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  • Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy  (2)
  • Chlordiazepoxide  (2)
  • Scanning acoustic microscopy  (2)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Cocaine ; Chlordiazepoxide ; Chlorpromazine ; Drug self-administration ; Drugs and schedule-controlled behavior ; Drug effects on behaviors maintained by different reinforcing events
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Lever pressing by squirrel monkeys was maintained under second-order schedules of either food presentation or IM cocaine injection. Under one second-order schedule, every tenth response produced a brief (1-s) visual stimulus and the first brief stimulus presented after 30 min had elapsed was followed either by ten 300 mg food pellets or by a 3.0 mg IM injection of cocaine. Under another second-order schedule, the first response after 3 min produced the brief stimulus and the tenth brief stimulus was followed either by food or by cocaine. The two types of second-order schedules generated distinctly different patterns of responding. Furthermore, the temporal distribution of responding maintained by food presentation or cocaine injection sometimes differed slightly under the same schedule. Food presentation or cocaine injection occurred only at the end of each daily session, thereby allowing assessment of the effects of presession administration of cocaine, chlorpromazine (CPZ), and chlordiazepoxide (CDP) on responding at times when the direct effects of consequent cocaine injections were minimal or absent. Presession treatment with suitable doses of cocaine increased low rates of food- or cocaine-maintained responding under both types of second-order schedules, whereas CPZ only decreased responding. CDP increased responding in some monkeys, whereas in other monkeys it had little or no effect. Individual differences in the effects of CDP were not related to the schedule of reinforcement, the maintaining event, or the control rate of responding. Thus, the behavioral effects of cocaine, CDP, and CPZ were largely independent of whether responding was maintained by food or by cocaine.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Psychopharmacology 110 (1993), S. 60-68 
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Opioid antagonists ; Opioid agonists ; Enhanced sensitivity ; Amphetamine ; Chlordiazepoxide ; Schedule-controlled behavior ; Rats
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Rats treated weekly with cumulative doses (1–100 mg/kg, IP) of naltrexone develop an enhanced sensitivity to the operant response-rate decreasing effect of naltrexone. In the present experiment the pharmacological specificity of that enhanced sensitivity was determined by testing a variety of drugs for cross-sensitivity to naltrexone. Cross-sensitivity was evaluated with two procedures. In one, dose-effect functions were determined for each of the test compounds before and after the development of enhanced sensitivity to naltrexone in a single group of rats. In the second procedure, one group of rats was made sensitive to naltrexone, while a second was not. Test compounds were then evaluated in both groups. For both procedures, a shift to the left in the dose-effect functions similar to naltrexone was considered evidence of cross-sensitivity. Of the opioid antagonists tested, only naloxone showed clear cross-sensitivity to naltrexone, although MR 2266 and diprenorphine also showed evidence of cross-sensitivity. The opioid antagonist quadazocine did not show cross-sensitivity to naltrexone on the day of testing, although some evidence of cross-sensitivity was evident 24 h later. In addition, the dose-effect function ford-amphetamine was significantly changed following naltrexone treatment. No evidence of cross-sensitivity was observed for the optical isomer of naloxone,d-naloxone, or for naloxone's quaternary derivative, naloxone methiodide. None of the opioid agonists or agonist-antagonists tested showed cross-sensitivity to naltrexone (i.e. morphine, U-50, 488H, ethylketocyclazocine,N-allylnormetazocine and pentazocine). The non-opioid drugs chlordiazepoxide and phencyclidine also failed to show evidence of cross-sensitivity. However, the dose-effect curves for chlordiazepoxide were shifted significantly to the right following naltrexone treatment. The results of the present experiment indicate that the enhanced sensitivity which develops to naltrexone in rats is stereospecific and centrally mediated. The effect is specific, in that it does not appear to confer changes in the behavioral effects of non-opioids or even opioid agonists.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell
    Biological Mass Spectrometry 6 (1972), S. 843-851 
    ISSN: 0030-493X
