Search results for "Locke"
showing 10 items of 332 documents
Intramedullary nailing vs. palmar locked plating for unstable dorsally comminuted distal radius fractures: A biomechanical study
2010
Abstract Background The purpose of this study was to compare the stability of a 2.4 mm palmar locking compression plate and a new intramedullary nail-plate-hybrid Targon DR for dorsally comminuted distal radius fractures. Methods An extraarticular 10 mm dorsally open wedge osteotomy was created in 8 pairs of fresh frozen human radii to simulate an AO–A3-fracture. The fractures were stabilized using one of the fixation methods. The specimens were loaded axially with 200 N and dorsal-excentrically with 80 N. 2000 cycles of dynamic loading and axial loading-to-failure were performed. Findings Axial loading revealed that intramedullary osteosynthesis (Targon DR: 369 N/mm) was significantly ( p …
Overview and performance comparison of grid synchronization algorithms
2014
Distributed power generation units are experiencing an impressive growth. Consequently, the amount of energy injected by non-linear loads as power converters is expected to increase. Stability and quality of the overall grid are heavily affected by performances of grid-side converters. In this paper, an overview of grid-synchronization technique is proposed. The grid-side inverter is implemented in MATLAB/Simulink® environment including current control and grid-synchronization section. Both Synchronous Reference Frame (SRF) and Decoupled Double Synchronous Reference Frame (DDSRF) PLL algorithms are implemented. A performance comparison is carried out under ideal and unbalanced utility condi…
The Egan problem on the pull-in range of type 2 PLLs
2021
In 1981, famous engineer William F. Egan conjectured that a higher-order type 2 PLL with an infinite hold-in range also has an infinite pull-in range, and supported his conjecture with some third-order PLL implementations. Although it is known that for the second-order type 2 PLLs the hold-in range and the pull-in range are both infinite, the present paper shows that the Egan conjecture may be not valid in general. We provide an implementation of the third-order type 2 PLL, which has an infinite hold-in range and experiences stable oscillations. This implementation and the Egan conjecture naturally pose a problem, which we will call the Egan problem: to determine a class of type 2 PLLs for …
18F-fluorodeoxyglucose hypometabolism in cerebellar tonsil and flocculus in downbeat nystagmus.
2006
A patient with downbeat nystagmus was examined by F-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography once while off and twice while on successful treatment with 4-aminopyridine. All positron emission tomography scans of the patient showed a reduced cerebral glucose metabolism bilaterally in the region of the cerebellar tonsil and flocculus/paraflocculus when compared with a normal database of the whole brain. An additional region-of-interest analysis revealed that 4-aminopyridine treatment lessened the hypometabolism. This finding supports the hypothesis that the cerebellar tonsil and (para-) flocculus play a crucial role in downbeat nystagmus. The hypometabolism might reflect reduced inhibi…
P23. Large demyelinating lesion of the pons as a cause of a locked-in syndrome in multiple sclerosis
2007
Arachidonic acid relaxes human pulmonary arteries through K+ channels and nitric oxide pathways.
2004
We aimed to investigate the role of K(+) channels and nitric oxide (NO) on the relaxant effects of arachidonic acid in the human intralobar pulmonary arteries. Arachidonic acid produced a concentration-dependent relaxation (E(max)=93+/-3% of maximal relaxation induced by papaverine 0.1 mM;-log EC(30)=7.03+/-0.09) that was antagonized by the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin (1 microM), by the combination of cyclooxygenase blockade and cytochrome P450 (CYP) blockade with 17-octadecynoic acid (17-ODYA, 10 microM), by the combination of cyclooxygenase inhibition and NO synthase (NOS) inhibition with N(omega)-nitro-l-arginine (l-NOARG, 100 microM), by the simultaneous inhibition of CYP and …
Vasodilator Effects of Liriodenine and Norushinsunine, Two Aporphine Alkaloids Isolated from <i>Annona cherimolia,</i>in Rat Aorta
1995
The effect of two aporphines, liriodenine and norushinsunine, isolated from Annona cherimolia, were studied in the rat aorta in order to examine their mechanism of action. Both alkaloids (10–7–10–4 mol/l) showed relaxant effects on the contractions elicited by 10–6 mol/l noradrenaline (NA) or 80 mmol/l KC1, but, while liriodenine showed a nonspecific relaxant action on both spasmogens, norushinsunine was more potent on KC1-induced contraction. In Ca2+-free medium, both alkaloids (0.1 mmol/l) inhibited the responses elicited by NA, but not those elicited by caffeine. This inhibitory action occurred when the alkaloids were present during the release of the Ca2+ internal stores or during the r…
Cardiovascular effects induced by rolipram, a selective cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor: Interaction with adrenergic and calcium affecting drugs
1990
Biochemical Characterization of a Novel Channel-Activating Site on Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors
1993
We have studied the interaction of the reversible acetylcholine esterase inhibitor (-)physostigmine and several structurally related compounds with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) from Torpedo marmorata electric tissue by means of ligand-induced ion flux into nAChR-rich membrane vesicles, direct binding studies and photoaffinity labeling. (-)Physostigmine acts as a channel-activating ligand at low concentrations and as a direct channel blocker at elevated concentrations. Channel activation is not inhibited by desensitizing concentrations of ACh or ACh-competitive ligands (including alpha-bungarotoxin and D-tubocurarine) but is inhibited by antibody FK1 and several other compoun…
Kinetics and state-dependent effects of verapamil on cardiac L-type calcium channels.
1996
The voltage dependence and the kinetics of block by verapamil of L-type calcium current (ICa) were investigated in ventricular myocytes from rat hearts using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. ICa was elicited repetitively in response to depolarizing voltage pulses from -80 mV to 0 mV at different pulse intervals and durations. Verapamil reduced the magnitude of ICa in a frequency-dependent manner without tonic component. The time course of ICa remained unchanged suggesting that not open but inactivated channels were affected by the drug. The interaction of verapamil with inactivated channels was investigated by the application of twin pulses. In the presence of verapamil, the duration o…