Publications by authors named "Halas E"

Because there is no ideal therapy for burns infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, there is sufficient need to investigate the efficacy of alternative antipseudomonal interventions. Honey is an ancient wound remedy for which there is modern evidence of efficacy in the treatment of burn wounds, but limited evidence for the effectiveness of its antibacterial activity against Pseudomonas. We tested the sensitivity of 17 strains of P.

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It is necessary to reevaluate the role of the Department of Sociology at Columbia University in the years 1929-1950. The impact of Robert M. MacIver, who played a significant role in the exchange between European and American thinkers, is examined, as well as his marginalization.

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We previously demonstrated that restraint and pharmacological agents that activate sympathetic nervous system activity induce expression of the 70-kD heat shock protein (HSP70) in major blood vessels. The magnitude and rapidity in which HSP70 is induced in the aorta suggest that it may play a salient role in the mechanical properties of vascular smooth muscle. Other investigators have reported that HSP70 inducibility is increased in genetically hypertensive animals.

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The effect of inhibition of glycosylation in guinea pig peritoneal macrophages on interaction of their surface Fc gamma receptors with guinea pig and rabbit IgG was studied. The inhibitors used were tunicamycin and monensin. The cells treated with tunicamycin incorporated markedly less [3H]mannose, bound less peanut (PNA) and wheat germ (WGA) lectins and showed diminished ability of binding IgG in comparison with control cells.

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In each of two experiments, adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats were deprived of copper and were subjected to the chronic stress of close confinement. A 2 X 2 factorial design was used because both copper deficiency and stress have been implicated in the regulation of blood pressure and are implicated in a major consequence of human hypertension--ischemic heart disease. Copper deficiency was verified by a decrease in copper in several organs.

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The aim of the presented work was to find out whether the Fc gamma receptor from human placental syncytiotrophoblast plasma membranes in its native membrane-bound state is composed of more subunit chains than previously found in our laboratory in the purified receptor. The chains might be lost during the purification procedure with the use of various chaotropic reagents, e.g.

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The purpose of this study was threefold: 1. to determine the long-term effects of interactions between lactational zinc deficiency and gender on bone mineral composition in repleted rat offspring, 2. to determine the nutritional efficacy of the second of two commercially designed, modified Luecke diets (ML2) during the gestational and lactational stress, and 3.

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Offspring of rats who were zinc or calorie deprived during lactation were administered a battery of reflex and motor tests from postnatal Day 4 to Day 21. Compared to offspring of ad lib-fed control rats, both zinc deprived and undernourished offspring exhibited developmental delays in reflexes which appeared after the first postnatal week (auditory startle, air righting, and rope descent). As the deficiencies continued the delays appeared to be more pronounced.

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Three experiments were conducted to test the behavior of the offspring of rat dams (ZD) fed a mildly zinc deficient diet (10.0 micrograms Zn/g) during pregnancy and lactation. Since zinc deficiency causes anorexia, a second group of rat dams (PF) was fed the same quantity of the diet during gestation and lactation as was consumed by their ZD mates.

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In a series of three experiments, adult rats who suffered severe zinc deficiency and/or undernutrition during lactation were tested in a 17-arm radial maze for working memory, reference memory, forgetting and learning. In Experiment 1, eight out of 17 arms were baited. The zinc deficient (ZD) and undernourished (PF) rats revealed a learning deficit when compared to adequately nourished rats (AL).

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Rat dams were fed a 20% sprayed egg white diet, containing 10 ppm zinc, during gestation and lactation (ZD) and compared to zinc-adequate pair-fed (PF) and ad libitum fed (AL) control animals. AL dams consumed more food than the ZD group. Throughout gestation AL dams were heavier than PF and ZD dams.

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At 100 days of age rats, whose dams suffered severe zinc deficiency and/or undernutrition throughout lactation, were tested in two learning tasks. One test was an original discrimination learning task and the other test was a more difficult reverse discrimination learning task. In the reverse learning test, performance differed significantly between rehabilitated malnourished rats and normal rats.

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Prenatal zinc deficiency and prenatal undernutrition were found to have adverse effects on the food consumption and weight gain of pregnant dams and their offspring. Pups whose dams suffered prenatal zinc deficiency (ZD) consumed less food and gained less weight than pups whose dams suffered prenatal undernutrition (PF). The PF pups consumed less food and gained less weight than pups whose dams were normally fed (AL).

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The effect of zinc deficiency during the latter third of gestation on avoidance conditioning of young adult male rats was compared with the effect of intrauterine starvation and normal pregnancy. Animals which had experienced zinc deficiency avoided shock less well than the offspring of pair-fed control dams. The offspring of pair-fed dams avoided shock less well than animals which were the product of normal pregnancy.

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Effects of prenatal and postnatal zinc deficiency on the composition of the brain and on subsequent adult behavior were studied. Deficiency throughout the latter third of pregnancy resulted in decreased body and brain size without affecting total brain DNA, RNA, or protein. Adult males that had been subjected to intrauterine zinc deficiency displayed impaired shock avoidance.

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