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Jeong YG, Lee KY, Lee BC, Lee NS, Lee KY, Won MH, Fukui Y. Post-natal changes of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 activator expression in the developing rat cerebellum. Anat Histol Embryol 2005; 34:20-6. [PMID: 15649222 DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0264.2004.00555.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
Abstract
cDNA of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) was cloned based on its primary sequence homology to Cdc2 and Cdk2. Cdk5 requires the neuronal Cdk5 activators such as p35 or p39(nck5ai) (p39) for its activity. In this study, we examined post-natal changes in the p39 expression pattern during the development of the rat cerebellum. p39 began to express in somata and dendrites of Purkinje cells at post-natal day 3 (PD3). In particular, at PD12, parasagittal bands (stripes) with p39 immunoreactivity were weakly observed. At PD21, p39-immunoreactive stripes were developed when compared with the PD12 group. At this age stage, p39 immunoreactivity became weak in somata of Purkinje cells, not forming stripes. At PD28, a series of parasagittal bands were more distinct than those of the PD21 group, and p39 immunoreactivity disappeared in Purkinje cells, not forming p39 immunoreactive stripes. In the adults, p39 immunoreactivity in Purkinje cells was similar to that found in the PD28 group which showed that parasagittal bands were very narrow, and became progressively more slender. Therefore, we suggest that the post-natal changes of p39 expression in Purkinje cells in the cerebellum is an autonomous characteristic of Purkinje cells with a role of Cdk5 activators.
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Moriguchi J, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Shimbo S, Sakurai H, Ikeda M. Decreases in urine specific gravity and urinary creatinine in elderly women. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 2005; 78:438-45. [PMID: 15959741 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-004-0597-z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/03/2004] [Accepted: 11/04/2004] [Indexed: 10/25/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine the effects of aging on urinary levels of creatinine (CR) and urine specific gravity (SG) among women in a large-scale epidemiology survey. METHODS Data on CR and SG in urine, together with smoking habits and menopausal status, were selected from previously established databases and combined with the results of supplemental sample collection. In total, CR and SG data were available for 11,090 never-smoking women (total group; 29-80 years of age); a subgroup of 1,851 women who lived in Kyoto was also selected from the total group. Data from the two groups were subjected to statistical analyses. In statistical evaluation, SG was converted to factor G, which was defined as (SG-1.000)x1,000. RESULTS Classification by decade of years of age showed that both CR and SG decreased steadily as a function of advancement in age over 30 years, both in the total group and in the Kyoto subgroup, showing high reproducibility of the observation on a whole-country basis and on a local basis. When the levels at 80 years of age were compared with those at 30 years, there was an approximately 60% and 30% decrease in CR and factor G, respectively. Thus, the effects of aging were more marked on CR than on factor G (and therefore on SG). Menopause appeared to be an influential factor in the reduction of CR and SG, separately from aging itself. CONCLUSIONS Urinary levels of creatinine and, to a lesser extent, urine specific gravity, steadily decreased as a function of ages of over 30 years in women.
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Moriguchi J, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Shimbo S, Sakurai H, Ikeda M. Effects of aging on cadmium and tubular dysfunction markers in urine from adult women in non-polluted areas. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 2005; 78:446-51. [PMID: 15942774 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-004-0598-y] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/03/2004] [Accepted: 11/04/2004] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVES The objectives of the present analyses were to examine if Cd and tubular dysfunction marker levels in urine show age-dependent changes among women who lived in areas with no known cadmium (Cd) pollution in Japan, and if the trends would be further modified by correction of analyte concentration in terms of urinary creatinine (CR or cr) or urine specific gravity (SG or sg). METHODS The results of urinalysis for Cd, alpha(1)-microglobulin (alpha(1)-MG), beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)-MG), and N-acetyl-beta-D: -glucosaminidase (NAG) concentrations together with CR and SG were cited from previously established databases. A majority of urine samples were collected in 2000-2002 from adult women (mostly at 40-60 years of age) in various areas in Japan, and the collection was supplemented by cases of > or =60-year-old women in 2003. In total, 11,090 never-smoking cases were subjected to statistical analysis. The values as observed (e.g., Cd(ob)), together with after correction for CR (e.g., Cd(cr)) or SG (e.g., Cd(sg)), were examined by linear regression analysis after logarithmic conversion. RESULTS The geometric mean (GM) values for Cd were 1.10 microg/l (as observed) or 1.32 microg/g cr (after correction for creatinine concentration). No increases were found in the levels of alpha(1)-MG, beta(2)-MG or NAG on a group basis, in agreement with the conditions that there was no known environmental pollution with Cd in the sampling areas. There were almost linear increases in logarithm of Cd, alpha(1)-MG, beta(2)-MG and NAG concentrations as age advanced. As CR, and to a lesser extent SG, also decreases steadily throughout life, the correction of the analyte concentrations for urine density induced substantial increases in the analyte values; i.e., the correction by CR and SG induced amplification of the increases by two- and 1.4-times, respectively, compared with the increase in non-corrected observed values. CONCLUSIONS There were age-related increases in Cd and tubular dysfunction markers in urine among women in areas with no known Cd pollution. The increase was amplified two- or 1.4-times when CR or SG correction was applied, respectively. The observation suggests that care should be practiced in applying CR or SG correction, especially when evaluation of Cd exposure and resulting health effects is made among elderly populations.
