635 results match your criteria: "University of Wales College of Cardiff[Affiliation]"

The long-term indwelling urethral catheter continues to be a major cause of morbidity in patients in hospitals, nursing homes and home care. Many authorities have recommended that wherever possible, alternative techniques should be considered for the management of patients with urinary retention or incontinence. This article considers the complications that develop from the urinary tract infections associated with long-term indwelling catheterization and reviews the evidence that the other options for bladder management pose less serious threats to health.

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Glutaraldehyde: current status and uses.

Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol

November 1994

Welsh School of Pharmacy, University of Wales College of Cardiff.

Glutaraldehyde (pentanedial) is a dialdehyde that displays potent bactericidal, fungicidal, mycobactericidal, sporicidal, and virucidal activity. Pertinent to its activity is its interaction with amino groups in proteins and enzymes, but this simplistic statement masks the manner in which it inactivates various types of microorganisms. Notwithstanding its toxicity for medical staff, glutaraldehyde remains an invaluable compound for high-level disinfection purposes in endoscopy units.

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Determination of fracture healing by transverse vibration measurement: a preliminary report.

J Med Eng Technol

August 1995

Medical Systems Engineering Research Unit, School of Electronic and Electrical Systems Engineering (ELSYM), University of Wales College of Cardiff, UK.

We present results from seven patients with closed mid-shaft tibial fractures and question the hypothesis that transverse wave response ratio analysis could be used to assess the progress of healing fractures. No correlation could be found between the response ratio and the post-fracture time as an indicator of bone fracture healing.

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We add a slow hyperpolarization-activated inward current IH = gHmH (v-vH) to our previous model of rebound bursting (Hindmarsh & Rose Phil. Trans. R.

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Resonance in a model of a mammalian neuron.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

October 1994

School of Mathematics, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.

In this paper we show that for a small range of voltages the model described in the previous paper (Hindmarsh & Rose Phil. Trans. R.

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A model for rebound bursting in mammalian neurons.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

October 1994

School of Mathematics, University of Wales College of Cardiff, U.K.

In this paper we begin by simplifying our previous model of a thalamic neuron (Rose & Hindmarsh Proc. R. Soc.

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1. Intracellular and patch-clamp recordings were obtained from thalamocortical (TC) cells in the rat and cat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) in vitro to study the role of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA receptors in the synaptic potential and burst firing evoked by electrical stimulation of the optic tract. 2.

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The aim of this study was to compare the visual functions of a group of young insulin dependent diabetes mellitus patients (IDDMs), (n = 42) with an age and sex matched control group (n = 24). Examinations were carried out every 3 months for 2 years. There were no significant differences in visual acuity between IDDMs and control subjects.

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Rabbit corneal endothelial cells mounted in vitro were impaled simultaneously with Na(+)-selective and conventional KCl-filled microelectrodes. The membrane potential (Vm) was -30.4 +/- 0.

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NADPH-diaphorase staining was performed on wholemount preparations of the muscularis externa (which includes the myenteric plexus) of the rat small intestine taken from animals of 4, 24 and 30 months of age. A population of NADPH-diaphorase-stained neuron cell bodies was observed predominantly in the ganglia of the plexus. There were also many stained axons throughout the plexus and in the muscularis at all ages.

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The growth of the freshwater macroinvertebrates Gammarus pulex (L.) and Chironomus riparius Meigen exposed to 3,4-dichloroaniline in chambers within stream mesocosms was determined. DCA significantly affected the growth of neonate G.

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DNA encoding the last 48 residues of the propart and the whole mature sequence of Plasmepsin II was inserted into the T7 dependent vector pET 3a for expression in E. coli. The resultant product was insoluble but accumulated at approximately 20 mg/l of cell culture.

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The existence of direct synaptic input from the neocortex to intermediate zone and white matter interstitial neurons was examined in both neonate and adult cats. This projection was studied by injecting the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) into the neocortex and examining whether cortical efferent axons formed synapses in the intermediate zone or white matter. Anterogradely labeled boutons establishing synapses in the intermediate zone and white matter were found at the electron microscopic level after injecting PHA-L into the primary visual, somatosensory, and suprasylvian cortex.

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Neurons are polarized secretory cells whose cytoplasm and plasma membrane are polarized to form two compartments: dendrites and axons. In mature, fully polarized neurons, the microtubule-associated protein Map2 is targeted to dendrites, while tau is mainly restricted to axons. However, the intraneuronal distribution of secretory pathway organelles, such as the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi complex, which give rise to all constitutive, regulated and lysosome vesicles, is poorly understood.

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Previous studies have shown that a random-dot kinematogram (RDK) comprising dots, each of which takes a random walk in direction or speed over time, can appear to flow in a single direction. This has been interpreted as evidence for the existence of a co-operative network linking neurons sensitive to different directions/speeds and different spatial locations. We have investigated the possibility that global motion perception in such patterns might simply reflect motion energy detection at a coarse spatial scale (such that many dots fall in the receptive field of one energy detector) without the need to encode local dot motions on a fine spatial scale and then integrate their motions over space.

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The present study distinguished between personal self-esteem (PSE) and collective self-esteem (CSE) as determinants of in-group bias in an intergroup context. Subjects performed a group task, the product of which they subsequently evaluated ('own' group), along with solutions allegedly produced by another 'in-group' (similar nationality), and an 'out-group' (different nationality). This provided the opportunity for intragroup discrimination (own vs.

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The sensitivity of the microaerophilic protozoan Trichomonas vaginalis to oxygen and products of its reduction, and the antioxidant defences employed by this organism, were investigated. Studies revealed that this amitochondrial flagellate is sensitive to oxygen tensions above those experienced in situ in the vagina (i.e.

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A new approach was used to measure anterior and posterior potentials and resistances of the bovine lens. Segments of the anterior, central and posterior lens were studied by mounting a disc of tissue from either the front or the back of the lens in a double chamber. At 35 degrees C the isolated anterior epithelial preparation exhibited a high potential of 9 mV and a low resistance of 279 omega cm2.

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HSV-1 derived amplicons expressing cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase (pA-SF1), or plasma membrane targeted TIMP-Thy1 (pA-TT1), were used to transduce glial cells in vitro. By monitoring the expression of reporter genes from both amplicons and helper virus, we determined that many cells were infected by both particles. In glial cells infected only by pA-SF1 beta-galactosidase immunoreactivity was restricted to the cytoplasm; co-infection with helper HSV-1 (wild type), resulted in additional nuclear beta-galactosidase immunoreactivity.

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A clearer understanding of the role of descending systems in motor control can be achieved by using in vitro preparations of mammalian spinal cord that display patterned motor output, together with the use of selective pharmacological agents. It has been suggested that 5-HT is involved in either the initiation or the modulation of certain motor behaviours, and that it acts to enhance or regulate the motor pattern. Most attention has been paid to the locomotor rhythms underlying walking or swimming, and in respiratory pattern generation.

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Cytoskeleton of cartilage cells.

Microsc Res Tech

August 1994

Department of Anatomy, University of Wales College of Cardiff, United Kingdom.

The cytoskeleton of chondrocytes consists of microfilaments made of actin, microtubules made of tubulin, and intermediate filaments made of a variety of subunits. Actin filaments are not prominent in vivo but may form in vitro. In culture, changes in filament polymerisation are important in determining cell shape, initiating chondrogenesis, and maintaining the chondrogenic phenotype.

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