2 resultados para Porcine hokovirus

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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La Digital Volume Correlation (DVC) è una tecnica di misura a tutto campo, non invasiva, che permette di misurare spostamenti e deformazioni all’interno della struttura ossea in esame. Mediante la comparazione d’immagini con provino scarico e con provino carico, ottenute attraverso sistemi di tomografia computerizzata, si può ottenere la mappa degli spostamenti per ogni direzione e la mappa di deformazione per ogni componente di deformazione. L’obiettivo di questo lavoro di tesi è la validazione della DVC, attraverso la determinazione dell’errore sistematico (accuratezza) e dell’errore casuale (precisione), in modo da poter valutare il livello di affidabilità della strumentazione. La valutazione si effettua su provini di vertebre di maiale, aumentate e non, sia a livello d’organo, sia a livello di tessuto. The Digital Volume Correlation (DVC) is a full field and contact less measurement technique that allowed estimating displacement and strain inside bone specimen. Images of the unloaded and loaded specimen were obtained from micro-CT and compared in order to obtain the displacement map and, differentiating, the strain map. The aim of this work is the validation of the approach, estimating the lack of accuracy (systematic error) and the lack of precision (random error) on different kinds of porcine vertebra, augmented and not, analysing the specimen on tissue level and on organ level.

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Advanced therapies combating acute and chronic skin wounds are likely to be brought about using our knowledge of regenerative medicine coupled with appropriately tissue engineered skin substitutes. At the present time, there are no models of an artificial skin that completely replicate normal uninjured skin and they are usually accompanied by fibrotic reactions that result in the production of a scar. Natural biopolymers such as collagen have been a lot investigated as potential source of biomaterial for skin replacement in Tissue Engineering. Collagens are the most abundant high molecular weight proteins in both invertebrate and vertebrate organisms, including mammals, and possess mainly a structural role in connective tissues. From this, they have been elected as one of the key biological materials in tissue regeneration approaches, as skin tissue engineering. In addition, industry is constantly searching for new natural sources of collagen and upgraded methodologies for their production. The most common sources are skin and bone from bovine and porcine origin. However, these last carry high risk of bovine spongiform encephalopathy or transmissible spongiform encephalopathy and immunogenic responses. On the other hand, the increase of jellyfish has led us to consider this marine organism as potential collagen source for tissue engineering applications. In the present study, novel form of acid and pepsin soluble collagen were extracted from dried Rhopilema hispidum jellyfish species in an effort to obtain an alternative and safer collagen. We studied different methods of collagen purification (tissues and experimental procedures). The best collagen yield was obtained using pepsin extraction method (34.16 mg collagen/g of tissue). The isolated collagen was characterized by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and circular dichroism spectroscopy.