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Ikeda M, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Sakurai H. Reproducibility of urinary cadmium, alpha1-microglobulin, and beta2-microglobulin levels in health screening of the general population. ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY 2005; 48:135-140. [PMID: 15666443 DOI: 10.1007/s00244-004-3034-0] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
The present study examined whether levels of cadmium, and alphal- and beta2-microglobulin in urine (Cd-U, ac-MG-U, and beta2-MG-U, respectively) were reproducible in urine samples collected from the same subjects on multiple occasions. For this purpose, two databases on background exposure to cadmium in Japan-one from study I between 2000 and 2001 and the other from study II in 2002-were revisited to find 231 apparently healthy, nonpregnant, nonlactating adult women who participated in both studies and thus had provided two urine samples. The databases contained information on Cd-U, alphal,-MG-U, and beta2-MG-U, creatinine (CR), and specific gravity (SG) as well as smoking and other lifestyle factors. Of the 231 women, 195 who had never smoked were selected for the present analysis. Cd-U as well as alpha1-MG-U were reproducible (e.g., with correlation coefficients [r] between study I and II results of 0.4 to 0.6) when measured on two occasions 9 to 10 months apart. The r values were lower for beta2-MG-U (r0.3). Exclusion of urine samples with inadequate urine density(i.e., CR <0.5 or >3.0 g/L or SG <1.010 or >1.030) resulted in substantial improvement of the agreements between the two measures (e.g., r = 0.6 to 0.7 for Cd-U and alpha1-MG-U). CR and SG correlated closely with each other, especially in low-density urine samples (r >0.9), and therefore the effects of CR and SG could not be evaluated separately. In the overall evaluation,single determination (i.e., without repeated urine sampling) of Cd-U and alpha1-MG-U should be acceptable, and it may also be acceptable for beta2-MG-U. Use of samples with adequate urine density rather than application of density correction to low-density urine samples in recommended.
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Kishida R, Lee ES, Fukui Y. In vitro maturation of porcine oocytes using a defined medium and developmental capacity after intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Theriogenology 2004; 62:1663-76. [PMID: 15511553 DOI: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2004.03.008] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/05/2004] [Accepted: 03/17/2004] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
To establish a defined in vitro maturation culture system for porcine oocytes, we examined the effects of adding cysteine (Cys) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) to the maturation medium. Furthermore, to evaluate cytoplasmic maturation, we investigated GSH concentrations and embryo development after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The basic media for IVM were modified TCM199 containing 10% newborn calf serum (NBCS) or 0.1% polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), supplemented with amino acids. Adding EGF (10 ng/ml) or EGF + Cys (0.57 mM) to the defined medium (0.1% PVA + amino acids) increased (P < 0.05) the rate of nuclear maturation relative to the defined medium (without these additives). After ICSI, oocytes matured in a medium supplemented with NBCS, Cys and EGF had a higher (P < 0.05) rate of pronuclear formation rate than oocytes matured in the defined IVM medium. Although there was no significant difference in cleavage rates between NBCS- and PVA-containing media supplemented with both Cys and EGF, the rate of blastocyst development was lower (P < 0.05) in the defined medium than in the NBCS-containing medium. Intracellular GSH concentrations of oocytes matured in the NBCS- and PVA-containing media supplemented with both Cys and EGF were higher (P < 0.05) than in oocytes matured in PVA alone or in oocytes before maturation. Adding Cys and EGF to a defined medium for porcine IVM improved rates of nuclear maturation and cleaved oocytes following ICSI, probably due to increased GSH concentrations. Also, embryos derived from oocytes matured in the defined medium (with the addition of Cys and EGF) developed into blastocysts after ICSI.
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Ikeda M, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai SH, Sakurai H. Critical evaluation of α1- and β2-microglobulins in urine as markers of cadmium-induced tubular dysfunction. Biometals 2004; 17:539-41. [PMID: 15688860 DOI: 10.1023/b:biom.0000045735.39613.52] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
Abstract
The purpose of the study was to examine the validity of alpha1-microglobulin (alpha1-MG) in comparison with popularly used beta2-microglobulin (beta2-MG). A database was revisited to select ca. 7,500 spot urine samples (of adequate urine density) from non-pregnant, non-lactating and never-smoking adult women. The validity of the MGs was examined in terms of stability of the MG-uria prevalence in urine samples of various creatinine (CR or cr) concentration or specific gravity (SG or sg). Comparisons were made for MGs as observed (e.g., alpha1-MGob), as corrected for CR (e.g., alpha1-MGcr) and as corrected for SG of 1.016 (e.g., alpha1-MGsg). A cut-off value of 5.7 mg/g cr (or mg/l) for alpha1-MG was deduced from a cut-off value of 400 microg/g cr (or mcirog/l) for beta2-MG, because the correlation between alpha1-MGcr and beta2-MGcr was statistically significant. The prevalence of a 1-MGsg-uria was essentially unchanged (i.e., from a low of 13.6% to a high of 17.0%, or 1.2 times) except for in very dense or very thin urine samples, in contrast, beta2-MGcr-uria showed a substantial increase (from 0.0% to 2.8% with an infinite rate) as a reverse function of a decrease in CR in urine. The prevalence of uncorrected markers, i.e., alpha1-MGob-uria and beta2-MGob-uria, showed even greater CR- or SG-dependent changes. Thus, it appeared prudent to consider a alpha-MGsg rather than beta2-MGcr as a marker of tubular dysfunction among a general population with various urine density.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, de Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, da Costa JG, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Unel MK, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, de Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Inclusive double-pomeron exchange at the fermilab tevatron p p collider. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2004; 93:141601. [PMID: 15524780 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.93.141601] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/05/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report results from a study of events with a double-Pomeron exchange topology produced in p p collisions at sqrt[s]=1800 GeV. The events are characterized by a leading antiproton and a large rapidity gap on the outgoing proton side. We find that the differential production cross section agrees in shape with predictions based on Regge theory and factorization, and that the ratio of double-Pomeron exchange to single diffractive production rates is relatively unsuppressed as compared to the O(10) suppression factor previously measured in single diffractive production.
