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Query: UMLS:C0847097 (
acidity
)
15,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycol methacrylate (GMA) samples containing inhibitor in the range of 200-300 ppm were included in a standard embedding mixture. The pH of the GMA samples was measured as a 10% solution of the sample in distilled
water
. The
acidity
of GMA due to methacrylic acid causes background staining of sections after basic dyes. The concentration of GMA and the amount of impurities such as methacrylic acid (MA) and ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (EDMA) were measured by gas chromatography. Distinct variations in purity were found among five samples of GMA. Sections derived from GMA samples containing more than 2% EDMA showed few, if any, minifolds after staining with hematoxylin and eosin and were more stable in alcoholic and basic solutions; sections from purer GMA showed minifolds and were less stable. Addition of crosslinkers, EDMA or triethylene glycol dimethacrylate (TEDMA) prevented these artifacts. Crosslinkers clearly influence dimensional changes in sections. Addition of crosslinkers to GMA samples containing minimal amounts of MA improved the results. The possibility of obtaining a high quality GMA embedding medium is discussed.
...
PMID:Glycol methacrylate embedding in histotechnology: the hematoxylin-eosin stain as a method for assessing the stability of glycol methacrylate sections. 244 95
In the last years the interest about acid depositions has been shifted to heterogeneous phase reactions and, particularly, to occult precipitations (fog, mist, ecc.). It is very improbable that some kind of human health hazards could derive from acid rain exposure. Instead, the human exposure to acid fog could represent a possible respiratory vehicle for the assumption of acid pollutants as well as of many other pollutants. This last assertion can be supported by the following considerations: 1) Fog may represent an important chemical reactor that can modify the nature of pollutant material in the atmosphere (acidification and other events). 2) Fog is formed near the ground where pollution sources are located so that pollution is the heaviest. The fog
water
droplets coalesce around preexisting aerosol which is most highly concentrated near the ground (cities and industrial areas). Since fog
water
droplets contain muc less
water
than rain drops, they do not dilute the
acidity
as much as rain. 3) Finally, fog is partially inhalable. In certain areas of the world, wet deposition by fog can be important to the human health, even if the acqueous concentrations of fog droplets, the
acidity
per volume of air and the acid deposition rate are all important factors to consider. Particularly the pH of fog does not tell the whole story, but it represents a sufficient information about the severity of the atmospheric situation that can be correlated to seriousness of human risk.
...
PMID:[Acid fog: hygiene and health observations correlated with an aspect of atmospheric pollution]. 248 49
The adsorption of zinc and lead on hair was dependent on the
acidity
of the hair and/or the medium in which the hair sample was immersed, suggesting that hair is an ion exchanger. The pKa was estimated to be between 4.5 and 5.0. The coexistence of mercuric ion or PCMB reduced zinc adsorption by only a few percent, whereas zinc inhibited mercuric ion adsorption to a greater extent. These facts suggest that the binding sites in hair for metals are located on functional groups like carboxyl groups rather than sulfhydryl groups. The removal and/or elution of metals from hair were observed for 18 elements by various washing procedures. By treating hair with a
water
solution of detergent, alkaline metals were eluted to a great extent, whereas alkaline earth metals were eluted to some extent. The other metals did not vary with any procedures tested.
...
PMID:Adsorption and elution of metals on hair. 248 36
Acid fog is complex and contains multiple stimuli that may be capable of inducing bronchoconstriction. These stimuli include sulfuric and niric acids, the principal inorganic acids present; sulfites, formed in the atmosphere as a reaction product of sulfur dioxide and
water
droplets; fog
water
itself, a hypoosmolar aerosol; the organic acid hydroxymethanesulfonate, the bisulfite adduct of formaldehyde; and gaseous pollutants, e.g., sulfur dioxide, oxides of nitrogen, ozone. Given this complexity, evaluation of the respiratory health effects of naturally occurring acid fog requires assessment of the bronchoconstrictor potency of each component stimulus and possible interactions among these stimuli. We summarize the results of three studies that involve characterization of the bronchoconstrictor potency of acid fog stimuli and/or their interaction in subjects with asthma. The results of the first study indicate that titratable
acidity
appears to be a more important stimulus to bronchoconstriction than is pH. The results of the second study demonstrate that sulfite species are capable of inducing bronchoconstriction, especially when inhaled at acid pH. The results of the third study suggest that
acidity
can potentiate hypoosmolar fog-induced bronchoconstriction.
