Dynamic transduction properties of in situ baroreceptors of rabbit aortic depressor nerve

1998 ◽  
Vol 274 (1) ◽  
pp. H358-H365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Sato ◽  
Toru Kawada ◽  
Toshiaki Shishido ◽  
Hiroshi Miyano ◽  
Masashi Inagaki ◽  
...  

We developed a new method for isolating in situ baroreceptor regions of the rabbit aortic depressor nerve (ADN) and estimated the transfer function from pressure to afferent nerve activity in the frequency range of 0.01–5 Hz by a white noise technique. Complete isolation of the baroreceptor area of the right ADN was made in situ by ligation of the innominate artery and the right subclavian and common carotid arteries. We altered the pressure in the isolated baroreceptor area according to a binary quasi-white noise between 80 and 100 mmHg in 12 urethan-anesthetized rabbits. The gain increased two to three times as the frequency of pressure perturbation increased from 0.01 to 2 Hz and then decreased at higher frequencies. The phase slightly led below 0.2 Hz. The squared coherence value was >0.8 in the frequency range of 0.01–4 Hz. The step responses estimated from the transfer function were indistinguishable from those actually observed. We conclude that the baroreceptor transduction of the ADN is governed by linear dynamics under the physiological operating pressure range.

1991 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 427-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald A. Studebaker ◽  
Robert L. Sherbecoe

Frequency-importance and transfer functions for the Technisonic Studios’ recordings of the CID W-22 word test are reported. These functions may be used to calculate Articulation Index (Al) values or to predict scores on the W-22 test. The functions were derived from the word recognition scores of 8 normal-hearing listeners who were tested under 308 conditions of filtering and masking. The importance function for the W-22 test has a broader frequency range and a different shape than the importance function used in the current ANSI standard on the Articulation Index (ANSI, 1969). The transfer function is similar in slope to to the ANSI transfer function for 256 PB-words, but is shifted to the right of that function by 0.05 Al.


1963 ◽  
Vol 3 (01) ◽  
pp. 53-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.E. Showalter

SHOWALTER, W.E., UNION OIL CO. OF CALIFORNIA, BREA, CALIF. Abstract This paper discusses some of the results of combustion-drive tests which were made in a test cell using a sand bed 10 in. in diameter × 10-ft long. The test method is illustrated and described.The relationship between the API gravity of the in situ oil and the amount of air required for combustion drive is discussed n detail. Other things constant, the air requirement for combustion drive increases as the API gravity of the in situ oil decreases. If the test results apply to actual reservoirs, the lowest-priced oils may cost the most to recover by this method.Information is shown which indicates that the effect of pressure on the amount of hydrocarbon burned is not large. A method of predicting air requirements from the API gravity of the in situ oil is presented. Introduction Combustion drive is the term used to identify the process of interstitial or in situ burning as an oil recovery method. Part of the in situ oil is burned to generate the energy needed to produce the remainder of the oil. Combustion drive as an oil recovery mechanism remains an economic uncertainty in spite of all the work that has been done by the industry in both laboratory and field. This paper will show some of the results of tests which were made in a test cell for the purpose of studying the nature of the combustion-drive process. It will present data which indicate that the API gravity of the in situ oil is a significant indicator of the amount of air required to drive a burning front through oil sand. Air requirement varies inversely as the API gravity of the in situ oil. EXPERIMENTAL The tests were performed in a cell which utilized a cylindrical sand section 10 in. in diameter × 10-ft long. The thin-walled metal pipe which held the sand was wound with twenty external electrical resistance heaters which, by means of an automatic controller, maintained adjacent sections of the wall of the pipe at temperatures equal to the temperatures of the contained sand. Each heater covered 6 linear in. of the pipe. By this means lateral heat loss from the sand section was minimized, thereby causing the sand section to simulate more closely a horizontal increment of a combustion-drive reservoir.Fig. 1 shows a schematic diagram of the test assembly.Thermocouplestomeasurethetemperature in the sand were located every 6 in. along the length of the sand section. The pipe containing the sand was enclosed in a cell designed for an operating pressure of 500 psig. The inlet air pressure was controlled at the inlet, and the gas flow rate was controlled and measured at the outlet of the cell.The oil sand used for the tests was prepared by mixing first water and then oil with the non-consolidated sand using a closed mixer similar to a cement mixer. Table 1 shows a screen analysis of the sand. Ninety percent of the sand was 100 mesh or finer. This sand was a mixture of 80 per cent No. 120 Nevada White Sand and 20 per cent Tennessee Hi-Fusion Moulding Sand No. 3. The Nevada sand was a clean silica sand. SPEJ P. 53^


1990 ◽  
Vol 258 (3) ◽  
pp. H887-H895 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sugimachi ◽  
T. Imaizumi ◽  
K. Sunagawa ◽  
Y. Hirooka ◽  
K. Todaka ◽  
...  

