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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of evacuation of atmospheric air during transportation on recovery of anaerobic bacteria was investigated. Evacuation of atmospheric air from glass tubes by
flushing
with pure carbon dioxide lowered the content of oxygen to about 0.4 per cent. Three B. fragilis strains and one strain of Fusobacterium mortiferum and of Peptostreptococcus anaerobius were investigated. Bacterial recovery was determined one hour and 24 hours after evacuation of atmospheric air by pure carbon dioxide and pure
nitrogen
, was compared to bacterial recovery from samples transported with free access to atmospheric air. Evacuation by pure carbon dioxide significantly improved the recovery of one B. fragilis strain after 24 hours of transportation and significantly impaired the recovery of Peptostreptococcus anaerobius after one hour of transportation, while evacuation by pure
nitrogen
significantly improved the recovery of Peptostreptococcus anaerobius after 24 hours of transportation. In all other cases, however, no statistically significant effect on bacterial recovery was found.
...
PMID:Survival of anaerobic bacteria during transportation. 1. Experimental investigations on the effect of evacuation of atmospheric air by flushing with carbon dioxide and nitrogen. 0 89
The present study shows that in the presence of 600 nm light, sulfide acts as a specific inhibitor of photosynthetic electron transport between water and Photosystem II in the cyanobacteria Aphanothece halophytica and Synechococcus 6311 as well as in tobacco chloroplasts. In the presence of 600 nm light sulfied affects the fast fluorescence transients as does a low concentration (10 mM) of hydroxylamine; the fluorescence yield decreases in the presence of either chemical and can be restored by the addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. In chloroplasts, however, NH2OH, an electron donor at high concentrations (40 mM), relieves the sulfide effect. In the dark, sulfide affects the cyanobacterial fluorescence transients through decrease of oxygen tension. The fluorescence yield increases in a similar pattern to that observed under
nitrogen
flushing
. Upon omission of sulfide in A. halophytica, the characteristic aerobic fluorescence transients return, consistent with the ease of alternation between oxygenic and sulfide-dependent anoxygenic photosynthesis in many cyanobacteria.
...
PMID:Sulfide inhibition of photosystem II in cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) and tobacco chloroplasts. 10 20
The following recommendations and conclusions are based upon results of fertility and laboratory studies, and general trends from field investigations. Fertility results due to the addition of enzymes have been variable and contradictory.
Flushing
of ampules with dry, gaseous
nitrogen
prior to filling has become a routine practice in processing semen to be frozen. For control of Vibrio fetus and Leptospira pomona, 2,000 micrograms of streptomycin and 1,000 u polymyxin B sulfate should be added per milliliter of raw semen immediately after collection. The extender for initial dilution should contain the same concentration of antibiotics used for raw semen plus 500 u penicillin. The glycerol portion of the extender should contain 500 u penicillin per milliliter. The effect of addition of sugars on fertility has been highly variable. The primary beneficial effect is probably due to their cryoprotective properties. A myriad of concoctions have been added to bovine semen and the results have been highly variable with respect to both motility and fertility. Results of subsequent experiments have rarely proven that addition of exotic compounds or mixtures has been of value. Higher mean fertility was obtained with semen in straws in 14 of 21 comparisons with ampules. The differences in favor of straws ranged from 1.1 to 18.9; while the range in favor of ampules was .1 to 4.4 percentage points. Fertility obtained with pellets has ranged from minus 12.8 to plus 11.9 percentage points in nonreturn rate (NR), compared to the corresponding NR with semen in ampules. Fertility of semen in ampules was higher in five of eight studies. Fertility of pelleted semen has ranged from minus 9.5 to plus 6.0 percentage points compared with straws. Fertility was higher for semen in pellets in only one of five investigations. Pellets should not be used until the potential for pathogenic contamination and exchange of spermatozoa among pellets is eliminated. There is a potential for higher fertility with semen in straws as compared to other packaging systems, but the issue of liquid
nitrogen
(LN) entry and possible contamination of semen should be further investigated. In general, fertility obtained with semen frozen in the .25 ml straw has been equal to or higher than semen in larger packages. However, they cannot be unequivocally recommended due to other considerations. From laboratory studies, it appears that greater spermatozoan survival is obtained when semen frozen in straws is thawed in water at 35 C or above.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Influence of seminal additives and packaging systems on fertility of frozen bovine spermatozoa. 16 35
The polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) fire retardant, FireMaster FF-1, was pyrolyzed for 20 min at 380-400 degrees C in open glass tubes and in tubes sealed after
nitrogen
flushing
. The pyrolyzed residue was extracted with benzene, and extracts were cleaned up on columns of graphite (Carbopack A) and alumina. Analysis was carried out by low resolution direct probe mass spectrometry (MS). Spectra from extracts of the open tube pyrolyzed material had a series of ions characteristic of tetra- and pentabrominated dibenzofurans as evidenced by comparison with spectra from 2,3,7,8-tetrabromodibenzofuran (TBDF). Confirmatory evidence for the brominated dibenzofurans was obtained by high resolution MS dual ion analysis of certain fragment and molecular ions. Recovery values of TBDF through the cleanup procedure averaged 50% and, using this recovery value and TBDF as an external standard, dual ion analyses indicated that 40 ppm tetra- and 4 ppm pentabrominanted dibenzofuran were produced based on the PBB level used in the pyrolysis experiments. Additional analysis of the open tube pyrolyzed material by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry provided evidence that there was one tetrabromodibenzofuran compound with a retention time equal to that of TBDF. Trace levels (less than 1 ppm) of the molecular ion of tetrabrominated dibenzofuran were found after analysis by low resolution MS of the PBB pyrolyzed under
nitrogen
in sealed tubes. The experimental evidence is consistent with a mechanism for brominated dibenzofuran formation involving attack of oxygen on PBB compounds.
...
PMID:Formation of brominated dibenzofurans from pyrolysis of the polybrominated biphenyl fire retardant, firemaster FF-1. 20 98
Canine kidneys, flushed with either Collins solution or autologous cryoprecipitated plasma, were then stored for 24 hr by either simple cold storage (submersion) in the
flushing
solution, or by continuous hypothermic pulsatile perfusion with cryoprecipitated plasma. After autotransplantation without contralateral nephrectomy, detailed split renal function studies were carried out immediately as well as 2 and 7 days later. Measurements were made of inulin clearance, maximal transport of p-aminohippurate, reabsorption of sodium, chloride, and glucose, and the reabsorption of free water. Contralateral nephrectomy was performed 7 days after transplantation, following measurement of renal functions on that day, and plasma urea
nitrogen
and creatinine were measured periodically over the ensuing 3 weeks. Renal function after transplantation was affected very little by the choice of
flushing
solution, and the course of azotemia that developed following contralateral nephrectomy was the same in all groups. However, the detailed functional measurements showed that during the 7-day period after transplantation, renal function was depressed to a much greater extent in kidneys treated by simple cold storage than in those that had been perfused.
...
PMID:Function of autotransplanted kidneys after 24-hour preservation by hypothermic pulsatile perfusion or simple cord storage. 36 May 23
Methods of column switching are described that make possible back-
flushing
, heart cutting and trapping. Conventional packed columns are employed as pre-columns for their high sample capacity, and glass capillary columns are used as the main columns for their high separation efficiency. Some typical examples of the application of double-column gas chromatography are presented: (1) solvent cutting for identification and exact quantitative determination of a phosphorus ester impurity in a sample of wheat flour (including trapping); (2) separation of trace amounts of methyl esters of fatty acids by means of back-
flushing
and trapping; (3) enrichment technique using trapping of trace elements in the front section of the capillary (plus solvent cutting, multiple injection and back-
flushing
); and (4) coupling a
nitrogen
-selective detector to the capillary main column to gain additional information. To illustrate the trapping effect, the separation number was determined with and without trapping.
...
PMID:Double-column gas chromatography using packed pre-columns and glass capillary main columns. 54 47
A rapid and reliable method of carboxyhemoglobin determination is described. Hemoglobin-bound carbon monoxide is released chemically into a continuous
nitrogen
stream and transported to an infrared gas analyser. The total amount of released CO is determined electronically. 100% CO Hb values are obtained in the same way from diluted blood samples after
flushing
with pure CO in special saturation vessels. The method described yields results with a standard deviation of +/- 2.5%.
...
