84 research outputs found
Search for Time-Reversal Violation in the beta-Decay of Polarized 8Li Nuclei
The transverse polarization of electrons emitted in the beta-decay of
polarized 8Li nuclei has been measured. For the time reversal violating triple
correlation parameter we find R = (0.9 +- 2.2)x10^{-3}. This result is in
agreement with the standard model and yields improved constraints on exotic
tensor contributions to the weak interaction. It also provides a new limit on
the mass of a possible scalar leptoquark, m_{LQ} > 560 GeV/c^2 (90% C.L.).Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters, 4 pages, 3 figures, uses
revtex
Zinc absorption in adult men from a chicken sandwich made with white or wholemeal bread, measured by a double-label stable-isotope technique
Beneficial Effects of Probiotic and Food Borne Yeasts on Human Health
Besides being important in the fermentation of foods and beverages, yeasts have shown numerous beneficial effects on human health. Among these, probiotic effects are the most well known health effects including prevention and treatment of intestinal diseases and immunomodulatory effects. Other beneficial functions of yeasts are improvement of bioavailability of minerals through the hydrolysis of phytate, folate biofortification and detoxification of mycotoxins due to surface binding to the yeast cell wall
Drug therapy in peptic ulcer disease
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/28099/1/0000546.pd
Release of intestinal diamine oxidase by histamine in rats
Diamine oxidase activity was measured in the intestinal mucosa, lymph, and in the serum of rats, to determine whether histamine, a substrate of diamine oxidase, liberates this enzyme from its mucosal storage site(s). Histamine induced a sharp rise in intestinal lymph flow, lymph protein, and lymph diamine oxidase, lasting less than 1 h after the histamine injection. The rise in lymph diamine oxidase activity was dose dependent over a narrow concentration range (0.05–0.2 mmol/kg, i.v. and 0.15–0.6 mmol/kg i.d.). It did not correlate with the dose dependent increase in lymph flow or lymph protein. A single maximal intraduodenal dose of histamine caused a 41.6-fold increase in the lymph diamine oxidase activity and a 2.4-fold increase in the serum enzyme level temporarily. A second injection of histamine, 2 h after the first, resulted in a comparatively smaller increase in the lymph enzyme. The extent of the reduction was dependent on the magnitude of the first injection. The results suggest that histamine causes a limited liberation of diamine oxidase from the intestinal mucosa. The function of this enzyme release may be a protective response by the mucosa to reduce toxic levels of free histamine, either liberated by the mucosal tissue or absorbed from the intestinal lumen. </jats:p
New approach to the separation and identification of some methylated histamine derivatives by gas chromatography
Quantitative determination of histamine metabolites by capillary gas chromatography
A method using capillary gas chromatography is described for the determination of histamine and eight of its basic and acid metabolites in a single biological sample of serum, urine, or gastric juice. Ion-exchange chromatography and extraction with organic solvents are used for isolation and purification, and gas chromatography for identification and quantitation. The heptafluorobutyryl derivatives of histamine and some basic metabolites are compatible with nitrogen–phosphorus and electron capture detection modes and offer an excellent sensitivity (detection limit 0.1 pmol with electron capture). The acid metabolites are quantitated after esterification. The linearity range, the sensitivity, a partial study of reproducibility and typical chromatograms show that the method is adaptable to a variety of applications. </jats:p
Effect of intestinal ischemia on diamine oxidase activity in rat intestinal tissue and blood
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