5 resultados para Berlin Bed-Rest Study
em Digital Commons - Michigan Tech
Resumo:
Disuse osteoporosis is a condition in which reduced mechanical loading (e.g. bed-rest, immobilization, or paralysis) results in unbalanced bone turnover. The American black bear is a unique, naturally occurring model for the prevention of disuse osteoporosis. Bears remain mostly inactive for up to half a year of hibernation annually, yet they do not lose bone mechanical strength or structural properties throughout hibernation. The long-term goal of this study is to determine the biological mechanism through which bears maintain bone during hibernation. This mechanism could pinpoint new signaling pathway targets for the development of drugs for osteoporosis prevention. In this study, bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BSALP), a marker of osteoblast activity, and tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRACP), a marker of osteoclast number, were quantified in the serum of hibernating and active black bears. BSALP and TRACP decreased during hibernation, suggesting a balanced reduction in bone turnover. This decrease in BSALP and TRACP were correlated positively to serum adiponectin and inversely to serum neuropeptide Y, suggesting a possible role of these hormones in suppressing bone turnover during hibernation. Osteocalcin (OCN) and undercarboxylated OCN increased dramatically in the serum of hibernating bears. These increases were inversely correlated with adiponectin, glucose, and serotonin, suggesting that OCN may have a unique role in energy homeostasis during hibernation. Finally, MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts were cultured in the serum from active and hibernating bears, and seasonal cell responses were quantified. Cells cultured in serum from hibernating bears had a reduced caspase-3/7 response, and more living cells, after apoptotic threat. The caspase-3/7 response was positively correlated to serum adiponectin and to gene expression of OCN and Runx2, suggesting that reduced caspase-3/7 activity may be related to the reduced differentiation potential of osteoblasts in hibernation serum, and that adiponectin is a potential effector hormone. In summary, the activities of osteoblasts and osteoclasts are reduced during hibernation in bears. This reduced turnover is due, in part, to hormonal control. Further study of potential effectors adiponectin and neuropeptide Y may provide insight into the biological mechanism through which bears maintain bone throughout hibernation.
Resumo:
Disuse osteoporosis is a problem for people with spinal cord injury or stroke, patients confined to bed rest, and astronauts exposed to microgravity. Unlike most mammals however, bears have been shown to prevent bone loss during hibernation, a seasonal period of disuse. Similarly, studies in ground squirrels indicate preservation of whole bone strength during hibernation, though evidence suggests there may be some increased osteocytic osteolysis. Uncovering the mechanism by which these animals prevent bone loss during hibernation could lead to an improved treatment for osteoporosis in humans. Marmots are a good animal model for these studies because they are small enough to easily house in an animal facility yet still utilize intracortical remodeling like humans and bears, and unlike smaller rodents like squirrels. Marmots preserve bone mechanical and microstructural properties during hibernation. Bone mechanical and geometrical properties are not diminished in post-hibernation samples compared to pre-hibernation samples. Mineral content, measured by ash fraction, was higher in post-hibernation samples (p = 0.0003). Haversian porosity as well as remodeling cavity density were not different (p > 0.38) between pre- and post-hibernation samples. Similarly, average lacunar area, lacunar density, and lacunar porosity were all lower (p < 0.0001) in post-hibernation samples. Trabecular thickness was larger in posthibernation samples (p = 0.0058). Bone volume fraction was not different between groups, but approached significance (p = 0.0725). Further studies in marmots and other hibernators could help uncover the mechanism that allows hibernators to prevent disuse osteoporosis during hibernation.
