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1.
Bull Med Libr Assoc ; 83(2): 221-7, 1995 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7599589

ABSTRACT

Gopher software has emerged rapidly as a powerful tool for providing library users with organized access to Internet resources. Building and maintaining Gophers is one way in which librarians' traditional knowledge and skills are being applied in a nontraditional area. In March 1992, the University of Michigan's ULibrary Gopher was created, mainly as a means of providing access to U.S. Census data and the U.S. Department of Commerce's Economic Bulletin Board. In an effort to broaden the scope of the Gopher, librarians were asked to submit ideas for new resources to access. The result was the ULibrary Gopher Working Group, a team of eighteen librarians from six libraries on campus. The Alfred Taubman Medical Library staff drafted a menu design for life sciences resources and received basic UNIX training. In March 1993, the life sciences section of ULibrary became fully operational and now is maintained by the Taubman staff. This paper describes the history of the ULibrary Gopher and the working group, the creation and ongoing maintenance of the life sciences area of the Gopher, staffing issues, and the relationship of Gopher building to traditional collection development.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks , Libraries, Medical , Software Design , Libraries
2.
Food Chem Toxicol ; 32(6): 549-57, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8045462

ABSTRACT

Methods are presented for the formulation and rapid determination of mineral hydrocarbons (MHCs) in animal diet and tissue. Food grade white oils and low melting point waxes are mixed as liquids with powdered diet. Higher melting point waxes are first powdered using a novel atomization technique before dry mixing with diet. MHCs sufficiently soluble in carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are determined in diet by ultrasonic solvent extraction, adsorption of polar material on Florisil and analysis of the residue by quantitative Fourier Transform Infra Red (FT-IR) spectroscopy. Quantification in tissue is achieved by aqueous saponification, followed by extraction, clean-up and FT-IR analysis as for diet samples. A 10-fold increase in sensitivity over previous methods is achieved, below 0.002% (w/w) in diet and 0.1 mg/g in tissue. Over 80% of the CCl4 used can be recovered and recycled. Control diet seems to contain approximately 0.003% (w/w) background MHC. The method was modified for one powdered wax, only sparingly soluble in CCl4, high concentrations being extracted from diet by flotation in aqueous cetrimide and determined gravimetrically with a limit of detection of 0.1% (w/w) in diet. Application of these methods to 90-day feeding studies is described, and future developments due to the phasing out of CCl4 are discussed.


Subject(s)
Food Analysis , Hydrocarbons/analysis , Mineral Oil/analysis , Waxes/analysis , Animals , Carbon Tetrachloride/analysis , Diet , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Hydrolysis , Rats , Rats, Inbred F344 , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
3.
Environ Res ; 62(1): 19-27, 1993 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8100769

ABSTRACT

The lungs of rats exposed to formaldehyde vapor, for 6 hr/day over 4 consecutive days, were examined for signs of injury and for changes in the level, or activity, of cytochrome P450. The animals were supplied with 10 ppm formaldehyde vapor generated, in two separate experiments, either from an aqueous solution of formaldehyde or from heated paraformaldehyde. All rats were exposed for 6 hr, on each of 4 consecutive days, and killed 1 day after the onset of the fourth period of exposure. The lung weights and gains in body weight of exposed animals were indistinguishable from those of their controls. Lungs from the formaldehyde-exposed animals did not show any signs of injury, even at the ultrastructural level. Bronchoalveolar lavage samples from exposed animals showed no increase in alkaline phosphatase or gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity. The total concentration of cytochrome P450 in the lungs of exposed animals was similar to that found in their controls. The P450 activity of pulmonary microsomes from exposed animals was not significantly different from that obtained with samples from the control animals. These results indicate that repeated exposure to 10 ppm formaldehyde vapor does not injure the deep lung of rats and has no effect on the level of lung P450 or on its activity against substrates for the most common pulmonary forms of this enzyme.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/toxicity , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Formaldehyde/toxicity , Lung/enzymology , Alkaline Phosphatase/metabolism , Animals , Body Weight/drug effects , Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid/enzymology , Lung/pathology , Male , Microsomes/enzymology , Organ Size/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , gamma-Glutamyltransferase/metabolism
4.
Brain Res Dev Brain Res ; 58(2): 215-21, 1991 Feb 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2029765

ABSTRACT

Several hundred taste buds develop and mature in the trench walls of the rat's vallate papilla during the first 3 months after birth. The objective of this investigation of taste bud development was to determine: (i) whether the vallate papilla has local growth zones where new taste buds form, (ii) whether new taste buds arise by the division of mature taste buds, (iii) how many days are required for a new taste bud to mature, and (iv) whether a taste pore forms as the taste bud reaches a critical volume. Camera lucida drawings were made of more than 4000 iron hematoxylin-stained, serially sectioned, vallate taste buds. The relative abundance of immature taste buds declined exponentially with age, from 18% of the mature taste buds at day 15 to 2% at day 90. At days 21, 33 and 45 most of the immature taste buds (those lacking a taste pore) were located in growth zones at the anterior and posterior extremes of the vallate trench. A mean of 10.5 days was required for the maturation of each cohort of immature taste buds present at days 15, 21, 33 and 45. Vallate taste buds were added de novo; fission of mature taste buds was rare. Taste buds varied widely in the taste bud volume at which a pore formed and in the final volume of the taste bud.


Subject(s)
Rats/growth & development , Taste Buds/growth & development , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Female , Male , Rats/anatomy & histology , Taste Buds/anatomy & histology , Time Factors
5.
Hum Exp Toxicol ; 10(1): 49-57, 1991 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1673625

ABSTRACT

1. A suitable method has been developed for generating atmospheres of zinc oxide/hexachloroethane smoke (ZnHCE). 2. The smoke was investigated using the Ames test and the micronucleus assay. 3. It was weakly mutagenic to the bacteria, but in the bone marrow no increases in micronuclei were detected up to toxic levels of the smoke. 4. The method used here could be applied to other pyrotechnic mixtures which give rise to complex mixtures of products.


Subject(s)
Ethane/analogs & derivatives , Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated/toxicity , Mutagens , Zinc Oxide/toxicity , Animals , Atmosphere Exposure Chambers , Ethane/toxicity , Female , Male , Mice , Micronucleus Tests/methods , Mutagenicity Tests/methods , Salmonella typhimurium/drug effects , Smoke/adverse effects
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