Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 range of motion (ROM) of total hip prostheses is influenced by a number of parameters. An insufficient ROM may cause impingement, which may result in subluxation, dislocation or material failure of the prostheses. In a three-dimensional CAD simulation, the position of the centre of rotation and the CCD angle of the stem were investigated. Displacement of the centre of rotation of the femoral head may be due to wear (PE cups) or to the design of the prosthesis (ceramic cups). Stems of widely differing design have been developed and implanted. The results of the present study demonstrate that the ROM is clearly reduced by increasing penetration of the femoral head. At an inclination angle of 45 degrees, a depth of penetration of 2 mm restricts flexion by about 15 degrees, and a depth of penetration of 3 mm by about 30 degrees. At smaller angles of inclination the ROM is reduced and flexion and abduction are associated with an increased risk of impingement. With steeper acetabular cup inclinations, the risk of impingement decreases, but dislocation, the risk of rim fractures (ceramic cups), and wear and penetration rates (PE cups) increase. The CCD angle of the stem should be oriented to the anatomical situation. At high CCD angles (> 135 degrees), flexion is clearly limited, in particular when there is penetration of the femoral head. For modern total hip arthroplasty, prosthetic systems characterised by precise positioning of components, minimum wear, slightly recessed inserts, and appropriate CCD angles should be used.
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PMID:[Ceramic acetabular cups for hip endoprostheses. 7: How do position of the center of rotation and the CCD angle of the shaft modify range of motion and impingement?]. 1067 90

From powder pattern indexing it has been demonstrated that [Y(H(2)O)](2)(C(2)O(4))(CO(3))(2), yttrium oxalate carbonate, crystallizes with orthorhombic symmetry, space group C222(1), a = 7. 8177 (7), b = 14.943 (1), c = 9.4845 (7) A, V = 1108.0 (1) A(3), Z = 4. This unit cell displays a doubling of the c parameter, arising from weak diffraction lines observed in the powder diffraction pattern, with respect to results reported in the literature. The crystal structure has been solved ab initio using direct methods from powder data and has been confirmed by additional single-crystal data collected with a CCD area detector. The overall crystal structure is similar for both unit cells, except that an alternation of the carbonate groups in the direction parallel to the screw axis is displayed in the larger cell, while with the suggested half unit cell (space group C2mm) the carbonate groups would show only one orientation. The unit-cell determination strategy from single-crystal diffraction, collected with Nonius CAD-4 and Nonius Kappa CCD diffractometers, is discussed with respect to the results extracted from the powder diffraction pattern. The study demonstrates the power and usefulness of the full trace of a powder pattern for the detection of subtle structure details.
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PMID:Powder and single-crystal X-ray diffraction study of the structure of 1109 66

Despite chronic acidosis, collecting ducts in adult carbonic anhydrase II-deficient (CAD mice) are depleted of intercalated cells, including those of type A, which are acid-secreting cells. We hypothesized that this depletion could occur during postnatal development. Principal cells were identified by immunofluorescence using an antibody to rat aquaporin-2 (AQP-2), and type A intercalated cells using an antibody specific for anion exchanger (AE1). In CAD mice the proportion of AQP2-positive cells, normal at 11 days, increased progressively in the cortical (CCD) and outer medullary collecting duct (OMCD), to reach almost 100% in the OMCD in adults. The percentage of AE1-positive cells in the OMCD of CAD mice decreased by half by 6 weeks of age and further by adulthood. In controls, however, the proportion of AQP2-positive cells and that of AE1-positive cells in the OMCD remained stable after 10 days of age. AE1-positive cells accounted for the majority of intercalated cells in the OMCD. The mechanisms leading to selective postnatal cell depletion in the collecting duct in CAD mice remain to be determined.
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PMID:Postnatal disappearance of type A intercalated cells in carbonic anhydrase II-deficient mice. 1142 Sep 10

A new single-crystal diffraction facility has been constructed on beamline 9 of the SRS at Daresbury Laboratory for the study of structural problems in chemistry and materials science. The station utilizes up to 3.8 mrad horizontally from the 5 T wiggler magnet which can be focused horizontally and vertically. The horizontal focusing is provided by a choice of gallium-cooled triangular bent Si (111) or Si (220) monochromators, giving a wavelength range from 0.3 to 1.5 A. Focusing in the vertical plane is achieved by a cylindrically bent zerodur mirror with a 300 mum-thick palladium coating. The station is equipped with a modified Enraf-Nonius CAD-4 four-circle diffractometer and a Siemens SMART CCD area-detector system. High- and low-temperature facilities are available to cover the temperature range from about 80 to 1000 K. Early results on test compounds without optimization of the beam optics demonstrate that excellent refined structures can be obtained from samples giving diffraction patterns too weak to be measured with conventional laboratory X-ray sources, fulfilling a major objective of the project.
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PMID:A New High-Flux Chemical and Materials Crystallography Station at the SRS Daresbury. 1. Design, Construction and Test Results. 1669 41