We identified, in 17 alpha-chloralose-anesthetized rabbits, the dynamic transduction characteristics of the aortic arch baroreceptors using a "white-noise technique." We recorded aortic pressure and aortic depressor nerve activity while perturbing pressure by rapid, intermittent ventricular pacing (400 beats/min). Dividing the cross-power spectrum between nerve activity and pressure by the power spectrum of pressure yielded the transfer function. The gain of the transfer function increased threefold as the frequency increased from 0.005 to 5 Hz, suggesting that the baroreceptors responded primarily to dynamic rather than to static changes in pressure. To quantify the nonlinear properties of baroreceptor transduction, we compared measured instantaneous nerve activity with that linearly predicted. We demonstrated that the major nonlinearity was attributable to "threshold". The overall baroreceptor transduction properties could be represented by a cascade connection of a linear subsystem followed by a nonlinear subsystem with threshold. The white-noise technique made it possible to identify the unbiased linear properties in a nonlinear system, and thus was very useful in identifying complex biological systems.


BMC Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaofan Xing ◽  
Rongrong Pan ◽  
Guangwei Hu ◽  
Xian Liu ◽  
Yiquan Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Left-right (LR) asymmetry is an essential feature of bilateral animals. Studies in vertebrates show that LR asymmetry formation comprises three major steps: symmetry breaking, asymmetric gene expression, and LR morphogenesis. Although much progress has been made in the first two events, mechanisms underlying asymmetric morphogenesis remain largely unknown due to the complex developmental processes deployed by vertebrate organs. Results We here addressed this question by studying Pitx gene function in the basal chordate amphioxus whose asymmetric organogenesis, unlike that in vertebrates, occurs essentially in situ and does not rely on cell migration. Pitx null mutation in amphioxus causes loss of all left-sided organs and incomplete ectopic formation of all right-sided organs on the left side, whereas Pitx partial loss-of-function leads to milder phenotypes with only some LR organs lost or ectopically formed. At the N1 to N3 stages, Pitx expression is gradually expanded from the dorsal anterior domain to surrounding regions. This leads to activation of genes like Lhx3 and/or Prop1 and Pit, which are essential for left-side organs, and downregulation of genes like Hex and/or Nkx2.1 and FoxE4, which are required for right-side organs to form ectopically on the left side. In Pitx mutants, the left-side expressed genes are not activated, while the right-side genes fail to decrease expression on the left side. In contrast, in embryos overexpressing Pitx genes, the left-side genes are induced ectopically on the right side, and the right-side genes are inhibited. Several Pitx binding sites are identified in the upstream sequences of the left-side and right-side genes which are essential for activation of the former and repression of the latter by Pitx. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that (1) Pitx is a major (although not the only) determinant of asymmetric morphogenesis in amphioxus, (2) the development of different LR organs have distinct requirements for Pitx activity, and (3) Pitx controls amphioxus LR morphogenesis probably through inducing left-side organs and inhibiting right-side organs directly. These findings show much more dependence of LR organogenesis on Pitx in amphioxus than in vertebrates. They also provide insight into the molecular developmental mechanism of some vertebrate LR organs like the lungs and atria, since they show a right-isomerism phenotype in Pitx2 knockout mice like right-sided organs in Pitx mutant amphioxus. Our results also explain why some organs like the adenohypophysis are asymmetrically located in amphioxus but symmetrically positioned in vertebrates.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 652-657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenwen Wang ◽  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Changjian Liu ◽  
Yuelin Zhu ◽  
Tong Yu ◽  
...  

Purpose: To report a novel internal and external blood bypass method for cerebral protection during in situ triple-fenestrated stent-graft repair in the aortic arch. Technique: A method was devised to combine internal and external blood bypass circuits to preserve cerebral blood flow when all 3 supra-aortic branches are covered by the stent-graft. Long 14-F to 18-F introducers are placed retrogradely into the right and left common carotid arteries (CCAs). Smaller sheaths are placed antegradely into the internal carotid arteries (ICAs) bilaterally and into the right CCA introducer, which has had an aperture cut into it for flow to pass into the smaller sheath. The right CCA introducer is positioned in the ascending aorta to supply the innominate artery; the smaller sheath in the right CCA introducer is positioned at the aperture. The small sheath in the right CCA is connected to the left ICA sheath, and the left CCA fenestration is made and stented. The left ICA sheath is connected to the right ICA sheath, and the right CCA introducer is pulled back to the origin of the innominate artery and the smaller sheath removed. The fenestrations for the innominate and left subclavian arteries are opened sequentially. In 8 patients, complete bypass to maintain brain perfusion was performed for an average 17.6±6.9 minutes; intraoperative transcranial Doppler monitoring during flow bypass showed no notable decline in intracranial blood flow velocity. Two patients suffered stroke; one recovered completely. Conclusion: A cerebral protection strategy that integrates internal and external blood flow bypass techniques to maintain adequate brain blood flow is simple and feasible for in situ triple-fenestration aortic arch stent-graft repairs. However, neurological complications were not avoided with this method; thus, further research and development are required.


