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1.
Nat Mater ; 10(3): 202-8, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21217692

ABSTRACT

Localization of charge carriers in crystalline solids has been the subject of numerous investigations over more than half a century. Materials that show a metal-insulator transition without a structural change are therefore of interest. Mechanisms leading to metal-insulator transition include electron correlation (Mott transition) or disorder (Anderson localization), but a clear distinction is difficult. Here we report on a metal-insulator transition on increasing annealing temperature for a group of crystalline phase-change materials, where the metal-insulator transition is due to strong disorder usually associated only with amorphous solids. With pronounced disorder but weak electron correlation, these phase-change materials form an unparalleled quantum state of matter. Their universal electronic behaviour seems to be at the origin of the remarkable reproducibility of the resistance switching that is crucial to their applications in non-volatile-memory devices. Controlling the degree of disorder in crystalline phase-change materials might enable multilevel resistance states in upcoming storage devices.

2.
Vet Parasitol ; 104(3): 217-28, 2002 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11812620

ABSTRACT

Abomasal parasites inhibit gastric acid secretion and reduce the number of acid secreting parietal cells either through physical contact with gastric tissue, the release of inhibitory excretory/secretory (ES) products or by initiating the host inflammatory response. To examine the role of parasite ES products, adult Haemonchus contortus were incubated in a medium based on Hank's balanced salt solution and three incubates were tested for the presence of inhibitors of acid secretion by dispersed rabbit gastric glands in vitro, using the intracellular accumulation of 14C-aminopyrine (AP) as an indirect measure of acid secretion. Acceptably sensitive rabbit preparations (80%) for testing ES products showed increased 14C-AP accumulation with either 10(-5) or 10(-4)M histamine. Sheep glands proved unsuitable as a test system as only two of six preparations responded weakly to histamine. Inhibitory activity was demonstrated in all the three parasite incubates, although responses varied quantitatively between tests, even with the same batch of incubate. In single tests, 16% ES products significantly reduced the 14C-AP ratio (P<0.05) of 10(-4)M histamine-stimulated glands (15 of 19 tests with Batch 1 and two of six with Batch 3). Even at 1 and 5%, ES products (Batch 2) were inhibitory for 10(-5)M histamine-stimulated glands: at 1% the mean reduction was 26.0% (range 7.8-54.8%, n=10), four of which were statistically significant and at 5% was 17.6% (range -15.3-53.8%, n=17), four of which were statistically significant. ES products were overall inhibitory (-12%, P<0.05), when tested on glands exposed to increasing histamine concentrations from 10(-6)M to 10(-3)M (which increased the 14C-AP ratio (P<0.001)). Responses by individual gland preparations differed (P<0.001). The active component(s) of the parasite ES products were less than 5000 molecular weight. Ammonium chloride, tested over the range of concentrations of ammonia present in worm incubates (0.2-1 mM, final concentrations in the gland incubations of 0.005-0.1 mM), had variable, but overall inhibitory effects on 10(-5)M histamine-stimulated glands (n=3). When tested with a range of histamine concentrations, 0.01 mM NH4Cl overall reduced the response by 8.6% (P<0.05)(n=4). The similarity of responses of rabbit glands to parasite ES products and to NH4Cl suggests that ammonia may be the small molecular weight ES product of adult H. contortus, which inhibited acid secretion in vitro.


Subject(s)
Aminopyrine/pharmacokinetics , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/pharmacokinetics , Gastric Acid/metabolism , Gastric Mucosa/metabolism , Haemonchus/immunology , Ammonia/analysis , Ammonia/pharmacology , Ammonium Chloride/pharmacology , Animals , Carbon Isotopes , Gastric Mucosa/drug effects , Haemonchiasis/veterinary , Histamine/pharmacology , In Vitro Techniques , Rabbits , Sheep
3.
Clin Reprod Fertil ; 1(2): 151-6, 1982 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7186830

ABSTRACT

The increasing usage of microsurgery in gynaecology and the recent release of a synthetic absorbable microsuture prompted a comparative study between this material and a nonabsorbable microsuture. Ethilon and Coated Vicryl sutures (Ethicon Inc.) were inserted into rabbit uteri and the histological response compared at 35 and 70 days using both light and polarizing microscopy. The results indicated that although the predominating cell types differed, the overall histological sequelae were markedly less with the synthetic absorbable suture than with the nonabsorbable suture materials.


Subject(s)
Sutures , Animals , Female , Microsurgery/methods , Nylons , Polyglactin 910 , Rabbits , Uterus/pathology
4.
Steroids ; 30(6): 827-32, 1977 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-611645

ABSTRACT

Pregnancy was maintained in ovariectomised does with 1 to 4 mg/day of exogenous progesterone with or without 0.2 microgram/day of estradiol. Progesterone doses were designed to give similar plasma progesterone levels in treated groups to those found in normal pregnancy, and were measured and compared with normals since this comparison does not appear to have been published previously. In normal pregnancy mean progesterone levels reached 10 ng/ml on day 7 and then plateaued at 14 ng/ml between day 10 and 20 before falling to very low levels at parturition. In treated groups progesterone levels reached 10 ng/ml on day 6 and remained between 10 and 13 ng/ml until day 20 before declining. The difference between treated and control plasma progesterone plateau levels was tested using the t-test and was found not be significant. The differences in progesterone levels between treated groups with or without estradiol, whether pregnant or not, were also not significant. Mean litter sizes (alive or dead) were not significantly different. However, fetal viability in the group maintained on progesterone alone was significantly lower than in the normal controls.


Subject(s)
Castration , Estradiol/pharmacology , Pregnancy Maintenance/drug effects , Pregnancy, Animal/drug effects , Pregnancy/drug effects , Progesterone/blood , Animals , Female , Fetal Viability/drug effects , Litter Size/drug effects , Progesterone/pharmacology , Rabbits
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