Search results for "Stability"

showing 10 items of 3085 documents

Chemical stability of tramadol hydrochloride injection admixed with selected pain drugs

2011

Background: Tramadol hydrochloride (HCl) and ketorolac tromethamine are analgesic drugs, which are commonly used in combination in postoperative pain management. According to some studies, metoclopramide and magnesium sulfate (MgSO4 ) as adjuvant agents can improve analgesia and decrease the need for other pain drugs. Materials and Methods: The chemical stability of tramadol HCl combined with ketorolac tromethamine and metoclopramide HCl has been studied using a stability-indicating high-performance liquid chromatographic assay method. Calibration curves were produced using linear regression of the peak area against concentration of each drug, with an r 2 value ≥ 0.96. Our aim was to invest…

MetoclopramideAdmixture analgesia ketorolac tromethamine magnesium sulfate metoclopramide hydrochloride stabilityChemistryMagnesiumShort CommunicationAnalgesicchemistry.chemical_elementanalgesiaGeneral MedicineAdmixtureMetoclopramide HydrochloridestabilityKetorolac TromethamineSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaKetorolacmetoclopramide hydrochloridemagnesium sulfateketorolac tromethamineAnesthesiamedicineTramadol HydrochlorideTramadolmedicine.drugInternational Journal of Pharmaceutical Investigation
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Characterization of two Lactococcus lactis zinc membrane proteins, Llmg_0524 and Llmg_0526, and role of Llmg_0524 in cell wall integrity

2015

Background Due to its extraordinary chemical properties, the cysteine amino acid residue is often involved in protein folding, electron driving, sensing stress, and binding metals such as iron or zinc. Lactococcus lactis, a Gram-positive bacterium, houses around one hundred cysteine-rich proteins (with the CX2C motif) in the cytoplasm, but only a few in the membrane. Results In order to understand the role played by this motif we focused our work on two membrane proteins of unknown function: Llmg_0524 and Llmg_0526. Each of these proteins has two CX2C motifs separated by ten amino-acid residues (CX2CX10CX2C). Together with a short intervening gene (llmg_0525), the genes of these two protein…

Microbiology (medical)Lysozymechemistry.chemical_elementZincPlasma protein bindingGrowthMicrobiologyMembrane proteins;Growth;Cumene hydroperoxideProtein structureBacterial ProteinsCumene hydroperoxideCell Wallcystéinelactococcus lactisMembrane proteinsBenzene Derivatives[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyCysteineBinding siteBinding SitesbiologyProtein StabilityLactococcus lactispropriété de membranebiology.organism_classificationcroissanceProtein Structure Tertiary3. Good healthZincchemistryBiochemistryMembrane proteinProtein foldingProtein BindingResearch ArticleCysteine
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Construction of simplified microbial consortia to degrade recalcitrant materials based on enrichment and dilution-to-extinction cultures

2019

AbstractThe capacity of microbes degrading recalcitrant materials has been extensively explored from environmental remediation to industrial applications. Although significant achievements were obtained with single strains, focus is now going toward the use of microbial consortia because of advantages in terms of functional stability and efficiency. While consortia assembly attempts were made from several known single strains, another approach consists in obtaining consortia from complex environmental microbial communities in search for novel microbial species, genes and functions. However, assembling efficient microbial consortia from complex environmental communities is far from trivial d…

Microbiology (medical)Serial dilutionEnvironmental remediationenrichment cultivation[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]lcsh:QR1-502Microbiologybiodegradationlcsh:Microbiologysimplified microbial consortiaTaxonomic composition03 medical and health sciencesFunctional stabilitydilution-to-extinction030304 developmental biologyOriginal Research0303 health sciencesChemistry030306 microbiologyfood and beveragesBiodegradationMicrobial consortiumDilutionDegradation (geology)Environmental scienceBiochemical engineeringrecalcitrant materials
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Gelation behavior of 5-chloro-8-hydroxyquinoline, an antituberculosis agent, in aqueous alcohol solutions

2012

It was shown that 5-chloro-8-hydroxyquinoline, an antituberculosis agent, gels aqueous alcohol solutions efficiently. Thermal stability and gel-to-sol transition temperature of 1% gel in CD3OD/D2O (2:1) was studied by 1H-NMR. Fibrous structures of four xerogels have been characterized by scanning electron microscope. peerReviewed

Microbiology (medical)gelScanning electron microscope5-kloori-8-hydroksikinoliinigel; 5-chloro-8-hydroxyquinoline; <em>Mycobacterium </em><em>tuberculosis</em>gelationBiochemistryMicrobiologyArticle5-chloro-8-hydroxyquinolinechemistry.chemical_compoundOrganic chemistryPharmacology (medical)Thermal stabilityGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceuticsta116Aqueous alcoholgeelin muodostusTransition temperature5-chloro-8-hydoxyquinolinelcsh:RM1-950Antituberculosis agent8-HydroxyquinolineMycobacterium tuberculosisInfectious Diseaseslcsh:Therapeutics. PharmacologychemistryNuclear chemistryAntibiotics
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Stability of chitin synthetase in cell-free preparations of a wild-type strain and a 'slime' variant of Neurospora crassa.