PMID:[A rapid carboxyhemoglobin determination by means of non-dispersive ultra-red gas analysis (author's transl)]. 103 9
Several metabolic fluxes were analyzed during gradual transitions from aerobic to oxygen-limited conditions in chemostat cultures of Pseudomonas mendocina growing in synthetic medium at a dilution rate of 0.25 h-1. P. mendocina growth was glucose limited at high oxygen partial pressures (70 and 20% pO2) and exhibited an oxidative type of metabolism characterized by respiratory quotient (RQ) values of 1.0. A similar RQ value was obtained at low pO2 (2%), and detectable levels of acetic, formic, and lactic acids were determined in the extracellular medium. RQs of 0.9 +/- 0.12 were found at 70% pO2 for growth rates ranging from 0.025 to 0.5 h-1. At high pO2, the control coefficients of oxygen on catabolic fluxes were 0.19 and 0.22 for O2 uptake and CO2 production, respectively. At low pO2 (2%), the catabolic and anabolic fluxes were highly controlled by oxygen. P. mendocina showed a mixed-type fermentative metabolism when
nitrogen
was flushed into chemostat cultures. Ethanol and acetic, lactic, and formic acids were excreted and represented 7.5% of the total carbon recovered. Approximately 50% of the carbon was found as uronic acids in the extracellular medium. Physiological studies were performed under microaerophilic conditions (
nitrogen
flushing
) in continuous cultures for a wide range of growth rates (0.03 to 0.5 h-1). A cell population, able to exhibit a near-maximum theoretical yield of ATP (YmaxATP = 25 g/mol) with a number of ATP molecules formed during the transfer of an electron towards oxygen along the respiration chain (P/O ratio) of 3, appears to have adapted to microaerophilic conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Metabolic and energetic control of Pseudomonas mendocina growth during transitions from aerobic to oxygen-limited conditions in chemostat cultures. 144 29
The objective of this study was to analyse in vivo the effect of oxygen on the nitrogenase of Bacillus polymyxa. The culture technique employed in this study prevented spore formation by B. polymyxa during the entire period of exposure to acetylene. Under these conditions the acetylene-reduction assay allowed quantification of nitrogenase activity over long incubation periods (44 h). Nitrogenase activity was highest in cells harvested in the late logarithmic phase. At PO2 of 0.19 and 0.37 kPa, acetylene reduction was inhibited by 80 and 100%, respectively. This switch-off effect could be reversed through oxygen exhaustion, either by
flushing
the culture with N2 or by cellular respiration, suggesting a respiratory protection mechanism for the nitrogenase complex in B. polymyxa. Oxygen consumption measured by a closed-chamber respirometer showed a linear increase up to a PO2 of 0.2 kPa. Above 0.3 kPa a saturation in oxygen consumption was observed. Exposure to high oxygen pressures resulted in an irreversible loss of nitrogenase activity. The oxygen inhibition pattern was shown to be similar to that in other microaerophilic and anaerobic
nitrogen
-fixing microorganisms.
...
PMID:Reversibility of oxygen switch-off effect on Bacillus polymyxa nitrogenase. 177 55
We studied the percutaneous losses of sevoflurane and isoflurane during administration and elimination in seven healthy male volunteers. Anesthesia was induced and maintained with fentanyl, midazolam, and/or thiopental, and nitrous oxide for 30 min, after which 1% sevoflurane and 0.4% isoflurane in 65% nitrous oxide were administered for 30 min. Inspired, end-tidal, and mixed-expired gas samples were collected during administration and for 5-7 days of elimination. To measure percutaneous loss, each subject's arm was enclosed in a glass cylinder sealed at both ends and with two ports, one for
flushing
with
nitrogen
and one for obtaining gas samples during the 30 min of administration and the first 150 min of elimination. Anesthetic concentrations in all samples were determined using gas chromatography. The surface area of the arm was measured and the total surface area was calculated. During administration and elimination, percutaneous loss of isoflurane was significantly greater than that of sevoflurane (P less than 0.05). For both volatile agents, losses during elimination were greater than during administration (P less than 0.05), but even when combined, these losses were too small to affect kinetic or metabolic studies based on mass balance.
...
PMID:Comparison of percutaneous losses of sevoflurane and isoflurane in humans. 198 6
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