Publications by authors named "R Rycyna"

Temperature and pH are two of the most important physiological parameters and are believed to be tightly regulated because they are intricately related to energy metabolism in living organisms. Temperature and/or pH data in mammalian brain are scarce, however, mainly because of lack of precise and non-invasive methods. At 11.

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In magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), T(2)(*)-weighted contrast is significantly enhanced by extremely high magnetic field strength, offering broad potential applications. However, the T(2)(*)-weighted image contrast distortion and signal loss artifact arising from discontinuities of magnetic susceptibility within and around the sample are also increased, limiting utilization of high field systems for T(2)(*)-weighted contrast applications. Due to the B(0) dependence of the contrast distortions and signal losses, and the heterogeneity of magnetic susceptibility in biological samples, magnetic susceptibility artifacts worsen dramatically for in vivo microimaging at higher fields.

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Improvements on a localized, automatic shimming method described by Gruetter and Boesch (J. Magn. Reson.

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A proposal is advanced for the conformation of the loop E region of prokaryotic 5S rRNAs based on spectroscopic data obtained from pAD3 RNA, a construct that includes helix IV, helix V, and loops D and E from Escherichia coli 5S rRNA. Even though loop E juxtaposes bases that cannot form Watson-Crick base pairs, it resembles an A-form double helix; its nucleotides relate to each other spectroscopically in a helix-like way and are in the anti conformation. The ends of loop E, which is palindromic, have the same conformation.

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Background And Purpose: Platelet-fibrin thrombi in the lumen of atherostenotic carotid arteries may underlie transient ischemic attacks and cerebral infarction. For this reason, we investigated the antiplatelet and antithrombotic effects of a novel and potent platelet fibrinogen receptor (glycoprotein IIb/IIIa) antagonist (SK&F 106760).

Methods: The effects of 0.

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