Publications by authors named "Knudsen G"

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured at varying haematocrit values in 8 streptozotocin-diabetic and in 7 control rats using the intracarotid 133Xe technique. A hyperbolic relationship between CBF and haematocrit was established for the individual rats in both groups. Diabetic animals showed a preserved CBF response to changes to haematocrit.

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All reported natural isolates of the marine fish pathogen Vibrio salmonicida contain plasmids, and in another marine fish pathogen, Vibrio anguillarum, it has been shown that a plasmid is important for expression of virulence by the organism. To study the function of the plasmids in V. salmonicida, we developed a gene transfer system based on the plasmid RSF1010 replicon.

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The biocontrol fungi Trichoderma harzianum, used to control soilborne plant pathogens, and Beauveria bassiana, used to control insect pests, were formulated as mycelial biomass in alginate pellets with wheat bran added. After drying for 0, 4, or 16 h, pellets were placed in water or in aqueous solutions of polyethylene glycol (PEG) 8000 for 4 to 24 h and then allowed to continue drying. PEG-treated pellets containing T.

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Blood-brain barrier permeability to L-lactate was studied in 18 patients with the double indicator technique. Venous outflow curves were obtained during normo- and hypercapnia and were analyzed by means of a model that takes tracer backflux and capillary heterogeneity of transit times into account. The average unidirectional extraction of L-lactate was 15%; the transport from the blood to the brain (PS1) was 0.

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The regional density of perfused cerebral capillaries (rDPC) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) were measured in 12 selected brain regions in rats after 3 and 20 weeks of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and in control groups. After 3 weeks of diabetes, both rCBF and rDPC were unchanged in the diabetic group compared to the control group. A diabetes duration of 20 weeks causing bilateral cataracts induced a significant (p less than 0.

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The influence of propranolol on cerebral blood flow (CBF) was tested in streptozotocin diabetic rats and in control animals. Resting CBF values were 40% lower in the diabetic rats compared with controls. Intravenous injection of propranolol (2 mg kg-1) decreased CBF significantly in the control group; the CBF decreased for 15 min after propranolol injection and returned to baseline values after 90 min.

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Blood-brain barrier permeability to four large neutral and one basic amino acid was studied in 30 patients with the double indicator technique. The resultant 64 venous outflow curves were analyzed by means of two models that take tracer backflux and capillary heterogeneity into account. The first model considers the blood-brain barrier as a double membrane where amino acids from plasma enter the endothelial cell.

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Endocrinological tests were performed in 14 chronic alcoholic men with signs of intellectual impairment and/or peripheral neuropathy. All had been abstinent from alcohol for at least 1 month. Basal serum growth hormone (GH) was consistently increased in only one patient whereas the GH responses to insulin hypoglycemia stimulation was normal in all patients.

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Biopsy specimens were taken at gingivectomy from 18 adult patients undergoing treatment for chronic marginal periodontitis. They were embedded so that the cut surface of the gingiva was parallel to the top of the block to obtain a comprehensive view in a transversal plane of the inflammatory cell infiltrate near the bottom of the pocket. Sections were stained with HES or with toluidine blue for histological description, and acid alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase (ANAE) was used to differentially stain T lymphocytes, plasma cells and monocytes/macrophages.

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The present study deals with the analysis of double-indicator curves for blood-brain barrier studies. Two mathematical models which provide for the estimation of backflux of tracer from brain to blood in conjunction with heterogeneity of the cerebral capillary and large-vessel transit times were used for the analysis of D-glucose transport on the basis of cerebral venous outflow curves. The two models, non-mixed and well mixed, arise from differing assumptions regarding the effective region surrounding the capillary lumen.

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The impact of transcranial pulsed magnetic stimulation on blood-brain barrier permeability was studied in rats. An integral uptake technique was used to asses the blood-brain barrier permeability to the tracers [3H]sucrose, [14C]urea, and 36Cl-. From the arterial plasma concentration-time curve-integral the permeability surface-area products were calculated.