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Tsukahara T, Ezaki T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Sakurai H, Ikeda M. No effects of hematuria and proteinuria in school days, and probably current pregnancy and current lactation also, as risk factors of cadmium-induced renal tubular dysfunction among adult women in general populations in Japan. ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY 2004; 46:413-418. [PMID: 15195814 DOI: 10.1007/s00244-003-3022-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
This study was initiated to examine if hematuria and proteinuria in school days, current pregnancy, or current lactation are risk factors of cadmium-induced tubular dysfunction for adult women among general populations in Japan. For this purpose, a database of 9,967 never-smoking adult women were reviewed for urinary levels of cadmium (Cd) and three other elements, calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), and zinc (Zn), and two tubular dysfunction markers of alpha1-microglobulin (alpha1-MG) and beta2-microglobulin (beta2-MG); the analyte concentrations were corrected for creatinine (cr) and expressed as, e.g., Cd-Ucr. From the total, 160 cases were selected as those who were informed of urinary abnormality (i.e., proteinuria, hematuria, or both) in their school days (the abnormality being found to be transient, later), and each case was matched by age and prefecture of residence. Separately, seven women with persistent urinary abnormality, seven pregnant women, and six lactating women were identified, and the case was matched with three cases each of the same age and living in the same prefecture. Statistical analyses showed that Cd-Ucr and other markers were not elevated in the transient urinary abnormality group as compared with the matched controls. This was also observed in the subjects with persistent abnormality. In the pregnant women, alpha1-MG-Ucr and possibly beta2-MG-Ucr were elevated, but Cd-Ucr did not increase, suggesting that the observed elevation in alpha1-MG and beta2-MG was not due to the effects of Cd but a part of the physiology of pregnancy itself. There was no change in marker levels in lactating women except for an increase in alpha1-MG. In overall evaluation, it was considered prudent to conclude that urinary abnormality in school days does not increase the risk of Cd-induced nephrotoxicity in adult women, whereas the negative findings with pregnancy and lactation should be taken as preliminary because the numbers of cases studied were limited.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, de Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, de Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for Kaluza-Klein graviton emission in pp collisions at square root[s] = 1.8 TeV using the missing energy signature. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2004; 92:121802. [PMID: 15089665 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.92.121802] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/15/2003] [Revised: 11/24/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report on a search for direct Kaluza-Klein graviton production in a data sample of 84 pb(-1) of ppmacr; collisions at sqrt[s]=1.8 TeV, recorded by the Collider Detector at Fermilab. We investigate the final state of large missing transverse energy and one or two high energy jets. We compare the data with the predictions from a (3+1+n)-dimensional Kaluza-Klein scenario in which gravity becomes strong at the TeV scale. At 95% confidence level (C.L.) for n=2, 4, and 6 we exclude an effective Planck scale below 1.0, 0.77, and 0.71 TeV, respectively.
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Moriguchi J, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Okamoto S, Ukai H, Sakurai H, Ikeda M. α1-Microglobulin as a promising marker of cadmium-induced tubular dysfunction, possibly better than β2-microglobulin. Toxicol Lett 2004; 148:11-20. [PMID: 15019084 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2003.11.009] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/22/2003] [Revised: 11/25/2003] [Accepted: 11/25/2003] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the validity of alpha1-microglobulin (alpha1-MG) in comparison with popularly used beta2-microglobulin (beta2-MG). A database on 8975 cases of never-smoking adult women was revisited; the data were based on spot urine samples from the women in 10 prefectures all over Japan. The validity of alpha1-MG was examined following essentially the same protocol as beta2-MG was examined in a previous study. Comparisons were made for alpha1-MG as observed (e.g. alpha1-MG(ob)), as corrected for creatinine (CR or cr) (e.g. alpha1-MGcr) and as corrected for a specific gravity (SG or sg) of 1.016 (e.g. alpha1-MGsg). A cut-off value of 5.0 mg alpha1-MG/g cr or l was deduced from 400 microg beta2-MG/g cr taking advantage of the regression equation between alpha1-MG and beta2-MG. The prevalence of alph1-microglobulinuria as corrected for a specific gravity of 1.016 (or alpha1-MGsg-uria in short) was essentially unchanged irrespective of SG, except for in very dense or very thin urine samples. alpha1-MGcr-uria prevalence decreased at higher CR. Comparison of the present observation with previous findings on beta2-MG-uria prevalence showed that the variation in prevalence of MG-uria as a function of urine density was smaller for alpha1-MGsg whereas it was substantially larger for beta2-MGcr, and thus it appeared prudent to consider alpha1-MGsg rather than beta2-MGcr as a marker of tubular dysfunction.
