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Query: UNIPROT:A7KAX9 (
grit
)
1,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The sugar content in the grits and in a gruel cooked with samples of oats and buckwheat subjected to hydrothermal treatment under different conditions and also in the oat flour, a product of baby and dietetic nutrition, was quantified. Hydrothermal processing results in significant changes occurring individual sugars of the
grit
. During culinary treatment these changes are levelled out, but in the end the level of virtually all types of sugar is higher in the gruel cooked with hydrothermally treated
grit
than in that prepared with initial, untreated
grit
. The oats flour is distinguished by a high glucose, maltose, fructose and saccharose content. A fall of the reducing sugars level coming as a result of thermal and culinary treatment is explained by their participating in the reaction of melanoidine formation. On the other hand, a rise in their content under rigorous conditions and in the production of oat flour is due to the starting of the starch hydrolysis.
...
PMID:[Change in the sugar content in oaten products, buckwheat and rice groats during their heat processing by cooking]. 102 98
Fluctuations in
grit
composition in the gizzards of willow ptarmigans and the grinding ability of various
grit
assortments from wild ptarmigans were examined. We confirmed reports of other investigators that larger, fewer and rounder stones were present in the winter than in the autumn. Experiments showed that ptarmigans prefer stones with diameters between 2-5 mm. Birds on a constant diet maintained a constant stone intake throughout the year. The composition of gizzard
grit
was influenced by the availability of stones as well as of the type of food the ptarmigans ate. Using an artificial gizzard,
grit
from birds shot during the autumn was found to be a more efficient grinding material than
grit
from winter birds. We suggest that other functions than grinding, such as supplying minerals, may be equally important functions of the
grit
.
...
PMID:Regulation and grinding ability of grit in the gizzard of Norwegian willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus). 122 13
The shear bond strengths (SBS) of the Amalgambond Adhesive System to several substrates were determined in vitro. Ninety extracted human permanent first and second molars were used. In 30 teeth, the occlusal surfaces were ground wet on 600-
grit
SiC to expose the enamel and in 60 to expose the superficial dentin. Amalgam (Tytin) restorations were placed on 15 exposed dentin surfaces and sandblasted. The Metafil-A composite was transferred in three increments and each cured for 30 seconds. The SBS of the composite to enamel were determined 1 minute (A) and 24 hours after final cure (B); to dentin 1 minute (C) and 24 hours after final cure (D); of freshly mixed amalgam to dentin (E) and to previously placed amalgam (F) after 24 hours. All of the 24 hours specimens were stored in saline at 37 degrees C or 24 hours. A shear load was applied to the base of the bonded cylinders with a knife-edged rod in an Instron machine at a crosshead speed of 0.5 mm/min. The SBS were expressed in MPa and the data analyzed by Student t-test, ANOVA and Student-Newman-Keuls test. The mean +/- SD of SBS were: A: 8.15 +/- 1.74; B: 15.69 +/- 4.50; C: 6.64 +/- 1.72; D: 17.09 +/- 4.61; E: 5.10 +/- 1.73; F: 6.54 +/- 3.78. The SBS to enamel and to dentin, respectively, after 24 hours were significantly greater than after 1 minute (P = 0.0001), the SBS of A vs C (P = 0.1783), B vs D (P = 0.2180) and E vs F (P = 0.7149) were not significantly different.
...
PMID:A laboratory study of the Amalgambond Adhesive System. 129 Jun 5
The relationship between the tensile bond strength (TBS) and three dentin characteristics: remaining dentin thickness (RDT), Ca-concentration, and hardness, were investigated. Sixty-two extracted bovine incisors, divided into four groups, were prepared using 600-
grit
SiC paper to create flat dentinal surfaces. The materials tested in this study consisted of three commercially available and one experimental dentin bonding systems. The TBS and modes of failure were determined after storage for 24 h in 37 degrees C water. Then RDT, Ca-concentration, and hardness were measured. Data were statistically compared with TBS of each group. The mean bond strength of the commercial materials ranged from 2.5 +/- 0.9 MPa to 7.7 +/- 2.8 MPa. Correlations with Ca-concentration and RDT varied, depending on the product. The bond strength of the experimental material was 9.2 +/- 4.4 MPa and significantly correlated with RDT and hardness. With two of the dentin bonding agents, specimens showed a high number of cohesive fractures in dentin, 40% to 82%. It was concluded that the variability of TBS was influenced by dentinal characteristics in three of the four materials tested.
