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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A provisional restoration must protect the prepared tooth, provide comfort and function and be esthetically acceptable and color stable. This study measured the degree of color change of provisional restorations. Five commercially available resins were evaluated: Trim, Tab, Kind, Snap and Duralay. Five cylindrical samples of each resin were fabricated by mixing the powder and the liquid to a predetermined ratio and pouring the mix into a mold. The Minolta Chroma Meter II Reflectance was used to establish the baseline color L* a* b*. The resins were then subjected to accelerated in vitro aging in a Weather-O-Meter and color readings were recorded. The color differentials on delta E* were computed for each sample (delta E*ab = [(delta L*)2+(delta b*)2]1/2). The difference is a quantitative measurement of color change. The National Bureau of Standards describes delta E* as units (
NBS
Unit = delta E*ab x 0.92). With this parameter only the allowable delta E*ab need be specified rather than the range of allowable L*, a*, b* values. This is important for color comparison and quality control functions. The results showed that Kind had a slight color change delta E* = -1.72, Trim demonstrated the most color change delta E* = -13.84, while the remaining resins demonstrated a noticeable change in color due to in vitro aging.
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PMID:In vitro color stability of provisional restorations. 260 59
The commercially available kits (Test-Combination, Cholinesterase, Boehringer, Mannheim and Test-reagent, Cholinesterase EC 3.1.1.8, Pliva, Zagreb) and reagents prepared in own laboratory for measuring cholinesterase activity (Ellman method) were tested with respect to their stability and the reproducibility of the activity measurements. The reagents of the three sources were shown to be interchangeable and equally stable over a few weeks. The coefficient of variation for within-run measurements by the Ellman method was 2-3% and that for between-run measurements 6%. The stability of the few enzyme standards (Precinorm E, Precinorm U,
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-serum and native human serum) for the quality control of the measurements was also tested: the most stable was native human serum.
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PMID:[Measurement of serum cholinesterase activity: comparison of commercial and laboratory test reagents, enzyme standards and statistical processing of the results]. 263 23
A method based on isocratic high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with UV detection at 292 nm is proposed as a candidate reference method for the determination of uric acid. Data obtained by this method are compared with those from an isotope dilution-gas chromatography-mass spectrometric method (ID-GC-MS), using [1,3-15N2]uric acid as internal standard and selected mass detection at m/z = 456 and m/z = 458. The inaccuracy of the ID-GC-MS method is maximally 0.4% for
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-SRM-909 control sera with a concentration of 483 mumol/l. The coefficient of variation between days is 0.26%-0.80% and 0.37-0.90% for 14 control sera from other suppliers. The maximum bias of the HPLC method is 0.6%, and the coefficient of variation between days is 0.31%-0.65% for
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-SRM-909 control sera. The coefficient of variation between days for the other 14 control sera tested is 0.35%-0.66%. Comparison of the HPLC method with the reference ID-GC-MS method resulted in a coefficient of correlation of r = 0.9998 (n = 14). The concentration of uric acid in the tested control sera ranged from 160 to 624 mumol/l.
...
PMID:A candidate reference method for the determination of uric acid in serum based on high performance liquid chromatography, compared with an isotope dilution-gas chromatography-mass spectrometer method. 265 52
The construction of essay-type questions for inclusion in nursing examination papers is a time consuming task for teachers. In this paper, the findings of the qualitative analysis of the examination systems in basic nursing education in Scotland are discussed, with specific reference to questions set in internal and external formal examinations. The form and type of questions which seemed to create difficulties for students are identified and discussed. Several issues are raised, including coverage of the syllabus content, the science base for nursing, and determining levels of question difficulty. The paper concludes with recommendations concerning the format of assessment, especially if the
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were to delegate more responsibility to colleges and when the proposals on curriculum reform evisaged in Project 2000, are implemented.
