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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We synthesized 4-methacryloxyethyl trimellite acid (4-MET) and anhydride (4-META), and tried them as a reactive comonomer for adhesives to bovine enamel. In the case of non-etched enamel, tensile adhesive strength was 40-50 Kg/cm2 after one day immersion in 37 degrees C
water
, but it decreased below 10 Kg/cm2 after a month immersion in 37 degrees C
water
. It could be concluded that this adhesion was not sufficient for practical usage. Then we applied this method to an etched enamel. After a series of experiments we concluded that it was necessary to etch bovine enamel surface with 30% citric acid for practical usage.
Adhesion
of some dental alloys with a PMMA rod was also studied and adhesive strength in Co-Cr alloy was over 150 Kg/cm2 either after one month immersion in 37 degrees C
water
or 60 times thermal cycles between 4 degrees C and 60 degrees C.
...
PMID:[Studies on dental self-curing resins. (17). Adhesion of PMMA with bovine enamel or dental alloys (author's transl)]. 28 86
Mating-specific adhesion between haploid yeast cells of opposite mating type (a and alpha) was studied by using a quantitative agar plate assay. Washed a and alpha cells that had not previously been exposed to their respective opposite mating type ("naive" cells) adhered relatively weakly. In
water
, only 5 to 10% of the a cells stuck tightly enough to alpha cells to give rise subsequently to diploid clones on the assay plates. Under optimum conditions (pH 6 to 7, at least 0.1 M Nacl or 0.01 M Mg(2+)), there was about 20% adhesion. Nevertheless, this weak binding defined a mating type-specific interaction because, even under optimum conditions, the homologous interactions (a with a and alpha with alpha) yielded only 3 to 5% cohesion. In contrast to these results, washed cells that had been preincubated in the cell-free culture medium of their opposite mating type ("preconditioned" cells) adhered quite strongly. The degree of adhesion between preconditioned cells (40 to 50%) was essentially unaffected by extremes of ionic strength, pH, and temperature and by the absence of divalent cation. This strong interaction was also mating type specific since cohesion between preconditioned cells of like mating type was only about 5%. The increase in agglutinability was obtained if only the a cells were preconditioned and could be induced by highly purified preparations of natural or synthetically prepared alpha-factor, an oligopeptide pheromone released by the alpha cells. The appearance of increased adhesiveness was blocked by an inhibitor of RNA synthesis and by an inhibitor of protein synthesis, but not by an inhibitor of polysaccharide synthesis.
Adhesion
between preconditioned cells could be inhibited by pretreatment with functionally univalent succinylated concanavalin A or with extracts from preconditioned cells of the opposite mating type. These results confirm in a quantitative manner that the recognition between conjugating cells of S. cerevisiae is a developmentally regulated event that is under the control of the mating type locus.
...
PMID:Cell-cell recognition in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: regulation of mating-specific adhesion. 35 Aug 54
A new, simple method of modifying the adherend metal surface by a liquid Ga-Sn alloy (Adlloy) was applied to dental precious and base-metal alloys for adhesion with 4-META adhesive resin.
Adhesions
of 4-META resin to three other surface states--as-polished, oxidized at high temperature, and electroplated tin--were also performed for comparison with the adhesion on Adlloy-modified surfaces. Bond strength measurements were made, and the durability against
water
at the adhering interface was evaluated. The Adlloy-modified gold alloys (Type IV and 14 K) and silver-based alloys (Ag-Pd and Ag-Cu) showed not only high bond strengths but also excellent
water
durability at the adhesion interface. Surface modification by Adlloy, however, did not affect adhesion to Ag-In-Zn and base-metal (SUS, Co-Cr, and Ni-Cr) alloys.
Adhesion
to the tin-electroplated specimens was comparable with that to the Adlloy-modified specimens.
...
PMID:A new method for promoting adhesion between precious metal alloys and dental adhesives. 161 83
The aim of this study was to examine the hydrophobicities of 23 urogenital, dairy, poultry, and American Type Culture Collection isolates of lactobacilli and to determine the effect on hydrophobicity of serially passaging the strains in liquid medium. To this end, strains were grown after isolation and identification and then serially passaged up to 20 times. Hydrophobicity was assessed through contact angle measurements on lawns of cells by using
water
, formamide, methylene iodide, 1-bromonaphthalene, and hexadecane as wetting agents and through measurement of their partitioning in a hexadecane-
water
system. The hydrophobicities of these strains varied widely, with Lactobacillus casei strains being predominantly hydrophilic and L. acidophilus strains being mostly hydrophobic. For some isolates, serial passaging was accompanied by a clear loss of hydrophobic surface properties, whereas for other strains, cultures became heterogeneous in that some cells had already lost their hydrophobic surface properties while others were still hydrophobic.
