Publications by authors named "Gaĭnullin R"

Sodium pectate derivatives with 25% replacement of sodium ions with nickel ions were obtained by carbonization to temperatures of 280, 550, and 800 °C, under special protocols in an inert atmosphere by carbonization to temperatures of 280, 550, and 800 °C. The 25% substitution is the upper limit of substitution of sodium for nickel ions, above which the complexes are no longer soluble in water. It was established that the sample carburized to 550 °C is the most effective active element in the hydrogen-oxidation reaction, while the sample carbonized up to 800 °C was the most effective in the oxygen-reduction reaction.

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This article presents data on electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and mass spectrometric analysis of potato tubers, irradiated with gamma rays, in order to examine and identify changes in the molecular composition of organic matter following radiation exposure. The products of the Maillard reaction were compared with the products of intramolecular radiolysis of organic constituents of potatoes. The presence of free radicals was verified using EPR.

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Background: Calcium-insensitive transient outward current (I(to)) is important to the development of cardiac memory (CM), which itself reflects the capacity of the heart to remodel electrophysiologically. We used cardiac pacing to test the hypothesis that CM evolution can be explained by developmental maturation of I(to).

Methods And Results: Acutely anesthetized dogs from 1 day old to adult were paced from the left ventricle (VP, n=29) or left atrial appendage (AP, n=12) to induce CM.

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Objective: Clinical and experimental studies suggest that immature hearts are as or more sensitive than adult hearts to adverse effects of I(Kr) blocking drugs. We hypothesized that age-dependent changes in I(Kr) and I(Ks) contribute to the different repolarization reserves and proarrhythmic effects of I(Kr) blockers in the young and adult heart.

Methods: Dogs aged 1-150 days and adults were used to study (1) proarrhythmic effects in situ of the I(Kr) blocker dofetilide; (2) dofetilide effects on action potential duration (APD) recorded with microelectrodes from left ventricular (LV) slabs; (3) I(Kr) and I(Ks) in single LV myocytes using whole-cell voltage clamp.

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Cardiac memory (CM) has short- (STCM) and long-term (LTCM) components modulated by calcium and angiotensin II. LTCM is associated with reduced Ito and Kv4.3 mRNA levels.

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Background: We tested the hypothesis that ICa,L is important to the development of cardiac memory.

Methods And Results: The effects of L-type Ca2+ channel blockade and beta-blockade were tested on acutely anesthetized and on chronically instrumented, conscious dogs. Short-term memory (STM) was induced by 2 hours of ventricular pacing and long-term memory (LTM) by ventricular pacing for 21 days.

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The force-frequency relationship (FFR) in papillary muscles of the heart of active ground squirrel in different seasons was studied. For comparison, similar preparations from rat and rabbit were used. It was shown that the FFR of papillary muscles of active ground squirrel undergo significant seasonal changes.

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Objective: The incidence of atrial fibrillation increases with age. We hypothesized that aging-associated changes in the atrial action potential (AP) and conduction velocity provide a substrate for abnormal conduction and arrhythmogenesis.

Methods: We used microelectrode techniques to record AP from the endocardium of the right atrial wall of dogs aged 1-5 (adult) and >8 years (old).

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Objective: In many cardiac arrhythmias, both a triggering factor and a favorable myocardial substrate are required. Whereas the sympathetic nervous system may trigger tachyarrhythmias, its function as a long-term modulator of the myocardial substrate is less well understood. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that regional sympathetic denervation at birth would produce an abnormal myocardial substrate.

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Background: Mechanisms for longer rate-corrected QT intervals and higher incidences of drug-induced torsade de pointes in women than in men are incompletely defined, although gonadal steroids are assumed to be important determinants of these differences.

Methods And Results: We used microelectrode techniques to study isolated rabbit right ventricular endocardium from control male and female and castrated male (ORCH) and female (OVX) rabbits. Action potential duration to 30% repolarization (APD(30)) was significantly shorter in male than female and in ORCH than OVX at a cycle length of 500 ms.

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Objective: Ventricular pacing or arrhythmias can induce cardiac memory (CM). We hypothesized that clinically administered antiarrhythmic drugs alter the expression of CM, and that the repolarization changes characteristic of CM can modulate the effects of antiarrhythmic drugs.

Methods: We studied conscious, chronically-instrumented dogs paced for two 1-h periods to study the effects of drugs on the evolution of memory (protocol 1) or for 21 days (protocol 2) to observe the effects of steady-state memory on drug actions.

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Objective: Delayed afterdepolarization-induced triggered activity originating in ventricular myocardium is a mechanism for some age-dependent, inherited ventricular tachycardias in a colony of German shepherd dogs.

Methods: We used standard microelectrode techniques to study beta-adrenergic receptor subtype modulation of the triggered activity in anteroseptal left ventricular myocardium from eleven of these dogs and seven unafflicted, age-matched German shepherd controls.