...
PMID:Potential bronchoconstrictor stimuli in acid fog. 253 89
The bioavailability of sulpiride taken in film-coated tablet form with sodium bicarbonate or cimetidine or with natural orange juice or diluted hydrochloric acid was studied. A commercial sulpiride film-coated tablet (100 mg/T) treated with polyvinylacetal diethylaminoacetate (AEA), which remain undissolved at pH above 4-5, was given to four healthy volunteers who had fasted overnight. The subjects were divided into two groups, those showing high and low bioavailability of sulpiride from an AEA film-coated tablet. The two high bioavailability subjects took one tablet (100 mg) with 100 ml of
water
(1) alone, (2) together with 1 g of sodium bicarbonate or (3) during concurrent dosing with cimetidine, 200 mg three times a day. The two low bioavailability subjects swallowed one tablet with 100 ml of (1)
water
, (2) natural orange juice, or (3) diluted hydrochloric acid. Urine samples were collected over a 48-h period following sulpiride administration to determine sulpiride concentrations by HPLC. The bioavailability was estimated from the cumulative amount excreted unchanged in urine over 48 h (Du48). In the high bioavailability subjects, the bioavailability of sulpiride markedly decreased with the coadministration of sodium bicarbonate or cimetidine compared to when the tablet was taken alone. In the low bioavailability subjects, the bioavailability remarkably increased with the concomitant intake of orange juice or diluted hydrochloric acid over that with only
water
. These results suggest that the bioavailability of sulpiride from AEA film-coated tablet is influenced by the individual's gastric
acidity
and by coadministered drug and drink which affect gastric
acidity
.
...
PMID:The bioavailability of sulpiride taken as a film-coated tablet with sodium bicarbonate, cimetidine, natural orange juice or hydrochloric acid. 255 11
During an electron microscopical study of the localization of the nucleoside diphosphatase IDPase in Reissner's membrane of the inner ear, it was discovered that the distilled
water
in the knife trough produced an annoying artefact. It dissolved all the lead phosphate reaction product from the sections, and thus converted a positive phosphatase reactivity to a false negative one. The
water
in the knife trough had a pH of approximately 5.4. Calculations showed that this is an expected
acidity
, if CO2 in the air equilibrates with distilled
water
, and that there is 200,000 times more acid in the trough than necessary to dissolve all the reaction product from a ribbon of ultrathin sections. Experiments showed that the artefact could be avoided by adjusting the pH to neutrality with dilute ammonia.
...
PMID:Ultrathin sectioning for electron microscopy: the distilled water in the knife trough may extract phosphatase reaction products from the sections. 255 83
Six foraging behaviors were evaluated for use in toxicity bioassays with fishes. Response time and strike frequency were used to measure fish activity, average and longest fixation distance, to measure visual acuity, while prey capture frequency and strike success were used to measure fish coordination and agility. In this study, the feeding behaviors were used to evaluate the effects of chronic exposure to acidic
water
on juvenile smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieui). Feeding responses to two types of live prey, tubificids and Daphnia magna, were recorded for bass exposed to pH 4.7 and 4.2. Fish held at the lower pH level had significantly lower fixation distances, prey capture success and capture frequencies with both prey types, indicating that high levels of
acidity
may impair visual acuity, coordination, and agility. The foraging behaviors evaluated herein appear to be useful in toxicity testing because they are easily quantified and indicate changes that may affect growth and survival in long-term exposures.
...
PMID:Analysis of six foraging behaviors as toxicity indicators, using juvenile smallmouth bass exposed to low environmental pH. 261 28
Two
water
-borne epidemics of bacillary dysentery have been described in a garrison in which the leading causative agent has been shigella boydii, serotype of 14 altered biochemical characteristics isolated for the first time in Yugoslavia. All the isolated strains of this shigella were mannitol negative and they degradated gylocose to
acidity
and gas already after 24 hours, and arabinose and sorbitol to
acidity
and gas after 48 hours. The clinical picture of the diseased was characteristic of bacillary dysentery and did not differ from clinical picture of patients in whom other serotypes of shigella were isolated.