...
PMID:Dentin thickness, hardness, and Ca-concentration vs bond strength of dentin adhesives. 129 88
One hundred maxillary premolar teeth were randomly allocated to ten groups. Each group was restored with one of ten different restorative techniques. The teeth were stored in deionized water for 7d prior to longitudinal sectioning in a mesio-distal plane. Following sectioning, ten specimens from each group were chosen at random from the 20 available sections. The sectioned surfaces were polished using 600-
grit
SiC abrasive paper and etched for 10 s with 50% phosphoric acid to remove the smear layer produced by sectioning. Five tooth sections from the dentin bonding resin groups were allowed to dry at 20 degrees C for 24h. The glass ionomer-based groups were reimmersed in deionized water during this period. The remaining five sections from each group were replicated using an addition-cure vinyl polysiloxane impression material and an epoxy resin. A comparison was made of the sections and the replicas. All tooth specimens were sputter-coated with gold for 4 min and examined using a scanning electron microscope. Replicas were gold-coated for 3 min. Different tooth/restoration interfaces, associated with different materials, were observed. A marked difference between the replicas and tooth sections was observed for glass ionomer-based restorations but not for resin-based bonding systems. Representative samples of replicas and specimens are shown, and the significance of the observed differences is discussed.
...
PMID:An in vitro comparative analysis: scanning electron microscopy of dentin/restoration interfaces. 129 93
Four experiments with 270, 44, 432 and 66800 Leghorn hens were carried out to investigate the influence of various Mn additions to diets differed in mineral or Ca contents on egg shell quality. The addition of 300 mg Mn/kg diet improved significantly egg shell breaking strength by 4 N over one year. The supply of 50-500 mg Mn/kg diet for 10-24 weeks of the second half of laying year did not influence the egg shell quality. Addition of mineral mixture or Ca
grit
to layer rations with adequate or higher Mn levels did not influence egg shell strength. High mineral content in a low manganese diet increased number of cracks by 3%. Strength, weight and ash content of tibia were significantly reduced by feeding a low mineral level. Addition of 50-150 mg Mn per kg low mineral diet normalized partially tibia stability in young hens. It was concluded that supplied dietary Manganese influences calcification positively only in young hens. High levels of Ca did not influence the effects of Mn. 50 mg Mn per kg layers mixture have been considered as an essential supply.
...