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Ozeki K, Yuhta T, Aoki H, Fukui Y. Inhibition of Ni release from NiTi alloy by hydroxyapatite, alumina, and titanium sputtered coatings. Biomed Mater Eng 2004; 13:271-9. [PMID: 12883176] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/03/2023]
Abstract
To alleviate the effects of Ni allergy from NiTi alloy implants, hydroxyapatite (Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2; HA), alumina (Al2O3), or titanium (Ti) was coated onto NiTi alloy plates to form 1-microm thick films using radio frequency magnetron sputtering. The coatings on the plates were characterized using XRD. After the plates had been immersed in physiological saline for periods of one, four, or eight weeks, the concentration of Ni ions released in each solution was detected using a microwave induced plasma mass spectrometer. After eight weeks, the concentration of Ni ions released from the non-coated, the Ti-coated, the HA-coated, and the alumina-coated plates were 238, 19.7, 183, and 106 ppb, respectively. The bonding strength of the Ti film, the HA film, and the alumina film to the NiTi substrate were 3.8 +/- 1.2, 2.6 +/- 0.7, and 3.1 +/- 1.2 MPa, respectively. The non-coated, the HA-coated, the alumina-coated, and the Ti-coated plates were implanted into the femurs of a dog for four weeks for histological observation. In case of the non-coated plates, connective tissue more than 300 microm thick was observed, whereas for the coated plates the thickness of the connective tissue was around 100 microm.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, de Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Colijn AP, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Spalding J, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, De Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for pair production of scalar top quarks in R-parity violating decay modes in pp collisions at square root of s=1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2004; 92:051803. [PMID: 14995297 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.92.051803] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/07/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We present the results of a search for pair production of scalar top quarks (t(1)) in an R-parity violating supersymmetry scenario in 106 pb(-1) of pp collisions at square root of s=1.8 TeV collected by the Collider Detector at Fermilab. In this mode each t(1) decays into a tau lepton and a b quark. We search for events with two tau's, one decaying leptonically (e or mu) and one decaying hadronically, and two jets. No candidate events pass our final selection criteria. We set a 95% confidence level lower limit on the t(1) mass at 122 GeV/c(2) for Br(t(1)-->tau b)=1.
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Chen X, Aoki H, Fukui Y. Effect of exercise on the bone strength, bone mineral density, and metal content in rat femurs. Biomed Mater Eng 2004; 14:53-9. [PMID: 14757953] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 04/28/2023]
Abstract
We have investigated the effect of exercise on the bone strength, bone mineral density (BMD), and metal content in rat femurs. Five Wister rats acting as an exercised group (E group) were exercised at intervals on a treadmill every day for four weeks. Another five rats were fed in a cage, acting as a control group (C group), without any exercise. After four weeks, the bend strength, Young's modulus, BMD value, and metal content of the femurs were measured using a three-point bend test, Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA), and chemical analysis. The bend strength of the E group was 101+/-5 MPa, and that of the C group was 86+/-7 MPa. The Young's modulus was 1.16+/-0.03 GPa for the E group, and 0.98+/-0.06 GPa for the C group. The BMD values were 0.179+/-0.002 g/cm(2) for the E group, and 0.166+/-0.002 g/cm(2) for the C group. The Ca concentration was 230600 +/- 1500 microg/g for the E group, and 223000 +/- 2700 microg/g for the C group. The Zn concentration was 160 +/- 7 microg/g for the E group, and 188 +/- 8 microg/g for the C group.
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Ikeda M, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Okamoto S, Ukai H, Sakurai H. Bias induced by the use of creatinine-corrected values in evaluation of beta2-microgloblin levels. Toxicol Lett 2003; 145:197-207. [PMID: 14581173 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-4274(03)00320-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 48] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/15/2022]
Abstract
The present study was initiated to examine if the correction for creatinine (CR or cr) is the best approach among the three methods of correction for CR, correction for a specific gravity (SG or sg) and the use of observed values in managing difference in urine density. For this purpose, a database previously developed on 10,753 adult women in 10 non-polluted areas in Japan was re-visited for information on age, urinary levels of Cd, Mg, Ca, Zn, beta(2)-MG, and creatinine, and urine specific gravity as well as smoking habits. Never-smoking women with various urine density counted 8975 cases (the various urine density group). From these cases, 7081 cases with adequate urine density (i.e. 0.5 g/l < or = CR < or = 3.0 g/l and 1.010 < or = SG < or = 1.030) were selected (the adequate urine density group). When a beta(2)-MG level of 400 microg/g CR or 400 microg/l was taken as a cut-off value for beta(2)-MG-uria, both the prevalence of beta(2)-MG(cr)-uria [i.e. cases with beta(2)-MG (as corrected for CR) in excess of 400 microg/g cr] and that of beta(2)-MG(sg)-uria increased as a function of the decrease in Cd(cr) or Cd(sg). The prevalence of beta(2)-MG(ob)-uria also varied as a function of CR and SG, especially of CR, but its range of variation was smaller than the corresponding changes in beta(2)-MG(cr)-uria prevalence. A noteworthy advantage for the use of observed values over that of SG-corrected values was the minimum effect of age. In over-all evaluation, therefore, the recommended approach appeared to be the use of non-corrected observed values (after selection of urine samples for adequate urine density if desired) or correction for SG, rather than correction for CR.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, de Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, de Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for lepton flavor violating decays of a heavy neutral particle in p(-)p collisions at sqrt[s]=1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2003; 91:171602. [PMID: 14611332 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.91.171602] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/20/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report on a search for a high mass, narrow width particle that decays directly to emu, etau, or microtau. We use approximately 110 pb(-1) of data collected with the Collider Detector at Fermilab from 1992 to 1995. No evidence of lepton flavor violating decays is found. Limits are set on the production and decay of sneutrinos with R-parity violating interactions.