Results: During sustained stimulation at cycle lengths of 300-4000 ms, 10(-9)-10(-7) M isoproterenol concentration-dependently shortened action potential duration (APD) to 90% repolarization more in myocardium from afflicted than from unafflicted dogs.

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The effect of insulin (0.1-100 nM) on isometric force of contraction in isolated ground squirrel papillary muscle was investigated. In summer, autumn and winter active animals, insulin had a negative inotropic effect on papillary muscles, decreasing the amplitude of contraction by about 30% of the control value.

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Introduction: We studied the effects of mibefradil (MIB), a nondihydropyridine T-type Ca2+ channel antagonist, on T- and L-type Ca2+ (I(CaT), I(CaL)) currents in Purkinje myocytes dispersed from the subendocardium of the left ventricle of normal (NZPC) and 48-hour infarcted (IZPC) hearts.

Methods And Results: Currents were recorded with Cs+- and EGTA-rich pipettes and in Na+-K+-free external solutions to eliminate overlapping currents. In all cells, I(Ca) was reduced by MIB (0.

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We studied the electrophysiological effects of LU111995 (1-15 mg/kg p.o.) in conscious dogs with chronic atrioventricular block and ventricular pacing at 50 to 130 beats/min.

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A recent publication by us has been interpreted by some as arguing against the existence and importance of M cells. We suppose this is the reason we have been asked to write this "controversy." Regrettably for the controversy, neither our work nor we deny the existence of M cells.

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During the deep hibernation (at 5-6 degrees C of the heart temperature) and during arousal from hibernation (at 15-16 degrees C) insulin have no effect on contractility. Two opposite inotropic effects of insulin at concentrations 0.1-50 nM were found at higher temperature of arousing: a transient positive inotropic effect between 21-28 degrees C, and a negative one (about 20-30% from the control value) above 28 degrees C.

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The paper describes the study of anti-arrhythmia effects of ionol. In isolated rabbit papillary muscle, ionol (a) had no effect on the depolarization-induced automaticity; (b) did not influence early afterdepolarizations: (c) delayed the onset of post-depolarizations initiated by Ca-overload and therefore inhibited the ectopic focal activity in myocardium. In isolated left auricles of rabbit, ionol suppressed the shortening of the excitation wavelength induced with adrenaline and thus protected the heart of reentry and consequent rhythm disturbances.

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Two opposite inotropic effects of the dihydropyridine activators, CGP 28392 and Bay K 8644, given at the same concentration (1-2 microM) were found in rat papillary muscles: a positive effect in polarized tissue (4 mM KCl) and a negative one during partial depolarization. The depressive effect found at a low rate or after a short rest was associated with marked prolongation of the Ca2(+)-mediated action potential, indicating that the drugs behave as Ca channel stimulators. The depressive effect of the activation on the resting state contraction was antagonized by nifedipine (2 microM) and high Mg2+ (5 mM).

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Two types of electrical and mechanical responses to 1 mumol/l ryanodine, depending on the intracellular calcium load, were observed in rabbit papillary muscles. In a normal calcium solution, ryanodine induced a transient decline followed by a stable increase in the developed force (by 20 +/- 5% of the pretreatment level; n = 30) and prolonged the action potential (AP). The positive ryanodine response showed an increased time-to-peak force and was completely suppressed by 2 mumol/l nifedipine, partially blocked by 50 mumol/l tetracaine (Ca2+ release blocker), but greatly potentiated by 20 mmol/l CsCl or (-) Bay R 5414 which prolonged the AP.

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Time course of oxygen tension in 30 free compound flaps was studied by the polarographic method. The use of two types of polarographic electrodes--open needle and closed membrane epicutaneous--in control over the viability of free compound flaps revealed essential differences in the obtained results. Zero pO2 value in measurement with an epicutaneous electrode is not always evidence of flap non-viability.

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Prevalence rates (PRs) for EFP (schizophrenic, schizoaffective and affective psychoses), with allowance for proband sex and age-of-onset data were studied in a subdivided population from the North-East of the European Region of the USSR. The population includes three subpopulations: a small old religious semi-isolate of Russians ("Rs"), aboriginal Komi people ("Ks")--an ethnic community of Ugro-Finnish lineage, and a mixed group of migrants ("Ms") from various regions of the USSR. The latter is mainly an urban population, while the "Rs" and "Ks" are, on the whole, rural populations.

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The single sucrose gap technique was employed to study the electrically induced automaticity in rabbit papillary muscles. When the potential was clamped at the level of the "maximum diastolic potential" following the first spike of automaticity an initial decline of the outward ionic current with subsequent activation of the delayed potassium current was observed. The initial decline was potential-sensitive with a maximum at approximately -2 mV; it diminished when the rate of stimulation increased and was abolished with 4-aminopyridine plus Sr2+.

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