To assess the effect of incorporating virtual patient activities in a pharmacy skills lab on student competence and confidence when conducting real-time comprehensive clinic visits with mock patients. Students were randomly assigned to a control or intervention group. The control group completed the clinic visit prior to completing virtual patient activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElongation factor 1 alpha (eEF1A) is a positively charged protein which has been shown to interact with the actin cytoskeleton. However, to date, a specific actin binding site within the eEF1A sequence has not been identified and the mechanism by which eEF1A interacts with actin remains unresolved. Many protein-protein interactions occur as a consequence of their physicochemical properties and actin bundle formation has been shown to result from non-specific electrostatic interaction with basic proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral anticonvulsant agents, including topiramate and valproate, have been found to reduce alcohol consumption in rodent models of drinking. The question of whether the novel anticonvulsant agent, zonisamide, shares similar actions in either mice or rats was investigated in the present experiments. In an initial experiment, the consumption of a 10% ethanol-5% sucrose solution, available for one hour, by Wistar rats treated with lactose, topiramate, or zonisamide was determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuccessful imaging of living human cells using atomic force microscopy (AFM) is influenced by many variables including cell culture conditions, cell morphology, surface topography, scan parameters, and cantilever choice. In this study, these variables were investigated while imaging two morphologically distinct human cell lines, namely LL24 (fibroblasts) and NCI H727 (epithelial) cells. The cell types used in this study were found to require different parameter settings to produce images showing the greatest detail.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present experiment compared the nociceptive threshold and analgesic response to morphine in young (4-5 months) and aged (24 months) rats using peripheral thermal stimulation and intracerebral electrical stimulation. Responses to thermal stimuli were assessed using both the classical tail-flick procedure in which latency of response is the dependent variable and a new method in which threshold in calories of heat is the dependent variable. In the intracerebral nociceptive threshold procedure, electrical stimuli were delivered via an electrode implanted in the mesencephalic reticular formation (MRF), a pain pathway, and the animals were trained to terminate the stimulation by turning a cylindrical manipulandum embedded in one wall of the experimental chamber.
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