Adhesion
of this collection of lactobacilli to hexadecane droplets in microbial adhesion to hexadecane (MATH) tests was driven by their aversion to
water
rather than by their affinity for hexadecane, as concluded from the fact that hexadecane contact angles were zero for all strains. Furthermore, adhesion of the lactobacilli to hexadecane in MATH tests occurred only when the
water
contact angle on the cells was above 60 degrees.
...
PMID:Comparison of contact angles and adhesion to hexadecane of urogenital, dairy, and poultry lactobacilli: effect of serial culture passages. 162 24
Activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) are implicated in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury (ALI) associated with sepsis.
Adhesion
of activated PMNs to endothelial monolayers is mediated by the CD18 adhesion-receptor complex on the PMN cell surface. Monoclonal antibody 60.3 (MoAb 60.3) blocks CD18-dependent PMN-endothelial adhesion in vitro and in vivo. This study was designed to determine the role of CD18-dependent PMN adhesion in ALI associated with gram-negative sepsis. Anesthetized, ventilated (FiO2 0.5, positive end-expiratory pressure 5 cm
H2O
) pigs received sterile saline (control, n = 8) or live Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 5 x 10(8) colony-forming units/ml at 0.3 ml/20 kg/min (septic, n = 9) for 1 hour. A third group (n = 7) received MoAb 60.3, 2 mg/kg intravenously, 15 minutes before Pseudomonas infusion. Animals were studied for 300 minutes. MoAb 60.3 significantly (p less than 0.05) attenuated the neutropenia seen in sepsis (15 +/- 1 vs 6 +/- 1 x 10(3) PMNs/mm3 at 300 min). Alveolar-capillary membrane injury was assessed by bronchoalveolar-lavage protein content and extravascular lung
water
determination. MoAb 60.3 significantly (p less than 0.05) reduced BAL protein at 300 minutes (388 +/- 75 vs 1059 +/- 216 micrograms/ml in septic animals) and attenuated the increase in extravascular lung
water
to 240 minutes (7.1 +/- 2 vs 14.2 +/- 1.2 ml/kg in septic animals). Systemic hypotension, decreased cardiac index, pulmonary hypertension, and relative hypoxemia, all characteristic of this model, were not altered by MoAb 60.3. These data suggest that, in this model of septic ALI, neutropenia is, in part, CD18 dependent and that blocking CD18-dependent PMN adhesion protects the alveolar-capillary membrane independently of altered hemodynamic status.
...
PMID:Anti-CD18 antibody attenuates neutropenia and alveolar capillary-membrane injury during gram-negative sepsis. 167 91
The bioadhesive characteristics of tablets for oral use made from modified starch, polyacrylic acid (PAA), polyethylene glycol (PEG) and sodium carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) were investigated.
Adhesion
force and energy were determined in-vitro and maximal adhesion time was evaluated in-vivo in human subjects. In-vitro, PAA showed the best bioadhesive properties, followed by modified maize starch and PEG with a mol. wt of 300,000-400,000 daltons. The presence of 0.1 mg of fluoride as NaF did not lead to significant differences in adhesion force and energy for the same formulation. The in-vivo bioadhesion was not strongly correlated to the in-vitro data. PAA, despite its excellent adhesion, proved to be irritating to the mucosa. PEG with a mol, wt of 200,000 daltons was subject to erosion. CMC showed good bioadhesive properties but the mechanical strength of the tablets was low. Modified maize starch tablets containing 5% (w/w) PAA and PEG with a mol. wt of 300,000 daltons proved to be the most suitable formulations for a fluoride-slow-release tablet with bioadhesive properties. In-vitro, the tablets released all of the fluoride within the 8 h period, with a high initial release. The release rate was related to the
water
absorption rate of the tablets. The PAA-containing formulations and the CMC formulations had the fastest release. In-vivo, fluoride levels with a minimum of 150 and a maximum of 1000 micrograms mL-1 were maintained for 8 h in the oral cavity. These fluoride levels were sustained significantly longer than those obtained with the administration of fourfold the amount of fluoride in the form of a fluoride-containing toothpaste. The release characteristics in-vivo exhibited a high variation. The use of bioadhesive polymers in oral pharmacotherapy seems promising.
...
