28 results match your criteria: "University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine 90095[Affiliation]"
AJR Am J Roentgenol
August 1995
Department of Radiological Sciences, University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine 90095-1721, USA.
Objective: Radiographic exposure has been thought to have little impact on the diagnostic quality of chest computed radiography because of automatic digital control of global optical density. The objectives of this study were to compare images obtained with two different exposures in computed radiography with conventional and asymmetric screen-film images of the chest for the detection of simulated lung nodules by use of receiver operating characteristic analysis and to relate differences in observer performance to parameters of image noise measured for each receptor condition.
Materials And Methods: At 110 kVp (fixed), exposures for the two screen-film systems were those necessary to achieve adequate optical densities over the lung and mediastinal regions of an anthropomorphic phantom.
Neurosci Lett
June 1995
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine 90095-1763, USA.
Regions within the rostral ventral medullary surface (RVMS) play an important role in cardiorespiratory responses to CO2 during anesthesia. Activity within a RVMS area, in which local cooling elicited marked ventilatory and blood pressure reductions, was measured as 660 nm scattered light changes in 5 goats following 5% CO2 challenges during waking and anesthetic states. During wakefulness, hypercapnia elicited a substantial, short latency transient (1-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Biol
June 1995
Department of Physiology, University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine 90095-1751, USA.
Burmese pythons normally consume large meals after long intervals. We measured gut contents, O2 consumption rates, small intestinal brush-border uptake rates of amino acids and glucose, organ masses and blood chemistry in pythons during the 30 days following ingestion of meals equivalent to 25% of their body mass. Within 1-3 days after ingestion, O2 consumption rates, intestinal nutrient uptake rates and uptake capacities peaked at 17, 6-26 and 11-24 times fasting levels, respectively.
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