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PMID:A qualitative analysis of examination questions set for students of nursing in Scotland. 275 40
A procedure has been developed to verify the particle counter lower counting limit (LCL) specified by the manufacturer for a laser particle counter (LPC). The procedure uses existing commercially available products to confirm an LPC lower size counting limit. The procedure involves the use of
NBS
traceable polystyrene latex (PSL) particles and an electrostatic classifier to generate highly monodisperse (single size) particles near the lower size limit of the LPC. A condensation nucleus counter (CNC) is used as a standard for particle concentration, since its lower size limit is far below the LPC's. By comparing the LPC concentration with that of the CNC, the lower counting limit of the LPC can be verified. This is especially well suited for certifying that pharmaceutical and electronics clean room counters are operating according to manufacturer specifications. The method is unique in that it specifies the LCL as an efficiency curve rather than as a single efficiency point.
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PMID:A procedure to verify the lower counting limit of optical particle counters. 276 24
A graphite furnace continuum source atomic absorption spectrometer using a photodiode array detector is described that provides high-resolution wavelength versus absorbance spectra over a 2.5-nm range for a single atomization step. The multiwavelength detection power allows the simultaneous determination of several elements, reduces problems caused by spectral interferences, and automatically corrects for nonzero background absorbance. Each spectrum is acquired in 0.33 s, and several successive spectra can be obtained during a single run. Three-dimensional wavelength-absorbance-furnace temperature spectra can be obtained by using ramped heating steps to provide a rough separation of elements in a mixture. Limits of detection calculated for 19 elements range from 0.1 pg for magnesium to 700 pg for arsenic. The sampling precision was found to be better than 10% relative standard deviation in all cases, with the precision for a single atomization being greatly increased when multiple absorption lines for a single element are observed in the spectrum. The error found for the measurement of the iron concentration in an
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standard bronze was 8.5%, with the calculated concentration agreeing with the certified concentration within 95% confidence limits.
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PMID:Continuum source atomic absorption spectrometry in a graphite furnace with photodiode array detection. 277 95
Porcelain-fused-to-metal restorations are fixed several hundred degrees above the glass-transition temperature and cooled rapidly through the glass-transition temperature range. Thermal expansion data from room temperature to above the glass-transition temperature range are important for the thermal expansion of the porcelain to be matched to the alloy. The effect of heating rate during measurement of thermal expansion was determined for
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SRM 710 glass and four commercial opaque and body porcelain products. Thermal expansion data were obtained at heating rates of from 3 to 30 degrees C/min after the porcelain was cooled at the same rate. By use of the Moynihan equation (where Tg systematically increases in temperature with an increase in cooling/heating rate), the glass-transition temperatures (Tg) derived from these data were shown to be related to the heating rate.
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PMID:The effect of thermal history on porcelain expansion behavior. 277 74
Quantification of nickel in animal soft tissue is of toxicological interest. A digestion method applying the use of microwave ovens for irradiating samples in Teflon digesters was developed. An acid mixture containing nitric acid (16 M, 1.0 ml g-1 tissue), hydrochloric acid (6 M, 0.5 ml g-1 tissue) and H2O2 (30%, 1.0 ml g-1 tissue) and irradiation at 600 W for 5 min were required for complete dissolution of tissue matrices and nickel compounds. Analyses of Ni in National Bureau of Standards Reference Material 1566 oyster tissue gave 0.87 +/- 0.24 micrograms g 1(mean +/- SD, n = 5), which was in agreement with the
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certified value of 1.03 +/- 0.19 micrograms g-1. Recoveries of 1-300 micrograms Ni added as nickel sulfate (highly soluble), nickel subsulfide (moderately soluble in biological fluids and acid) or nickel oxide (green high-temperature oxide, low solubility in biological fluids and acid) to lung, liver, lymph node and kidney were quantitative, except in the case of nickel sulfate added to kidney, where recovery was less than quantitative for 1-10 micrograms Ni. The method appears effective for digestion of a variety of tissues requiring Ni analyses.
