Health Care Manag (Frederick)
May 2019
The purpose of this study was to explore caffeine intake habits and the perception of its effects on health among college students. After completing a literature review on the topic of caffeine and its effects, a problem was identified relating to increased caffeine consumption and a gap in knowledge about the effects of caffeine among college students. This was a quantitative, cross-sectional study with a descriptive design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMorphogenesis of the semicircular canal ducts in the vertebrate inner ear is a dramatic example of epithelial remodelling in the embryo, and failure of normal canal development results in vestibular dysfunction. In zebrafish and Xenopus, semicircular canal ducts develop when projections of epithelium, driven by extracellular matrix production, push into the otic vesicle and fuse to form pillars. We show that in the zebrafish, extracellular matrix gene expression is high during projection outgrowth and then rapidly downregulated after fusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulsed field gradient NMR is a well-established technique for the determination of self-diffusion coefficients. However, a significant source of systematic error exists in the spatial variation of the applied pulsed field gradient. Non-uniform pulsed field gradients cause the decay of peak amplitudes to deviate from the expected exponential dependence on gradient squared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolid-state carbon-13 (13C) and nitrogen-15 (15N) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) have been used to investigate how water interacts with sildenafil citrate. When the humidity is altered, the water concentration in the solid compound changes in a reversible manner. The proportion of occupied sites depends on the humidity, but the water concentration never reaches a rational (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStability and reproducibility of the spectrometer are fundamental to the success of many modern NMR experiments. Variation in room temperature is a particularly important source of instability, in part because it can cause coherent artifacts in NMR spectra. Small changes in room temperature lead to corresponding changes in the phases, amplitudes, and frequencies of NMR signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF2D spectra, particularly for homonuclear correlation, can show a variety of artifactual signals in the F1 domain. Common sources include carry-over of signal modulation from one transient to the next ("rapid pulsing artifacts") and systematic variations in room temperature ("parallel diagonals"). In both cases there is one very simple expedient which can greatly reduce the impact of these sources of error.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA three-dimensional experiment is described in which NMR signals are separated according to their proton chemical shift, 13C chemical shift, and diffusion coefficient. The sequence is built up from a stimulated echo sequence with bipolar field gradient pulses and a conventional decoupled HMQC sequence. Results are presented for a model mixture of quinine, camphene, and geraniol in deuteriomethanol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh performance liquid chromatography has been coupled simultaneously to high field NMR and MS detectors, giving UV, NMR and mass spectra for each component in a mixture, after on-line separation. This powerful new tool for the structure elucidation of components in mixtures without isolation has been successfully applied to the analysis of the metabolites of paracetamol in human urine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe earlier use of combined liquid chromatography/NMR spectrometry/mass spectrometry (LC/NMR/MS) involved the use of a particle beam interface. This paper describes further developments of this hyphenated technology, in particular the incorporation of an electrospray interface into the LC/NMR/MS system. This improved LC/NMR/MS system was designed for the support of a combinatorial library program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSome NMR resonances which have previously been observed but not identified in mammalian brain tissue extracts have been shown to arise from ethanolamine. This conclusion is drawn from a systematic study of the perchloric acid extracts of rodent brain tissue in which several NMR experiments were used to assign the peaks unambiguously. The extraction procedure used in this work gave samples with highly reproducible spectra, and ethanolamine was observed in all our extract samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis essay begins with the history from 1989 through late 1991 of the Primary Care Organization's Consortium (PCOC), a group of representatives from nine major academic and professional organizations for primary care specialties. The PCOC was formed to discuss what might be done to reverse the alarming decrease in the number of medical students who choose primary care specialties. The article reviews some of the conditions that many believe have caused the continuing move away from primary care careers, and concludes with a description of the PCOC's program to encourage medical students to choose primary care careers, and the new opportunities for collaborative planning of such programs that are now available to medical schools.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo acquire information about the characteristics of U.S. citizens who had recently studied medicine abroad, the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG) and the Association of American Medical Colleges merged independently collected data on a study group of 10,460 U.
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