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The individual, deuterated, isomeric α- and β-carotenes were isolated from the green alga, Scenedesmus obliquus, cultivated in D2O containing 99·7 to 99·8 atom percent deuterium. Mass spectroscopy showed that both the α- and β-deuterio-carotene preparations contained principally the fully deuterated pigment molecules (C40D56), small quantities of deuterated molecules with one proton (C40D55H) and yet smaller quantities of deuterated molecules with two protons (C40D54H2). From statistical calculations the deuterio-carotene preparations also contained one to several isotopically-substituted deuterio-carotenes of each mass in the mass range 585 to 599 because of variation of the number of 13C and H atoms per molecule. The mass fragmentation of the deuterated pigments was analogous to that of the respective ordinary α- and β-carotene. It indicated that the protons in the C40D55H and C40D54H2 molecules were distributed approximately randomly in various parts of the structure as in the terminal rings and in the ends and central portions of the polyene chain.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester : Wiley-Blackwell
    Biological Mass Spectrometry 5 (1971), S. 565-572 
    ISSN: 0030-493X
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: High resolution mass spectrometry has been employed to establish the structural formulae of the unique carotenoid pigment siphonaxanthin, its natural ester, siphonein and several derivatives. Siphonaxanthin exhibits a fragmentation reaction that is unusual among carotenoid pigments, namely, the elimination of carbon dioxide, observed as [M - CO2] and [M - (CO2 + H2O)]. This reaction involves the migration of an oxygen atom. Siphonaxanthol, a partially hydrogenated siphonaxanthin, exhibits a similar reaction involving the elimination of carbon monoxide and formaldehyde. From the fragmentation of derivatives of siphonaxanthin, such as the triacetate, the dimethyl ether and siphonaxanthol, and also from the fragmentation of related pigments, such as loroxanthin and fucoxanthin, the unique structural units responsible for the elimination of the carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide have been identified.
    Additional Material: 4 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Hoboken, NJ [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Orthopaedic Research 7 (1989), S. 607-611 
    ISSN: 0736-0266
    Keywords: Total hip arthroplasty ; Bone remodeling ; Ultrasound ; Elastic stiffnesses ; Scanning acoustic microscopy ; Life and Medical Sciences
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Total hip arthroplasty causes biomechanical changes in the normal femur, including a redistribution and concentration of stress. These mechanical alterations in the femur cause local remodeling and resorption that affect the geometry and mechanical properties of the bone. Two complementary ultrasonic techniques were used to study the local adaptive remodeling of bone due to prosthesis implantation. An ultrasonic wave propagation technique was used to determine elastic properties and a new scanning acoustic microscope (SAM) mapped the acoustic impedance profile of each section. The effects of the implantation of two types of hip prostheses, an uncemented bipolar prosthesis with an Austin-Moore type stem and a cemented Charnley prosthesis, were investigated. Both prostheses had a detrimental effect on local elastic properties as determined by acoustic velocity measurements. The SAM system provided information about local inhomogeneities in bone properties not obtainable by any other means. The acoustic impedance maps highlighted bone resorption and bone remodeling on a microstructural level.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Hoboken, NJ [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Journal of Orthopaedic Research 6 (1988), S. 770-775 
    ISSN: 0736-0266
    Keywords: Scanning acoustic microscopy ; Acoustic impedance mapping ; Bone-implant interface ; Bone micromechanics ; Life and Medical Sciences
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: A relatively simple scanning acoustic microscope (SAM) that operates in the reflection mode has been constructed. The system uses a 20 MHz spherically focused transducer, acting both as transmitter and as detector, to obtain acoustic impedance information on a thin surface layer at a maximum resolution of approximately 100 μm. The specimen is mounted on an X-Y driving system (precision, 5 μm) under computer control in order to scan a grid of 256 × 256 points across areas ranging from 6.5 to 1300 mm2. An algorithm is used to reference the data against standards; specially developed software provides for pseudo-color mapping, three-dimensional images, zooming to 16X magnification, contouring, and single line profiles of the data. The system has been used to determine inhomogeneities in surface acoustic properties of mineralized tissues and implant materials, in many cases as a complement to using ultrasonic wave propagation techniques to measure the bulk anisotropic properties.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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