Resumo:
A diesel oxidation catalyst (DOC) with a catalyzed diesel particulate filter (CPF) is an effective exhaust aftertreatment device that reduces particulate emissions from diesel engines, and properly designed DOC-CPF systems provide passive regeneration of the filter by the oxidation of PM via thermal and NO2/temperature-assisted means under various vehicle duty cycles. However, controlling the backpressure on engines caused by the addition of the CPF to the exhaust system requires a good understanding of the filtration and oxidation processes taking place inside the filter as the deposition and oxidation of solid particulate matter (PM) change as functions of loading time. In order to understand the solid PM loading characteristics in the CPF, an experimental and modeling study was conducted using emissions data measured from the exhaust of a John Deere 6.8 liter, turbocharged and after-cooled engine with a low-pressure loop EGR system and a DOC-CPF system (or a CCRT® - Catalyzed Continuously Regenerating Trap®, as named by Johnson Matthey) in the exhaust system. A series of experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance of the DOC-only, CPF-only and DOC-CPF configurations at two engine speeds (2200 and 1650 rpm) and various loads on the engine ranging from 5 to 100% of maximum torque at both speeds. Pressure drop across the DOC and CPF, mass deposited in the CPF at the end of loading, upstream and downstream gaseous and particulate emissions, and particle size distributions were measured at different times during the experiments to characterize the pressure drop and filtration efficiency of the DOCCPF system as functions of loading time. Pressure drop characteristics measured experimentally across the DOC-CPF system showed a distinct deep-bed filtration region characterized by a non-linear pressure drop rise, followed by a transition region, and then by a cake-filtration region with steadily increasing pressure drop with loading time at engine load cases with CPF inlet temperatures less than 325 °C. At the engine load cases with CPF inlet temperatures greater than 360 °C, the deep-bed filtration region had a steep rise in pressure drop followed by a decrease in pressure drop (due to wall PM oxidation) in the cake filtration region. Filtration efficiencies observed during PM cake filtration were greater than 90% in all engine load cases. Two computer models, i.e., the MTU 1-D DOC model and the MTU 1-D 2-layer CPF model were developed and/or improved from existing models as part of this research and calibrated using the data obtained from these experiments. The 1-D DOC model employs a three-way catalytic reaction scheme for CO, HC and NO oxidation, and is used to predict CO, HC, NO and NO2 concentrations downstream of the DOC. Calibration results from the 1-D DOC model to experimental data at 2200 and 1650 rpm are presented. The 1-D 2-layer CPF model uses a ‘2-filters in series approach’ for filtration, PM deposition and oxidation in the PM cake and substrate wall via thermal (O2) and NO2/temperature-assisted mechanisms, and production of NO2 as the exhaust gas mixture passes through the CPF catalyst washcoat. Calibration results from the 1-D 2-layer CPF model to experimental data at 2200 rpm are presented. Comparisons of filtration and oxidation behavior of the CPF at sample load-cases in both configurations are also presented. The input parameters and selected results are also compared with a similar research work with an earlier version of the CCRT®, to compare and explain differences in the fundamental behavior of the CCRT® used in these two research studies. An analysis of the results from the calibrated CPF model suggests that pressure drop across the CPF depends mainly on PM loading and oxidation in the substrate wall, and also that the substrate wall initiates PM filtration and helps in forming a PM cake layer on the wall. After formation of the PM cake layer of about 1-2 µm on the wall, the PM cake becomes the primary filter and performs 98-99% of PM filtration. In all load cases, most of PM mass deposited was in the PM cake layer, and PM oxidation in the PM cake layer accounted for 95-99% of total PM mass oxidized during loading. Overall PM oxidation efficiency of the DOC-CPF device increased with increasing CPF inlet temperatures and NO2 flow rates, and was higher in the CCRT® configuration compared to the CPF-only configuration due to higher CPF inlet NO2 concentrations. Filtration efficiencies greater than 90% were observed within 90-100 minutes of loading time (starting with a clean filter) in all load cases, due to the fact that the PM cake on the substrate wall forms a very efficient filter. A good strategy for maintaining high filtration efficiency and low pressure drop of the device while performing active regeneration would be to clean the PM cake filter partially (i.e., by retaining a cake layer of 1-2 µm thickness on the substrate wall) and to completely oxidize the PM deposited in the substrate wall. The data presented support this strategy.