1999 ◽  
Vol 276 (1) ◽  
pp. H326-H332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Sato ◽  
Toru Kawada ◽  
Hiroshi Miyano ◽  
Toshiaki Shishido ◽  
Masashi Inagaki ◽  
...  

We developed new methods for isolating in situ baroreceptor regions of carotid sinus and aortic depressor nerves in halothane-anesthetized rats. After ligation of the root of the external carotid artery, the internal carotid and pterygopalatine arteries were embolized with two ball bearings of 0.8 mm in diameter. Bilateral carotid sinus pressures were changed between 60 and 180 mmHg in 20-mmHg steps lasting 1 min each. The sigmoidal steady-state relationship between aortic and carotid sinus pressures in 11 rats indicated the maximum gain of the carotid sinus baroreflex to be −2.99 ± 0.75 at 120 ± 5 mmHg. An in situ isolation of the baroreceptor area of the right aortic depressor nerve could be made by ligation of the innominate, common carotid, and subclavian arteries in 9 rats. Pressure imposed on the subclavian baroreceptor was altered between 40 and 180 mmHg in 20-mmHg steps lasting 1 min each. The sigmoidal steady-state relationship between the aortic depressor nerve activity and imposed pressure showed that the baroreceptor gain peaked at 118 ± 4 mmHg. We established an easy approach to the rat baroreflex and baroreceptor research.


Development ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 623-637
Author(s):  
Alfredo Castro-Quezada ◽  
Bernardo Nadal-Ginard ◽  
María V. de la Cruz

The formation of the normal bulboventricular loop (convex to the right) and the inverted loop (convex to the left) produced by the Lepori technique in chick embryos was studied. The development of the loops was recorded by means of diagrams, photographs and microscopic time-lapse photography. Electron-microscope studies were also made. The normal loop was studied by means of labelling and removal experiments on the heart tube. The results demonstrated that the fusion of both cardiac primordia is made in stage 9 — in the mid-line of the embryo and that the first asymmetry of the heart tube appears in stage 10. The truncus region developed in situ directed towards the right after the fusion of both cardiac primordia, and in this region the electron-microscope study demonstrated a gradient of caudo-cephalic differentiation. In stage 10 the left caudal groove is the prospective interventricular groove, but the right caudal groove is not the right atrioventricular groove as had been stated by others. The asymmetric incorporation of both primordia begins in stage 11 —, when the curvature of the loop is already developing. In the removal experiments it was evident that the different portions of the cardiac tube in situ are orientated in space independently of the whole of the loop. The formation of the experimentally inverted loop is a mirror-image of the normal loop and appears to be originated through mechanic traction of the cardiac tube by the left splachnopleure and not by a faster displacement of the right cardiac primordia.


2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 120-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bong Won Park ◽  
Sang Jun Park ◽  
Hojong Park ◽  
Jae Chol Hwang ◽  
Young Woo Seo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Joachim Frank

Cryo-electron microscopy combined with single-particle reconstruction techniques has allowed us to form a three-dimensional image of the Escherichia coli ribosome.In the interior, we observe strong density variations which may be attributed to the difference in scattering density between ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and protein. This identification can only be tentative, and lacks quantitation at this stage, because of the nature of image formation by bright field phase contrast. Apart from limiting the resolution, the contrast transfer function acts as a high-pass filter which produces edge enhancement effects that can explain at least part of the observed variations. As a step toward a more quantitative analysis, it is necessary to correct the transfer function in the low-spatial-frequency range. Unfortunately, it is in that range where Fourier components unrelated to elastic bright-field imaging are found, and a Wiener-filter type restoration would lead to incorrect results. Depending upon the thickness of the ice layer, a varying contribution to the Fourier components in the low-spatial-frequency range originates from an “inelastic dark field” image. The only prospect to obtain quantitatively interpretable images (i.e., which would allow discrimination between rRNA and protein by application of a density threshold set to the average RNA scattering density may therefore lie in the use of energy-filtering microscopes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-201
Author(s):  
Tudor-Vlad Sfârlog

Abstract The present study offers the doctrine of the right of intellectual creation new perspectives on the study of the institution of termination of the assignment contract for the patrimonial rights resulting from the intellectual creation. We believe that the present study is rich in doctrinal contributions, formulating new theses and opening the prospect for new perspectives of scientific research. Last but not least, we appreciate that the proposals made in the present study contribute not only to the activity of opinionated in the field, but also to the work of practitioners and direct beneficiaries of the legal provisions on the assignment of patrimonial rights of authors.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document