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PMID:A rapid digestion method for analysis of nickel compounds in tissue by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. 277 54
The toxicity of single and multiple fire gases is studied to determine whether the toxic effects of the combustion products from materials can be explained by the toxicological interactions (as indicated by lethality) of the primary fire gases or if minor, more obscure gases need to be considered. LC50 values for Fischer-344 rats have been calculated for the individual gases, carbon monoxide (CO), hydrogen cyanide (HCN), or decreased oxygen (O2), for 30-min exposures plus relevant postexposure periods using the
NBS
Toxicity Test Method. Combination experiments with CO and HCN indicate that they act in an additive manner. Synergistic effects have been found when the animals are exposed to certain combinations of CO and carbon dioxide (CO2). Five percent CO2 raised the threshold for deaths due to hypoxia and decreased the LC50 of HCN. Decreasing the O2 concentration in the presence of various mixtures of the other major fire gases increased the toxicity even further. A comparison of the concentrations of the major combustion products generated from a number of polymeric materials at their LC50 (30-min exposure plus 14-day postexposure) values with the combined pure gas results indicates that, in most cases, the observed toxicity may be explained by the toxicological interactions of the examined primary toxic fire gases. These results provide necessary information for the computer model currently being developed at the Center for Fire Research to predict the toxic hazard that people will experience under various fire scenarios.
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PMID:Effects of exposure to single or multiple combinations of the predominant toxic gases and low oxygen atmospheres produced in fires. 282 Aug 22
A new synthesis of 5-(monofluoromethyl)- and 5-(difluoromethyl)-2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyluracil (F-FMAU and F2-FMAU) is reported. 3',5'-Di-O-(tert-butyldiphenyl)silylated thymidine or FMAU was photochemically brominated with
NBS
to the corresponding alpha-monobromide, which was hydrolyzed to the 5-hydroxymethyl derivative. Further oxidation of the latter with MnO2 afforded the 5-formyluracil nucleoside. Treatment of these nucleosides with DAST in CH2Cl2 gave the protected alpha-fluorinated nucleosides. Desiylation with TBAF afforded the desired free nucleosides. Also, 5-(trifluoromethyl)-2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyluracil (F3-FMAU) was synthesized by copper-catalyzed trifluoromethylation of 5-iodo-2'-fluoro-ara-U (FIAU). These new nucleosides were studied in comparison with the corresponding 2'-deoxy-erythro-pentofuranosyl derivatives, for their inhibitory activity against cellular thymidylate synthase (TS) and [3H]TdR incorporation into DNA, cytotoxicity against HL-60 cells, and antiviral activity against herpes simplex types 1 and 2 (HSV-1 and -2). F2-TDR and F3-TDR strongly inhibited TS and were also quite cytotoxic and antiherpetic, whereas FTDR was only active in the antiviral assay. In the 2'-fluoroarabino series, fluorine substitution at the alpha-methyl function did not alter significantly the antiherpetic activity. Although FMAU and F-FMAU did not inhibit TS to any significant extent, F2-FMAU and F3-FMAU were weakly inhibitory. The latter nucleosides did not inhibit [3H]TDR incorporation into DNA, while all the other alpha-fluorinated thymine nucleosides inhibited the incorporation of radioactivity of [3H]TDR into DNA to various extents. F2-FMAU and F3-FMAU were about 2 orders of magnitude less cytotoxic against HL-60 cells than were F2-TDR and F3-TDR. The results strongly suggest that in both the 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoroarabino and the 2'-deoxy-erythro-pentofurano series the cytotoxic action of the alpha,alpha-difluoro and alpha,alpha,alpha-trifluoro derivatives may involve the inhibition of TS. The synthesis of [2-14C]F2-FMAU, as an experimental imaging agent, is also described. Unfortunately, the highly selective uptake of the labeled compound within infected brain regions previously noted with [2-14C]FMAU was not detected with the derivative [2-14C]F2-FMAU.
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PMID:Nucleosides. 150. Synthesis and some biological properties of 5-monofluoromethyl, 5-difluoromethyl, and 5-trifluoromethyl derivatives of 2'-deoxyuridine and 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-beta-D-arabinofuranosyluracil. 284 May 3
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