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Moriguchi J, Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Okamoto S, Ukai H, Sakurai H, Shimbo S, Ikeda M. Comparative evaluation of four urinary tubular dysfunction markers, with special references to the effects of aging and correction for creatinine concentration. Toxicol Lett 2003; 143:279-90. [PMID: 12849688 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-4274(03)00181-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 39] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/18/2022]
Abstract
Comparative evaluation was made on alpha(1)-microglobulin (alpha(1)-MG), beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)-MG), retinol binding protein (RBP) and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), as a marker of renal tubular dysfunction after environmental exposure to cadmium (Cd), with special references to the effects of aging and correction for creatinine concentration. For this purpose, a previously established database of 817 never-smoking Japanese women (at the ages of 20 to 74 years) on hematological [hemoglobin, serum ferritin (FE), etc.] and urinary parameters [alpha(1)-MG, beta(2)-MG, creatinine (cr), and a specific gravity] was revisited. For the present analysis, the database was supplemented by the data on RBP and NAG in urine. The exposure of the women to Cd was such that the geometric mean Cd in urine was 1.3 microg/g cr. Among the four tubular dysfunction markers, NAG showed the closest correlation with Cd, followed by alpha(1)-MG and then beta(2)-MG, and RBP was least so although the correlations were all statistically significant. The observed values of the markers gave the best results, whereas correction for a urine specific gravity gave poorer correlation, and it was the worst when correction for creatinine concentration was applied. Age was the most influential confounding factor. The effect of age appeared to be attributable at least in part to the fact that both creatinine and, to a lesser extent, the specific gravity decreased as a function of age. Iron deficiency anemia of sub-clinical degree as observed among the women did not affect any of the four tubular dysfunction markers. In conclusion, NAG and alpha(1)-MG, rather beta(2)-MG or RBP, are more sensitive to detect Cd-induced tubular dysfunction in mass screening. The use of uncorrected observed values of the markers rather than traditional creatinine-corrected values is recommended when comparison covers people of a wide range of ages.
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Ozeki K, Yuhta T, Aoki H, Fukui Y. Preparation and osteocompatibility of hydroxyapatite coated on titanium from the reaction of sputtered CaO and vaporized P2O5. Biomed Mater Eng 2003; 13:83-90. [PMID: 12652025] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/01/2023]
Abstract
Hydroxyapatite (HA) and other calcium phosphates were synthesized on titanium plates by a solid-gas state reaction of sputtered CaO and vaporized P(2)O(5). The calcium phosphates formed were HA, beta-tricalcium phosphate (beta-TCP; Ca(3)(PO(4))(2)), beta-calcium pyrophosphate (beta-PYR; Ca(2)P(2)O(7)), and beta-calcium metaphosphate (beta-MET; Ca(2)(PO(3))(2)). Their formation depended on the ratio of the sputtered CaO and the reacting P(2)O(5). For a mole ratio of CaO/P(2)O(5)=4 (Ca/P=2), an HA film was synthesized. The surface roughness increased by over seven times after the solid-gas state reaction from Ra = 0.16+/-0.02 microm (for the CaO film) to Ra = 1.15+/-0.25 microm (for the reacted film). The synthesized HA film-coated titanium plates and control non-coated titanium plates were implanted in the femora of two dogs for a period of two, four and 12 weeks, and observed using a soft X-ray radiograph and histological sections. New bone formation was observed without any connective tissue at four weeks around the HA film, whereas over the 12 week experimental period, there was no new bone formation around the control and connective tissue was observed over all periods, reaching a thickness of more than 200 microm at 12 weeks.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, De Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Colijn AP, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, Cecco SD, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, Pedis DD, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Fang HC, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Da Costa JG, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Unel MK, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, Denis RS, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Spalding J, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, De Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, Von Der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Central pseudorapidity gaps in events with a leading antiproton at the fermilab tevatron pp collider. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2003; 91:011802. [PMID: 12906532 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.91.011802] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/15/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report a measurement of the fraction of events with a large pseudorapidity gap deltaeta within the pseudorapidity region available to the proton dissociation products X in p+p-->p+X. For a final state p of fractional momentum loss xi(p) and 4-momentum transfer squared t(p) within 0.06<xi(p)<0.09 and |t(p)|<1.0 [0.2] GeV2 at sqrt[s]=1800 [630] GeV, the fraction of events with deltaeta>3 is found to be 0.246+/-0.001 (stat)+/-0.042 (syst) [0.184+/-0.001 (stat)+/-0.043 (syst)]. Our results are compared with gap fractions measured in minimum bias pp collisions and with theoretical expectations.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, e Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Colijn AP, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Issever C, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Spalding J, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, de Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for the supersymmetric partner of the top quark in dilepton events from pp collisions at square root of s=1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2003; 90:251801. [PMID: 12857123 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.90.251801] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/07/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We have searched for pair production of the supersymmetric partner of the top quark (stop) in 107 pb(-1) of pp collisions at square root of s=1.8 TeV collected by the Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF). Each stop is assumed to decay into a lepton, bottom quark, and supersymmetric neutrino. Such a scenario would give rise to events with two leptons, two hadronic jets, and a substantial imbalance of transverse energy. No evidence of such a stop signal has been found. We exclude stop masses in the region (80</=m(t)</=135 GeV/c(2)) in the mass plane of stop versus sneutrino.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, de Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Colijn AP, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, de Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Fang HC, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai KW, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Spalding J, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, De Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, von der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for associated production of Upsilon and vector boson in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2003; 90:221803. [PMID: 12857307 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.90.221803] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/09/2002] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We present a search for associated production of the Upsilon(1S) and a vector boson in 83 pb(-1) of ppmacr; collisions at sqrt[s]=1.8 TeV collected by the CDF experiment in 1994-1995. We find no evidence of the searched signal in the data, and set upper limits to the production cross sections.