...
PMID:[Isolation of Shigella boydii serotype 14 with altered biochemical characteristics in a water-borne epidemic of dysentery]. 266 91
Inorganic bismuth salts are poorly soluble in
water
: solubility is influenced by the
acidity
of the medium and the presence of certain compounds with (hydr)oxy or sulfhydryl groups. The analysis of bismuth in biological material is not standardised and is subject to large variation; it is difficult to compare data from different studies, and older data should be approached with caution. The normal concentration of bismuth in blood is between 1 and 15 micrograms/L, but absorption from oral preparations produces a significant rise. Distribution of bismuth in the organs is largely independent of the compound administered or the route of administration: the concentration in kidney is always highest and the substance is also retained there for a long time. It is bound to a bismuth-metal binding protein in the kidney, the synthesis of which can be induced by the metal itself. Elimination from the body takes place by the urinary and faecal routes, but the exact proportion contributed by each route is still unknown. Elimination from blood displays multicompartment pharmacokinetics, the shortest half-life described in humans being 3.5 minutes, and the longest 17 to 22 years. A number of toxic effects have been attributed to bismuth compounds in humans: nephropathy, encephalopathy, osteoarthropathy, gingivitis, stomatitis and colitis. Whether hepatitis is a side effect, however, is open to dispute. Each of these adverse effects is associated with certain bismuth compounds. Bismuth encephalopathy occurred in France as an epidemic of toxicity and was associated with the intake of inorganic salts including bismuth subnitrate, subcarbonate and subgallate. In the prodromal phase patients developed problems in walking, standing or writing, deterioration of memory, changes in behaviour, insomnia and muscle cramps, together with several psychiatric symptoms. The manifest phase started abruptly and was characterised by changes in awareness, myoclonia, astasia and/or abasia and dysarthria. Patients recovered spontaneously after discontinuation of bismuth. Intestinal lavage, forced diuresis and haemodialysis have been tried without positive effects on the clinical condition of the patient or on blood bismuth concentration, and the use of dimercaprol as an antidote has produced reports of both positive and negative findings. To confirm the diagnosis of bismuth encephalopathy, it is essential to find elevated bismuth concentrations in blood, plasma, serum or CSF. A safety level of 50 micrograms/L and an alarm level of 100 micrograms/L have been suggested in the past, but no proof is available to support the choice of these levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and toxicity of bismuth compounds. 268 29
Eighty-eight children (mean age 5.6 yr, range 1-14 yr) about to undergo elective outpatient surgery were randomly assigned to four groups. All children were given phenolsulfonphthalein (PSP) orally 2-3 h before the scheduled time of surgery as a marker dye to assess gastric emptying. Immediately after receiving PSP they were given: group A--liquids, up to 5 ml/kg + placebo (glucose
water
0.2 ml/kg); group B--liquids, up to 5 ml/kg + ranitidine 2 mg/kg in glucose
water
0.2 ml/kg; group C--placebo only; group D--ranitidine only. Gastric contents were aspirated after induction of anesthesia. Mean volume (range) in ml/kg of aspirated gastric fluid in each group was: group A--0.34 (0-1.0); group B--0.17 (0.07); group C--0.25 (0-1.1); group D--0.16 (0-0.6). The pH mean (range) value was: group A--1.83 (0.9-3.6); group B--4.76 (2.0-7.7); group C--2.10 (1.2-4.1); group D--3.97 (1.3-7.3). PSP could not be detected in the gastric samples from children in whom the ingestion-sampling interval was more than 2.25 h. In comparison with prolonged starvation, administration of oral liquids without ranitidine 2-3 h preoperatively did not produce a significant increase in mean volume of gastric aspirate, and there was no increase in the number of patients with gastric aspirate greater than 0.4 ml/kg. Administration of ranitidine with or without fluids resulted in a decrease in both volume and
acidity
of gastric contents.
...
PMID:Effect of oral liquids and ranitidine on gastric fluid volume and pH in children undergoing outpatient surgery. 231 45
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