramic posterior inlay-retained fixed dental prostheses. 1958 61
The present study evaluated the failure risks of an endodontically treated premolar with severely damaged coronal hard tissue and restored with either a computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (
CAD
/CAM) ceramic endocrown or a classical crown configuration. Two, three-dimensional finite element maxillary premolar models were designed with endodontic treatment and restored with either a chairside economic reconstruction of esthetic ceramic (CEREC) ceramic endocrown or a classical crown. The Weibull function was incorporated with finite element analysis to calculate the long-term failure probability relative to different load conditions. Additionally, an in vitro
fatigue
-load fracture experiment was performed to validate the numerical simulation results. The results indicated that the stress values on the dentin and luting cement for the endocrown restoration were lower than those for the crown configuration. Weibull analysis revealed that the individual failure probability in the endocrown dentin and luting cement diminished more than those for the crown restoration. While the overall failure probabilities for the endocrown and the classical crown were similar,
fatigue
fracture testing revealed that the endocrown restoration had higher fracture resistance than the classical crown configuration (1,446 vs. 1,163 MPa). This investigation implies that the endocrown can be considered as a conservative, aesthetic, and clinically feasible restorative approach for endodontically treated maxillary premolars.
...
PMID:Finite element and Weibull analyses to estimate failure risks in the ceramic endocrown and classical crown for endodontically treated maxillary premolar. 2015 70
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