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Tsukahara T, Ezaki T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Sakurai H, Ikeda M. No significant effect of iron deficiency on cadmium body burden or kidney dysfunction among women in the general population in Japan. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 2003; 76:275-81. [PMID: 12719983 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-003-0432-y] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/05/2002] [Accepted: 12/07/2002] [Indexed: 10/25/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine if iron-deficient conditions modify body burden or health effects of cadmium among women in the general population in Japan. METHODS In 2002, 1,482 women aged 20 to 74 years in six prefectures in Japan provided informed consent to participate in this study. They offered peripheral blood and spot urine samples, and answered questionnaires on their social habits and health conditions. Never-smoking, non-pregnant and non-lactating healthy women (1,190 subjects) were selected from the volunteers. Blood samples were analyzed for serum iron, ferritin and total iron-binding capacity (TIBC) in addition to red blood cell (RBC) counts and hemoglobin (Hb) concentration as markers of anemia and iron deficiency. Urine samples were analyzed for cadmium (Cd), alpha(1)-microglobulin (alpha(1)-MG), beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)-MG) as markers of Cd burden and Cd-induced tubular dysfunction; the measures were expressed after being corrected for creatinine (cr) as, e.g., Cd-Ucr. RESULTS The subjects were classified into anemic (37 women) and iron-deficient (388 women) groups separately from healthy controls (765 women), taking ferritin (<20 ng/ml) and Hb (<10 g/100 ml) as classification indicators. Strictly matched pairs (with regard to age and prefecture) were established for 36 anemic and 280 iron-deficient cases. Comparison between the cases and the matched controls showed that serum iron was lower and TIBC was higher in accordance with lower levels of ferritin and Hb in the anemic and iron-deficient groups, although the RBC count was only slightly reduced (the anemic group) or stayed essentially unchanged (the iron-deficient group). In contrast, no significant increase in Cd-Ucr, alpha(1)-MG, or beta(2)-MG was observed in either the anemic group or the iron-deficient group compared with the matched controls. Cd-Ucr in one case of clinical anemia, however, tended to be higher than the levels among women of the same age range and from the same prefecture. Her alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr, however, remained un-elevated. CONCLUSIONS The current level of iron deficiency among women in the general population in Japan may not induce significant increase in Cd body burden or Cd-induced tubular dysfunction.
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Acosta D, Affolder T, Akimoto H, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amidei D, Anikeev K, Antos J, Apollinari G, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Asakawa T, Ashmanskas W, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Bailey S, De Barbaro P, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Barone M, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bell WH, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Benjamin D, Bensinger J, Beretvas A, Berryhill J, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Blusk SR, Bocci A, Bodek A, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bonushkin Y, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Brandl A, Bromberg C, Brozovic M, Brubaker E, Bruner N, Budagov J, Budd HS, Burkett K, Busetto G, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Calafiura P, Campbell M, Carithers W, Carlson J, Carlsmith D, Caskey W, Castro A, Cauz D, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chan AW, Chang PS, Chang PT, Chapman J, Chen C, Chen YC, Cheng MT, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chirikov-Zorin I, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Christofek L, Chu ML, Chung JY, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciobanu CI, Clark AG, Coca M, Colijn AP, Connolly A, Convery M, Conway J, Cordelli M, Cranshaw J, Culbertson R, Dagenhart D, D'Auria S, De Cecco S, DeJongh F, Dell'Agnello S, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dominguez A, Donati S, D'Onofrio M, Dorigo T, Eddy N, Einsweiler K, Engels E, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fan Q, Fang HC, Farrington S, Feild RG, Fernandez JP, Ferretti C, Field RD, Fiori I, Flaugher B, Flores-Castillo LR, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman J, Friedman J, Fukui Y, Furic I, Galeotti S, Gallas A, Gallinaro M, Gao T, Garcia-Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gatti P, Gay C, Gerdes DW, Gerstein E, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Goncharov M, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Green C, Gresele A, Grim G, Grosso-Pilcher C, Guenther M, Guillian G, Guimaraes Da Costa J, Haas RM, Haber C, Hahn SR, Halkiadakis E, Hall C, Handa T, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hardman AD, Harris RM, Hartmann F, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Heinrich J, Heiss A, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Hill C, Hocker A, Hoffman KD, Hollebeek R, Holloway L, Hou S, Huffman BT, Hughes R, Huston J, Huth J, Ikeda H, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ivanov A, Iwai J, Iwata Y, Iyutin B, James E, Jones M, Joshi U, Kambara H, Kamon T, Kaneko T, Kang J, Karagoz Unel M, Karr K, Kartal S, Kasha H, Kato Y, Keaffaber TA, Kelley K, Kelly M, Kennedy RD, Kephart R, Khazins D, Kikuchi T, Kilminster B, Kim BJ, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim TH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirk M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Koehn P, Kondo K, Konigsberg J, Korn A, Korytov A, Kotelnikov K, Kovacs E, Kroll J, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kurino K, Kuwabara T, Kuznetsova N, Laasanen AT, Lai N, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster J, Lannon K, Lancaster M, Lander R, Lath A, Latino G, LeCompte T, Le Y, Lee J, Lee SW, Leonardo N, Leone S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Liss TM, Liu JB, Liu T, Liu YC, Litvintsev DO, Lobban O, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loken J, Loreti M, Lucchesi D, Lukens P, Lusin S, Lyons L, Lys J, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Malferrari L, Mangano M, Manca G, Mariotti M, Martignon G, Martin M, Martin A, Martin V, Matthews JAJ, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, Menguzzato M, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Meyer A, Miao T, Miller R, Miller JS, Minato H, Miscetti S, Mishina M, Mitselmakher G, Miyazaki Y, Moggi N, Moore E, Moore R, Morita Y, Moulik T, Mulhearn M, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Munar A, Murat P, Murgia S, Nachtman J, Nagaslaev V, Nahn S, Nakada H, Nakano I, Napora R, Niell F, Nelson C, Nelson T, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Neuberger D, Newman-Holmes C, Ngan CYP, Nigmanov T, Niu H, Nodulman L, Nomerotski A, Oh SH, Oh YD, Ohmoto T, Ohsugi T, Oishi R, Okusawa