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Spectrum analysis of diaphragmatic global electromyograms in cattle, with special regard to appropriate strategy for detection of fatigue.
1994
Desmecht D.J.M. | Linden A.S. | Close R.P. | Michaux C.L. | Lekeux P.M.
Although the respiratory tract of healthy and diseased cattle has been intensively studied during the past few years, only a few attempts to detect dysfunctions of bovine inspiratory muscles have been reported. Such technique would be useful in assessing the possibility of inspiratory muscle fatigue in the context of ventilatory failure. Fatigue in skeletal muscle is associated with characteristic changes in the electromyographic power spectrum. Power spectral analysis was therefore applied to cattle diaphragmatic electromyograms (EMGdi) to precisely determine the exact influence of motion and ECG artifacts, describe its basic frequency content, and extract a spectral index capable of providing an accurate warning of fatigue. The EMGdi was recorded via intramuscularly placed fishhook electrodes in 5 healthy young bulls during resting and stimulated respiration. The EMGdi and EGC signals were analyzed by use of power spectral density analysis after band-pass filtering (20 to 1,800 Hz). The EMGdi spectrum was concentrated in the band width 20 to 530 Hz. Electrode motion artifacts were absent, and it was always possible to find an electrode pair giving ECG-free EMGdi. Of the 12 power and frequency values used to quantitate the spectrum, the most stable was the centroid frequency. It was reproducible within and between calves and was only minimally altered by changing inspiratory, load. Though the clinical relevance of fatigue in the respiratory musculature in case of ventilatory failure is currently unknown, the method described here constitutes a possible approach to detection of such phenomenon in cattle.
Show more [+] Less [-]Accumulation of diacylglycerol induced by CCl4-derived radicals in rat liver membrane and its inhibition with radical trapping reagent: FT-IR spectroscopic and HPLC chromatographic observations
2000
Yoon, S. (Hokkaido Univ., Sapporo (Japan)) | Maruyama, Y. | Kazusaka, A. | Fujita, S.
We have investigated the accumulation of diacylglycerol (DAG) induced by carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-derived radicals in the liver of female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats after intraperitoneally injecting CCl4. DAG is an intracellular activator of protein kinase C (PKC) which regulates cell proliferation and differentiation. The electron spin resonance (ESR) study gave the signal of the PBN-CCl3 adduct in the liver of the rats which were pretreated with PBN, confirming that CCl4 was metabolized into CCl3-radicals with cytochrome P450 enzyme and indicating that PBN could trap them. The blood biochemical assay supported the trapping of the CCl3-radicals; the pretreatment of rats with PBN inhibited the increase in the GOT and GPT values upon exposure to CCl4. The Fourier transform-infrared (FT-IR) study indicated in comparison with the model compounds that the CCl4-injected rats accumulated DAG in addition to phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine and triglyceride (TG) in the lipid membrane fraction of the liver homogenate. DAG was found to be ca. 10-15% of the membrane phospholipids by weight. However, DAG was not found in the lipid of the liver microsomes, suggesting that it is formed only in the cell membrane of liver. Also, neither DAG nor TG was found in the lipid membrane of the rats that were pretreated with PBN followed by an injection of CCl4. The formation of DAG was confirmed by an HPLC study. The activation of PKC was observed in liver homogenate in the rats that were injected with CCl4. On the basis of the above findings, it was concluded that the CCl4-derived radicals stimulate PKC through the accumulation of DAG in the liver membrane of the rats. Furthermore, it was shown that PBN has a protective and therapeutic effect against CCl4-induced damage
Show more [+] Less [-]Application of FT-IR and ESR spectroscopic techniques to the study of CCl4-induced peroxidation in rat liver microsomes
2000
Yoon, S. (Hokkaido Univ., Sapporo (Japan)) | Maruyama, Y. | Kazusaka, A. | Fujita, S.
FT-IR and ESR were used for on the investigation of the CCl4-induced peroxidation of rat liver microsomes in combination with biochemical methods. Lipid peroxidation was assayed by TBA reagent in the presence of CCl4 and NADPH. The CCl3 - radical was detected by ESR spectroscopy with a spin trapping reagent of PBN. The FT-IR spectroscopy revealed that absorption band of -C-H in -C=C-H decreased in intensity at 3012 cm(-1), but the absorption bands of the phosphate head and choline in the phospholipids did not significantly change between 1300 and 900 cm(-1). These findings were interpreted to be due to the removal of H- from -C=C-H by radicals as the first step of lipid peroxidation, and to the absence of dephosphorylation of phospholipids in the microsomal membrane. This is the first IR spectroscopic evidence indicating the nature of damage to a microsomal membrane caused by CCl4 treatment. The spectroscopies used here demonstrated that they are useful tools to observe the damage
Show more [+] Less [-]Photosensitivity in South Africa. IX. Structure elucidation of a beta-glucosidase-treated saponin from Tribulus terrestris, and the identification of saponin chemotypes of South African T. terrestris
1996
Wilkins, A.L. (Waikato Univ., Hamilton (New Zealand). Chemistry Dept.) | Miles, C.O. | De Kock, W.T. | Erasmus, G.L. | Basson, A.T. | Kellerman, T.S.