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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (
EMA
)
2,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ethyl methacrylate (ethyl 2-methyl-2-propenoate,
EMA
) has been implicated in the development of neurologic impairment following occupational exposure. The potential of
EMA
to produce neurotoxicity was investigated in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats in two experiments. In the first experiment, animals were administered 100, 200, 400, or 800 mg/kg by daily intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections for 60 d. Control rats received daily i.p. injections of 1 ml saline/kg. Clinical observations, spontaneous motor activity, and performance in the Morris water maze were assessed. Alterations in clinical parameters in the higher dose groups included lethargy, impaired breathing, decreased weight gain, and increased mortality. Alterations in motor activity were observed at 100 mg/kg, a dose that did not cause alterations in clinical parameters, body weight gain, or mortality. There was also a dose-dependent impairment in performance in the Morris water maze. In the second experiment, animals were administered
EMA
in drinking water at concentrations of 0.1, 0.2, or 0.5% for 60 d. Control rats were administered
tap
water. Animals were perfused at the termination of exposure and samples of brain, spinal cord, and sciatic nerve were prepared for histological examination. Spongiform alterations were observed in fiber tracts of the forebrain, brainstem, and spinal cord. Clusters of axonal swellings were scattered throughout the dorsal, ventral, and lateral columns of the spinal cord, and typically involved internodal segments of two or three neighboring axons. Shrunken axons with separated myelin lamellae and large axons with thinner than normal myelin sheaths were apparent in the sciatic nerve. The patterns of alterations in the white matter of the spinal cord and the sciatic nerve are consistent with myelinopathy, but additional experiments are necessary to confirm whether oligodendroglia and Schwann cells are the primary sites of injury. In addition to the alterations associated with myelin, there was a decrease in the density of neurons in the ventral horn of the spinal cord. While the observed effects of
EMA
on the nervous system of rats are consistent with neurologic symptoms of workers exposed to
EMA
, additional experiments are necessary to determine if the level and route of exposures associated with occupational use produce these impairments in experimental animals.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity of ethyl methacrylate in rats. 1065 38
In recent years, increasing numbers of human campylobacteriosis cases caused by contaminated water have been reported. As the culture-based detection of Campylobacter is time consuming and can yield false-negative results, the suitability of a quantitative real-time PCR method in combination with an ethidium monoazide pretreatment of samples (
EMA
-qPCR) for the rapid, quantitative detection of viable Campylobacter cells from water samples was investigated.
EMA
-qPCR has been shown to be a promising rapid method for the detection of viable Campylobacter spp. from food samples. Application of membrane filtration and centrifugation, two methods frequently used for the isolation of bacteria from water, revealed a mean loss of up to 1.08 log10 cells/ml from spiked samples. Both methods used alone lead to a loss of dead bacteria and accumulation of viable bacteria in the sample as shown by fluorescence microscopy. After filtration of samples, no significant differences could be detected in subsequent qPCR experiments with and without
EMA
pretreatment compared to culture-based enumeration. High correlations (R(2)= 0.942 without
EMA
, R(2) = 0.893 with
EMA
) were obtained. After centrifugation of samples, qPCR results overestimated Campylobacter counts, whereas results from both
EMA
-qPCR and the reference method were comparable. As up to 81.59% of nonviable cells were detected in pond water,
EMA
-qPCR failed to detect correct quantities of viable cells. However, analyses of spiked
tap
water samples revealed a high correlation (R(2) = 0.863) between results from
EMA
-qPCR and the reference method. After membrane filtration,
EMA
-qPCR was successfully applied to Campylobacter field isolates, and results indicated an advantage over qPCR by analysing defined mixtures of viable and nonviable cells. In conclusion,
EMA
-qPCR is a suitable method to detect viable Campylobacter from water samples, but the isolation technique and the type/quality of the water sample impact the results.
...
PMID:Influencing factors and applicability of the viability EMA-qPCR for a detection and quantification of Campylobacter cells from water samples. 2541 99