T, Olsen J, Orejudos W, Pagliarone C, Palmonari F, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Partos D, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Pauly T, Paus C, Pellett D, Penzo A, Pescara L, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts KT, Pompos A, Pondrom L, Pope G, Pratt T, Prokoshin F, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Pukhov O, Punzi G, Rademacker J, Rakitine A, Ratnikov F, Ray H, Reher D, Reichold A, Renton P, Rescigno M, Ribon A, Riegler W, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Riveline M, Robertson WJ, Rodrigo T, Rolli S, Rosenson L, Roser R, Rossin R, Rott C, Roy A, Ruiz A, Ryan D, Safonov A, St Denis R, Sakumoto WK, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Sansoni A, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato H, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Scodellaro L, Scott A, Scribano A, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Shah T, Shapiro MD, Shepard PF, Shibayama T, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Singh P, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Snider FD, Snihur R, Solodsky A, Spalding J, Speer T, Spezziga M, Sphicas P, Spinella F, Spiropulu M, Spiegel L, Steele J, Stefanini A, Strologas J, Strumia F, Stuart D, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Suzuki T, Takano T, Takashima R, Takikawa K, Tamburello P, Tanaka M, Tannenbaum B, Tecchio M, Tesarek RJ, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Thurman-Keup R, Tipton P, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tonelli D, Tonnesmann M, Toyoda H, Trischuk W, De Troconiz JF, Tseng J, Tsybychev D, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Vaiciulis T, Valls J, Varganov A, Vataga E, Vejcik S, Velev G, Veramendi G, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Volobouev I, Von Der Mey M, Vucinic D, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallace NB, Wan Z, Wang C, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Ward B, Waschke S, Watanabe T, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wenzel H, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Wilkes T, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Winn D, Wolbers S, Wolinski D, Wolinski J, Wolinski S, Wolter M, Worm S, Wu X, Würthwein F, Wyss J, Yang UK, Yao W, Yeh GP, Yeh P, Yi K, Yoh J, Yosef C, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu S, Yu Z, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zetti F, Zucchelli S. Search for long-lived charged massive particles in pp collisions at square root s = 1.8 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2003; 90:131801. [PMID: 12689274 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.90.131801] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/04/2002] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report a search for the production of long-lived charged massive particles in a data sample of 90 pb(-1) of square root[s]=1.8 TeV pp collisions recorded by the Collider Detector at Fermilab. The search uses the muonlike penetration and anomalously high ionization energy loss signature expected for such a particle to discriminate it from backgrounds. The data are found to agree with background expectations, and cross section limits of O(1) pb are derived using two reference models, a stable quark and a stable scalar lepton.
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Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Sakurai H, Honda S, Ikeda M. No clear-cut evidence for cadmium-induced renal tubular dysfunction among over 10,000 women in the Japanese general population: a nationwide large-scale survey. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 2003; 76:186-96. [PMID: 12690493 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-002-0389-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 73] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/06/2002] [Accepted: 08/09/2002] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine whether environmental exposure to cadmium has been inducing kidney dysfunction among middle-aged women in the general population in Japan. METHODS This study was conducted in 2000 and 2001. Morning spot urine samples were collected from 10,753 women (mostly aged 35 to 60 years) in ten prefectures all over Japan (thus about 1,000 women per site). Urine samples were analyzed for cadmium (Cd-U), calcium (Ca-U), magnesium (Mg-U), zinc (Zn-U), alpha(1)- and beta(2)-microglobulins (alpha(1)- and beta(2)-MG-U). The urinary analyte concentrations were corrected for creatinine (cr) concentration (i.e., Ucr). The data thus obtained were subjected to statistical evaluation by chi-square test, ANOVA, multiple comparison test, and simple regression analysis (SRA) as well as multiple regression analysis (MRA) including logistic regression analysis (LRA). Log-normal distribution was assumed for Cd-Ucr, alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr, whereas normal distribution was considered for age, Ca-Ucr, Mg-Ucr and Zn-Ucr. RESULTS Geometric mean values (GM) of Cd-Ucr were distributed unevenly, depending on the sampling areas, with a grand GM of 1.3 microg/g cr, the highest (3.2 microg/g cr) and lowest GM values(0.8 microg/g cr) being significantly different from GMs of other areas. Correlation matrix analysis with subjects of all ages showed that log alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and log beta(2)-MG-Ucr correlated significantly (r=0.272 and 0.202, respectively) with log Cd-Ucr, but they correlated also with age (r=0.280 and 0.213, respectively). The same analysis with the two selected age groups (41-50 and 51-60 years), however, failed to show close correlation of alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and log beta(2)-MG-Ucr with Cd-Ucr. Both MRA and LRA indicated that age was a confounding factor in the evaluation of the effect of Cd-U on the two MG levels. Whereas the LRA with the all-age group showed a positive influence of log Cd-Ucr on log alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and log beta(2)-MG-Ucr, such effect disappeared in parallel with the disappearance of age effects when LRA was conducted with the two selected age groups. An exceptional observation was the influence of log Cd-Ucr on log alpha(1)-MG-Ucr (but not on log beta(2)-MG-Ucr) in LRA when a cut-off value of 5.00 mg for alpha(1)-MG-U/g cr was applied. Comparison between the low and high Cd-U groups showed that both alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr were higher in the high Cd-U groups, but prevalence of cases with alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr in excess of the cut-off values did not differ between the two groups except when a cut-off value of 5.00 mg/g cr was employed for alpha(1)-MG-U. CONCLUSIONS In over-all evaluation, no clear-cut evidence was obtained in the present study to show that environmental exposure to Cd has induced tubule dysfunction among middle-aged women in the general population in Japan. It might be the case, however, that an increase in alpha(1)-MG-U was associated with Cd exposure. In this sense, it is apparently desirable from public health viewpoints to make further efforts to reduce the intensity of the general population's exposure to environmental Cd.