PMID:Development and testing of bioadhesive, fluoride-containing slow-release tablets for oral use. 168 57
The objective of this study was to determine the adhesion to dentin and the physical properties of Vitrabond Light Cure Glass Ionomer Liner/Base and to compare these values with those of a conventional material, 3M Glass Ionomer Liner (3MGI). Shear bond strengths to bovine dentin after 24 h in distilled
water
were determined to be 12 +/- 3 MPa for Vitrabond Liner/Base, while for 3MGI, bond strengths were 4 +/- 2 MPa. The failure mode was cohesive in dentin or the ionomer. Immediate adhesion of the light-cured material was also significantly higher than that of the conventional glass-ionomer liner. Thermal cycling experiments showed that the bond of Vitrabond Liner/Base to dentin was a stable one.
Adhesion
studies carried out on human dentin showed high adhesion values as well. Compressive and diametral tensile strengths for Vitrabond Liner/Base were determined immediately after light curing and also after storage in
water
for 24 h, one week, one month, and seven months. There was no significant difference in the values of compressive and diametral tensile strengths obtained immediately after curing and after extended storage in
water
at 37 degrees C.
...
PMID:Adhesion to dentin and physical properties of a light-cured glass-ionomer liner/base. 199 64
Adhesion
durability between dentin pretreated with 10-3 and 4-META/MMA-TBB resin was studied. Reduction of etching periods with 10-3 was not so effective as expected. The weakening of bond strength during immersion in
water
at 37 degrees C to the dentin pretreated for 1 sec occurred faster than those for either 5 sec or 10 sec. The strength decreased from 12 MPa at 1 day to 9 MPa at 3 months, 3 MPa at 6 months and finally 2 MPa at 1 year in the case of 1 sec pretreated dentin. On the other hand, the strength became half after the storage in
water
for 1 year in the cases of 5 and 10 sec pretreated dentins. Combination of 10-3 pretreatment and subsequent glutaraldehyde treatment could stabilize the decrease but not completely. SEM and TEM examinations suggested that dentinal collagen exposed by the etching but not entangled and impregnated by poly (4-META-co-MMA) easily deteriorated by
water
during the longer immersion. Collagen modified with 10-3 and then with glutaraldehyde was also changed by the longer immersion.
...
PMID:[Durability of bonding between 4-META/MMA-TBB resin to dentin pretreated with 10-3. The effect of 10-3 pretreating period and subsequent glutaraldehyde treatment]. 213 46
The ability of Candida albicans IFO 1385 to adhere to acrylic and the partial characterization of an adhesive substance, named AS, which was isolated from the yeast, were studied in vitro. The results obtained were as follows: 1. The cells cultured in the synthetic media (YNB) containing 500 mM galactose showed a much greater tendency to adhere than did those cells cultured in the YNB containing 500 mM glucose. 2. More cells prepared by the standing cultivation adhered to acrylic than did those prepared by the stirring cultivation. 3. A large number of the adherent cells was obtained when the acrylic plates were incubated at 37 degrees C for 90 min in the cell suspension at a concentration of 1.0 x 10(7) cells/ml. The plates were observed without staining. 4. AS was isolated from the surface of C. albicans, grown on different carbon sources (50 mM glucose, 500 mM glucose and 500 mM galactose), by treatment with ultrasonication. 5. Three different kinds of AS isolated from the three carbon sources were slightly soluble in distilled
water
. All were similar in composition to each other, and contained 62-68% carbohydrate (as glucose) and 23-26% protein (as BSA). 6. Silica particles adhered to acrylic coated with AS and pretreatment of acrylic with AS promoted C. albicans adhesion. However, similar pretreatment inhibited subsequent Candida glabrata and Candida krusei adhesion. As to subsequent adhesion of Candida tropicalis, no significant data were obtained. 7.
Adhesion
assay using the silica particles, the adhesive ability of the AS was significantly reduced by treatment with trypsin or pronase E, but not with papain, alpha-amylase, dextranase or zymolyase.
...
PMID:[Adherence of Candida albicans to acrylic surfaces]. 248 1
Adhesion
of various organic-solvent based adhesives to glass slides could be greatly improved by first priming the slide with a copolymer of allyl methacrylate and methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane. The use of different solvents and types of adhesives with these slides is discussed. Cellulose nitrate in different esters of acetic acid proved to be an effective adhesive for varied sections at room temperature and in the cryostat. Carbowax sections as a special case preferably were affixed with polyisobutylene in petroleum ether. Most of the attachments formed resisted even boiling
water
.
...
PMID:Some new methods for affixing sections to glass slides. II. Organic-solvent based adhesives. 329 81
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