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  • Key words: SKS splitting, asthenosphere, plate motion, dislocation-diffusion transition.  (1)
  • Key words: X-ray irradiation—E. coli bacterium—Inflammatory lung injury—Neutrophil function—Macrophage function  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Key words: SKS splitting, asthenosphere, plate motion, dislocation-diffusion transition.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract —We examine the possibility of seismic anisotropy in the asthenosphere due to present plate motion using SKS splitting results. The fast directions of anisotropy correlate weakly with the directions of the absolute plate motion (APM) for all APM models. Weak correlation indicates the possibility of asthenospheric anisotropy as well as frozen anisotropy in the lithosphere. Detection of strain rate dependence of anisotropy is helpful to further conclusion of the problem. The selection of reference frame is important to describe shear deformation in the asthenosphere beneath continent due to plate motion. The behavior of hot spots to the mesosphere, fixed or drifted by mantle return flow, is a key of the selection of the reference frame. For the NNR-NUVEL1 model, APM correlated anisotropy appears only at plate velocity faster than 1.4 cm/yr. It suggests the new possibility of the formation of asthenospheric anisotropy in addition to frozen anisotropy in the lithosphere. A critical plate velocity for the formation of anisotropy can be caused by the dislocation-diffusion transition as a function of strain rate on a deformation mechanism map of the upper mantle olivine.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1750
    Keywords: Key words: X-ray irradiation—E. coli bacterium—Inflammatory lung injury—Neutrophil function—Macrophage function
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract. Irradiation is suspected to injure inflammatory cells, such as neutrophils and mononuclear phagocytes, cells known to contribute to the development of acute lung injury (ALI). This study examined whether preexposure to x-ray irradiation modifies ALI induced by E. coli injected intravenously in guinea pig. Thirty animals were divided into two control and two irradiated subgroups: the first control group received saline only (n= 8), and the second control group received E. coli, 2 × 109/kg body weight, suspended in saline (n= 6), IV. The first irradiated group received a single 12-Gy dose + saline (n= 6), and the second irradiated group received a single 12-Gy dose +E. coli (n= 10). The lung wet-to-dry-weight ratio (W/D) and 125I-albumin lung tissue/plasma ratio (T/P) were measured as markers of lung injury. W/D was significantly higher in the control E. coli group than in the other groups. T/P in the control E. coli group was also increased compared with T/P measured in the other groups. In the control E. coli group, a marked increase in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) neutrophils was observed compared with the control saline group. However, no significant difference in BAL neutrophil counts was observed between the control and irradiated E. coli groups. In contrast, BAL macrophages were significantly reduced in the irradiated E. coli groups compared with the control E. coli group. These findings suggest that x-ray irradiation attenuates E. coli–induced ALI in guinea pigs, an effect explained, at least in part, by a reduction in the number of alveolar macrophages.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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