Resumo:
Recent epidemiological studies report a consistent association between short sleep and incidence of hypertension, as well as short sleep and cardiovascular disease-related mortality. While the association between short sleep and hypertension appears to be stronger in women than men, the mechanisms underlying the relations between sleep deprivation, stress, risks of cardiovascular diseases, and sex remain unclear. We conducted two studies to investigate the underlying neural mechanisms of these relations. In study 1, we examined sympathetic neural and blood pressure responses to experimentally-induced sleep deprivation in men and women. We further investigated the influence of sleep deprivation on cardiovascular reactivity to acute stress. In study 2, we examined the neural and cardiovascular function throughout the ovarian cycle in sleep deprived women. Twenty-eight young healthy subjects (14men and 14 women) were tested twice in study 1, once after normal sleep (NS) and once after 24-h total sleep deprivation (TSD). We measured the blood pressure, heart rate (HR), muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and forearm blood flow (FBF) during 10min baseline, 5min of mental stress (MS) and 2 min cold pressor test (CPT). We demonstrated that TSD increased resting arterial blood pressure to a similar extent in both men and women, but MSNA decreased only in men following TSD. This MSNA response was associated with altered baroreflex function in women and divergent testosterone responses to TSD between men and women. Regarding TSD and cardiovascular reactivity, TSD elicited augmented HR reactivity and delayed recovery during both MS and CPT in men and women, and responses between sexes were not statistically different. Fourteen young healthy women participated in study 2. Subjects were tested twice, once during their early follicular (EF) phase after TSD, once during their mid-luteal (ML) phase after TSD. Blood pressure, HR, MSNA, and FBF were recorded during 10min baseline, 5 min MS, and 2 min CPT. We observed an augmented resting supine blood pressure during EF compared to ML in sleep deprived women. In contrast, resting MSNA, as well as cardiovascular responses to stressors, were similar between EF and ML after TSD. In conclusion, we observed sex differences in MSNA responses to TSD that demonstrate reductions of MSNA in men, but not women. TSD elicited augmented HR reactivity and delayed HR recovery to acute stressors similarly in men and women. We also reported an augmented supine blood pressure during EF compared to ML in sleep deprived women. These novel findings provide new and valuable mechanistic insight regarding the complex and poorly understood relations among sleep deprivation, sex, stress, and risk of cardiovascular disease.
Resumo:
Semi-active damping devices have been shown to be effective in mitigating unwanted vibrations in civil structures. These devices impart force indirectly through real-time alterations to structural properties. Simulating the complex behavior of these devices for laboratory-scale experiments is a major challenge. Commercial devices for seismic applications typically operate in the 2-10 kN range; this force is too high for small-scale testing applications where requirements typically range from 0-10 N. Several challenges must be overcome to produce damping forces at this level. In this study, a small-scale magneto-rheological (MR) damper utilizing a fluid absorbent metal foam matrix is developed and tested to accomplish this goal. This matrix allows magneto-rheological (MR) fluid to be extracted upon magnetic excitation in order to produce MR-fluid shear stresses and viscosity effects between an electromagnetic piston, the foam, and the damper housing. Dampers for uniaxial seismic excitation are traditionally positioned in the horizontal orientation allowing MR-fluid to gather in the lower part of the damper housing when partially filled. Thus, the absorbent matrix is placed in the bottom of the housing relieving the need to fill the entire device with MR-fluid, a practice that requires seals that add significant unwanted friction to the desired low-force device. The damper, once constructed, can be used in feedback control applications to reduce seismic vibrations and to test structural control algorithms and wireless command devices. To validate this device, a parametric study was performed utilizing force and acceleration measurements to characterize damper performance and controllability for this actuator. A discussion of the results is presented to demonstrate the attainment of the damper design objectives.