scholarly journals Sonoporation delivery of inorganic nanoparticles into bacterial cell of probiotic strains using diagnostic ultrasound machine

2019 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. S83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rostyslav V. Bubnov ◽  
Mykola Y. Spivak
Author(s):  
Jørgen Jørgensen

The development of diagnostic ultrasound in medicine began in Denmark in November 1965 at the Surgical Department H at Gentofte County Hospital in Copenhagen, and a prosperous time for diagnostic ultrasound began. It was the young surgeon Hans Henrik Holm who took the initiative, strongly supported by the head of the department Professor P.A. Gammelgaard. Hans Henrik Holm had for years studied ultrasound and earlier in 1965 he had visited Helmuth Hertz in Lund in Sweden to discuss the prospects of ultrasound. A grant from a national scientific foundation of 60 000 Danish kroner (approximately $10 000) made it possible to buy the American Physionic A-mode ultrasound machine. It was installed in a spare room at the Surgical Department H at Gentofte County Hospital in Copenhagen. An ultrasound laboratory was hereby established, and it was increasingly involved in a variety of clinical ultrasound studies and in the development and testing of new ultrasound equipment. The expenses were met by both the hospital and the University of Copenhagen, and a great deal of the research was financed by foundations. Hans Henrik Holm became the day-to-day head of the laboratory and he kept this position for many years. The Surgical Department and the ultrasound laboratory, designated the Ultrasound Department, were relocated to the new Herlev County Hospital in 1976 where Hans Henrik Holm became consultant at the Urology Department and Professor in Ultrasound and Interventional Ultrasound affiliated with the Surgical Department. The Ultrasound Department at Herlev had an increasing number of rooms and staff members. A senior registrar (Jø rgen Kvist Kristensen) was associated to the department in 1975 and Søren Torp-Pedersen was appointed consultant at the department in 1989. In 1966, 250 patients were examined annually. Thirty years later the Ultrasound Department at Herlev Hospital examined 17 000 patients annually, and ultrasound departments had been established at other hospitals in the Copenhagen area. By 1966 two papers in Danish were published and two papers in English were published in 1967 and 1968 . The number of staff rapidly increased, and a group of enthusiastic doctors and technicians was formed, working with patients and on scientific projects.


In Practice ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 142-144
Author(s):  
Frances Barr

2020 ◽  
Vol 85 ◽  
pp. 131-139
Author(s):  
S Shen ◽  
Y Shimizu

Despite the importance of bacterial cell volume in microbial ecology in aquatic environments, literature regarding the effects of seasonal and spatial variations on bacterial cell volume remains scarce. We used transmission electron microscopy to examine seasonal and spatial variations in bacterial cell size for 18 mo in 2 layers (epilimnion 0.5 m and hypolimnion 60 m) of Lake Biwa, Japan, a large and deep freshwater lake. During the stratified period, we found that the bacterial cell volume in the hypolimnion ranged from 0.017 to 0.12 µm3 (median), whereas that in the epilimnion was less variable (0.016 to 0.033 µm3, median) and much lower than that in the hypolimnion. Additionally, in the hypolimnion, cell volume during the stratified period was greater than that during the mixing period (up to 5.7-fold). These differences in cell volume resulted in comparable bacterial biomass in the hypolimnion and epilimnion, despite the fact that there was lower bacterial abundance in the hypolimnion than in the epilimnion. We also found that the biomass of larger bacteria, which are not likely to be grazed by heterotrophic nanoflagellates, increased in the hypolimnion during the stratified period. Our data suggest that estimation of carbon flux (e.g. bacterial productivity) needs to be interpreted cautiously when cell volume is used as a constant parametric value. In deep freshwater lakes, a difference in cell volume with seasonal and spatial variation may largely affect estimations.


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