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Ezaki T, Tsukahara T, Moriguchi J, Furuki K, Fukui Y, Ukai H, Okamoto S, Sakurai H, Honda S, Ikeda M. Analysis for threshold levels of cadmium in urine that induce tubular dysfunction among women in non-polluted areas in Japan. Int Arch Occup Environ Health 2003; 76:197-204. [PMID: 12690494 DOI: 10.1007/s00420-002-0390-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/15/2002] [Accepted: 08/09/2002] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine if there is a threshold in urinary cadmium concentration that induces elevation in urinary microglobulins. METHODS The database developed in a previous field survey (Ezaki et al. 2002) was employed. In the survey conducted in 2000 and 2001, more than 10,000 middle-aged women (with no occupational exposure to Cd) in ten prefectures all over Japan gave morning spot urine samples, which were analyzed for cadmium (Cd-U), calcium (Ca-U), magnesium (Mg-U), zinc (Zn-U), alpha(1)- and beta(2)-microglobulins (alpha(1)- and beta(2)-MG-U), and creatinine (cr). The urinary analyte concentrations were corrected for cr concentration (to be expressed as, e.g., Cd-Ucr), and the data thus obtained were subjected to statistical evaluation. The largest geometric mean (GM) for Cd-Ucr among the ten prefecture was 3.2 microg Cd/g cr, and the maximum Cd-Ucr observed among the women studied was 20.9 microg Cd/g cr. RESULTS Both alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr increased as a function of the increase in Cd-Ucr among all the women and also in sub-populations of narrow age ranges (i.e., 41-50 and 51-60 years), with no apparent threshold Cd-Ucr. Comparison of the cases exceeding cut-off alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr levels also indicated a Cd dose-dependent increase in the prevalence, similarly without a threshold Cd-Ucr. In addition, such findings were essentially reproducible when elevation in alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr levels was examined with the three essential elements, especially with Ca-Ucr and Mg-Ucr, although less clearly with Zn-Ucr. The observations as a whole suggest a possibility that the dose-dependent increases in alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr with no apparent threshold for element concentration is not specific to Cd-Ucr but common to other elements. CONCLUSIONS No threshold Cd-Ucr was detected in relation to the increases in alpha(1)-MG-Ucr and beta(2)-MG-Ucr. The element dose-dependent increases in the two MGs with no threshold in the element concentration might be not limited to Cd, but common to other elements. Further studies are apparently necessary.
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Hayashi K, Miyamoto A, Konari A, Ohtani M, Fukui Y. Effect of local interaction of reactive oxygen species with prostaglandin F(2alpha) on the release of progesterone in ovine corpora lutea in vivo. Theriogenology 2003; 59:1335-44. [PMID: 12527080 DOI: 10.1016/s0093-691x(02)01173-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/27/2022]
Abstract
Prostaglandin (PG) F(2alpha) is implicated in the process of luteal regression in many species, and has been shown to increase the generation of reactive oxygen species. In this study, the role of reactive oxygen species in the local regulatory mechanisms of functional luteolysis in the ewe was examined. In Experiment 1, we studied local effects of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and its interaction with PGF(2alpha) on P secretion in ovine corpus luteum (CL) in vivo. For this purpose, a microdialysis system (MDS) was used, where only the cells surrounding the capillary membrane in the microenvironment of the CL are exposed to these factors, and the P secretory ability of the CL is maintained as if intact. The study used a multiple CL model to implant the MDS, enabling us to examine in parallel several experimental infusions into the MDS implanted in different CLs (one MDS line per CL) developed after superovulation in one ewe. On Day 8 after GnRH treatment, the MDS were implanted into multiple CL in both ovaries of six ewes. A 4-h infusion with PGF(2alpha) (10(-6)M) at 8-12 h slightly increased P release during infusion, while a 4-h infusion with H(2)O(2) (10(-3)M) at 20-24 h decreased P release at 27-38 h. A pre-infusion with PGF(2alpha) for 4h at 8-12h, followed by infusion of H(2)O(2) at 20-24 h rapidly decreased the P release at 20-40 h (P<0.05); this decrease occurred 7h earlier than in the CL treated with H(2)O(2) alone. In Experiment 2, by utilizing the MDS we also applied free radical scavengers to examine their possible weakening effect on the inhibition of P secretion in the microenvironment within the regressing CL induced by PGF(2alpha) treatment. On Day 8 after estrus, the MDS were implanted into the CL (single CL model, two MDS lines per CL). Infusion of free radical scavengers, superoxide dismutase (SOD;50mg/ml)+catalase (CAT; 10mg/ml), at 0-28 h first increased P release until 12 h (P<0.05), and consequently delayed the decrease in P release until 30 h after administration of PGF(2alpha) i.m. (P<0.05). The present results support the concept that the leading pathway from PGF(2alpha) induces an increase of reactive oxygen species in luteolysis in the ewe.
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