PMID:[Effect of the manganese content in laying hen feed with different Ca and mineral levels on the egg shell quality and bone mineralization of hens]. 129 83
Determining the best technique for finishing and polishing composite resins is important to ensure longevity of the restoration and prevention of recurrent decay and periodontal disease. This study quantitatively compared the surface roughness of a small particle hybrid composite material finished and polished using six different techniques. Five composite samples were randomly assigned to one of six polishing techniques. Uniform composite surfaces were prepared by finishing samples with a 600-
grit
carborundum disk prior to polishing. The unpolished surfaces were analyzed with the Taylor-Hobson Talysurf 10 surface texture measuring instrument. The surfaces were then polished and analyzed again. There were no statistical differences among treatment groups prior to polishing. There was a statistical difference between treatment groups after polishing. The smoothest surfaces were obtained using Centrix System rubber points alone, Centrix System rubber points plus Caulk's Prisma Gloss fine and super-fine pastes, and Caulk's Enhance disks plus Caulk's Prisma Gloss fine and super-fine pastes. There was no statistical difference between these methods and 3M Sof-flex disks alone. The roughest surface was produced by the Enhance disks only without using the Prisma Gloss pastes. There was no statistical difference between this method, however, and the use of Sof-flex disks plus Kerr's Lustre Paste. Lustre Paste, included with Herculite kits, did not improve a surface polished with Sof-flex disks.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis of six composite polishing techniques on a hybrid composite material. 129 21
Hydroxylapatite (HA)-coated and
grit
-blasted (non-HA-coated) titanium dental implants were inserted into healed extraction sites of canine mandibles. After six weeks, the animals were killed and the implants mechanically tested in torsion to failure. Interface attachment strength, implant/tissue compatibility, integrity of the HA coating, and the location of interface failure were evaluated. Mechanical testing demonstrated an interface torsional strength of 3.98 +/- 0.93 MPa for the HA-coated implants and 2.25 +/- 0.65 MPa for the
grit
-blasted implants. This represents a 76.9% improvement in the maximum torsional interface strength, and is statistically-significant (p = 0.0004). On qualitative histologic analysis, interface failure was seen to occur primarily at the HA/implant interface, although failure through the HA coating and regions of bone/HA interface failure were observed. The HA-coated implants had bone in direct apposition to their surface with no fibrous tissue interposition. The
grit
-blasted implants also had regions of direct bone-implant apposition, but these areas were limited to a smaller proportion of the total interface area. There was no evidence of breakdown or change in thickness of the HA coating.
...
PMID:Torsional stability of HA-coated and grit-blasted titanium dental implants. 129 18
This study evaluated the effect of dentin surface treatment with polyacrylic acid on the shear bond strength of Fuji Lining LC light-cured glass ionomer lining cement (GIC). A total of 40 human, noncarious extracted permanent molars stored in distilled water were used. A flat buccal dentin surface was ground wet on 600-
grit
silicon carbide paper. The teeth were then randomly distributed into four groups of 10 teeth each: Group 1: dentin rinsed with distilled water, dried with oil-free compressed air, placement of cylindrical GIC samples and sheared at 15 minutes post-curing. Group 2: same as group 1, but sheared 7 days post-curing. Group 3: dentin treated with GC Conditioner for 10 seconds, rinsed with distilled water, dried with oil-free compressed air, placement of the GIC and sheared 15 minutes post-curing. Group 4: same as group 3, but sheared 7 days post-curing. The GIC was mixed in a 1:1 powder-liquid ratio. The samples were stored in distilled water until sheared with an Instron. The results revealed that dentin surface treatment with the polyacrylic acid significantly increased the shear bond strength to dentin when tested at 7 days post-curing.
...
PMID:Dentin surface treatment and shear bond strength of a light-cured glass ionomer. 129 59
Thermocycling is widely used in the evaluation of dentin bonding agents. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of increasing thermocycling times on the shear bond strength of composite resin to dentin using a NTG-GMA/BPDM-type bonding agent. Fifty human molar teeth were ground flat on the buccal surface into dentin (600
grit
). Ten specimens were prepared for each thermocycling group of 100, 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 cycles. The adhesive agent was applied to the dentin according to the manufacturer's instructions. A cyclindrical-shaped matrix was used to form the composite resin that was light cured to the treated dentin surface for 60 seconds. Thermocycling was started after 24 hours of storage in deionized water at 37 degrees C. Shear bond strengths were determined with an Instron universal testing machine at a cross-head speed of 0.5 mm per minute. The bond strengths in megapascals (MPa) were : 100 cycles 18.1 (+/- 5.2) MPa, 500 cycles 19.4 (+/- 4.0)MPa, 1000 cycles 16.5 (+/- 2.9), 2000 cycles 14.6 (+/- 5.1), and 4000 cycles 19.9 (+/- 3.2)MPa. When this data was subjected to an ANOVA, no significant difference was found between the groups.
...
PMID:Effect of thermocycling times on dentin bond strength. 129 92
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