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Risk assessment for genetically engineered bacteria sprayed onto crops includes determination of off-site dispersal and deposition. The ability to predict microbial dispersal patterns is essential to characterize the uncertainty (risk) associated with environmental release of recombinant organisms. Toward this end, a particle dispersal model was developed to predict recovery of bacteria on fallout plates at various distances and directions about a test site.

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The influence of intracarotic infusion of isoproterenol on cerebral blood flow, on cerebrovascular CO2-reactivity, and on cerebral glucose metabolism were investigated in streptozotocin diabetic rats. Resting cerebral blood flow in diabetic rats decreased by 26% from a control value of 90 ml/100 g.min.

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The effect of stimulation of the cervical sympathetic ganglia on the upper limit of cerebral blood flow (CBF) autoregulation was studied in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) and in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) following intravenous administration of the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor captopril (10 mg/kg). CBF was measured using the intracarotid 133Xe injection method in halothane/nitrous oxide anaesthetized WKY and SHR. Arterial blood pressure was raised stepwise by the intravenous infusion of noradrenaline.

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Median motor and sensory nerves were examined in 20 healthy subjects. Superficial stimulating and recording electrodes were used, and the nerves were examined at natural skin temperature, after cooling and after heating of the arm. The conduction velocity for the fastest and slow conducting sensory fibres (temperature range 17-37 degrees C), and for the fastest conducting motor fibres (temperature range 19-38 degrees C) increased non-linearly with increase in skin temperature.

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The function of the sensory and motor median nerves was examined in 6 divers during a simulated dive to 360 meters of seawater (msw), with a mixture of helium and oxygen (heliox) as breathing gas. Divers were examined in the compression chamber before the dive, at 360, 300, 240, 130, 50, and 5 msw, and with skin temperatures ranging from 29.2 degrees to 35.

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In order to explore the pathogenetic mechanism underlying the changes in blood-brain barrier sodium transport in experimental diabetes, the effects of hyperglycemia and of hypoinsulinemia were studied in nondiabetic rats. In untreated diabetes, the neocortical blood-brain barrier permeability for sodium decreased by 20% (5.6 +/- 0.

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The effect of a dietary supplement of an aldose reductase inhibitor (ponalrestat) or of myo-inositol on sodium transport into the rat brain and on concentrations of saccharide and polyols in cortical brain tissue and sciatic nerve was investigated in control rats and in streptozotocin-diabetic rats after a diabetes duration of 2 weeks. In untreated diabetes, the neocortical blood-brain barrier permeability for sodium decreased by 28% (3.4 +/- 0.

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Prospective experimental field evaluation of genetically engineered microorganisms, such as microbial pest control agents, raises issues of how to properly ascertain their fate and survival in the environment. Field trials with recombinant organisms must reflect requirements for sampling and monitoring. Field trials were conducted at Tulelake, Calif.

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Blood-brain barrier permeability to the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), to sucrose and to sodium was studied in rats with galactosamine-induced liver damage and hepatic encephalopathy by means of an arterial integral uptake technique. Permeability to GABA was unaltered in all examined brain regions (2.47 +/- 0.

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A computer simulation model was used to predict the dynamics of survival and conjugation of Pseudomonas cepacia (carrying the transmissible recombinant plasmid R388:Tn1721) with a nonrecombinant recipient strain in simple rhizosphere and phyllosphere microcosms. Plasmid transfer rates were derived for a mass action model, and donor and recipient survival were modeled as exponential growth and decay processes or both. Rate parameters were derived from laboratory studies in which donor and recipient strains were incubated in test tubes with a peat-vermiculite solution or on excised radish or bean leaves in petri dishes.

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The present study comprises 847 women operated upon for invasive breast carcinoma at 19 surgical departments and enrolled in protocol DBCG-82TM from January 1983 to November 1987. Among them 662 (78%) were allocated for breast-preserving therapy or mastectomy by randomization, while 185 patients (22%) did not accept randomization. Within the randomized group 6% could not be entered into adjuvant protocols, i.

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