1991

Chitin synthetase activity in cell-free preparations from a wild-type strain and a 'slime' variant of Neurospora crassa was monitored over many days in samples stored at 0 degrees C. Total activity in whole-cell-free extracts and low-speed supernatants from both organisms was very unstable, losing more than 90% of the initial activity on storage at 0 degrees C for 96 h. Chitin synthetase detection was not masked by chitinase activity present in the preparations. Gel-filtration chromatography of these preparations increased the stability of the activity from the 'slime' variant, whereas removal of particulate structures by high-speed centrifugation stabilized the chitin synthetase activity i…

MicrobiologyCell-free systemMicrobiologyNeurospora crassachemistry.chemical_compoundChitinEnzyme StabilityGeneticsCentrifugationMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationChitin SynthasebiologyCell-Free SystemNeurospora crassafungiWild typeGenetic VariationChitin synthasebiology.organism_classificationcarbohydrates (lipids)KineticsEnzymechemistryBiochemistryChitinasebiology.proteinFEMS microbiology letters
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Redistribution of tax resources: a cooperative game theory approach

2021

AbstractWe consider the problem of how to distribute public expenditure among the different regions of an economic entity after all taxes have been collected. Typical examples are: the regions that make up a country, the states of a federal country, or the countries of a confederation of countries. We model the problem as a cooperative game in coalitional form, called the tax game. This game estimates the fiscal resources collected in each region, or coalition of regions, by differentiating between what comes from economic activity within each region and what comes from trade with the other regions. This methodology provides a measure of the disagreement within a region, or coalitions of re…

MicroeconomicsCore (game theory)EconomicsStability (learning theory)Public expenditureRedistribution (cultural anthropology)Cooperative game theoryEconomiaPlanificació fiscalGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceShapley valueBudget allocationPublic finance
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Coordination of Wage Bargaining, Exchange Rate Stability and External Adjustment

2016

The literature on the determinants of the rate of current account reversion has been limited to examining the role of exchange rate regimes. We propose that the degree of coordination of wage bargaining affects the speed of current account adjustment. Our point estimates are economically and statistically significant, suggesting that fragmented firm-level wage bargaining facilitates external adjustment. We also find a strong negative interaction between the effects of coordination of wage bargaining and exchange rate stability on the rate of current account reversion.

MicroeconomicsExchange rateEconomicsCurrent accountPoint estimationMonetary economicsStability (probability)health care economics and organizationsDegree (temperature)Wage bargainingSSRN Electronic Journal
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Self-enforcing international environmental agreements with a stock pollutant

2005

In this paper the stability of an International Environmental Agreement (IEA) among N identical countries that emit a pollutant are studied using a two-stage game. In the first stage each country decides noncooperatively whether or not to join an IEA, and in the second stage signatories jointly against nonsignatories determine their emissions in a dynamic setting defined in continuous time. For this second stage we have studied both the open-loop Nash equilibrium and the feedback Nash equilibrium. A numerical simulation shows that a bilateral coalition is the unique self-enforcing IEA independently of the gains coming from cooperation and the kind of strategies played by the agents (open-lo…

MicroeconomicsPollutantsymbols.namesakeNash equilibriumsymbolsStability (learning theory)EconomicsJoin (sigma algebra)Stage (hydrology)Environmental economicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinancePublic badStock (geology)Spanish Economic Review
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Multistage Dynamics of International Environmental Agreements: Free-riding from Membership and Compliance*

2009

Abstract In dealing with the multistage dynamics of international environmental agreements (IEAs), it is necessary to analyze the dynamics of global emission level associated with the corresponding abatement process. We model multilateral collaboration among countries as a two-level coalitional game of heterogeneous players with a stepwise emission reduction over a finite and discretized period of time. The formed coalition is assumed to hold a leader's position in the game, and the players that did not join the agreement (free-riders) are assumed to accept a position of the followers. To analyze fulfillment of the emission reduction targets, we construct a time-consistent abatement scheme,…

MicroeconomicsReduction (complexity)IncentiveProcess (engineering)Time consistencyWelfare economicsStability (learning theory)EconomicsPosition (finance)Compliance (psychology)Free ridingIFAC Proceedings Volumes
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Self-Enforcing International Environmental Agreements: Adaptation and Complementarity

2018

This paper studies the impact of adaptation on the stability of an international emission agreement. To address this issue we solve a three-stage coalition formation game where in the first stage countries decide whether or not to sign the agreement. Then, in the second stage, signatories (playing together) and non-signatories (playing individually) select their levels of emissions. Finally, in the third stage, each country decides on its level of adaptation non co-operatively. We solve this game for two models. For both, it is assumed that damages are linear with respect to emissions which guarantee that emissions are strategic complements in the second stage of the game. However, for the …

MicroeconomicsStrategic complementsYield (finance)Complementarity (molecular biology)EconomicsDamagesStability (learning theory)Adaptation (computer science)Discount pointsOutcome (game theory)SSRN Electronic Journal
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