9 results on '"Spectrum analysis"'
Search Results
2. Multinuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy for in Vivo Assessment of Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Parkinson's Disease.
- Author
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Henchcliffe, Claire, Shungu, Dikoma C., Mao, Xiangling, Huang, Chaorui, Nirenberg, Melissa J., Jenkins, Bruce G., and Beal, M. Flint
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PARKINSON'S disease , *SPECTRUM analysis , *MAGNETIC resonance , *MITOCHONDRIA , *METABOLISM , *GLYCOLYSIS , *PHOSPHATES , *ADENOSINES - Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common and often devastating neurodegenerative disease affecting up to one million individuals in the United States alone. Multiple lines of evidence support mitochondrial dysfunction as a primary or secondary event in PD pathogenesis; a better understanding, therefore, of how mitochondrial function is altered in vivo in brain tissue in PD is a critical step toward developing potential PD biomarkers. In vivo study of mitochondrial metabolism in human subjects has previously been technically challenging. However, proton and phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H and 31P MRS) are powerful noninvasive techniques that allow evaluation in vivo of lactate, a marker of anaerobic glycolysis, and high energy phosphates, such as adenosine triphosphate and phosphocreatine, directly reflecting mitochondrial function. This article reviews previous 1H and 31P MRS studies in PD, which demonstrate metabolic abnormalities consistent with mitochondrial dysfunction, and then presents recent 1H MRS data revealing abnormally elevated lactate levels in PD subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
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3. Identification of Incinerated Root Canal Filling Materials After Exposure to High Heat Incineration.
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Bonavilla, Joseph D., Bush, Mary A., Bush, Peter J., and Pantera, Eugene A.
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INCENDIARY weapons , *INCENDIARY bombs , *INCINERATION , *X-ray spectroscopy , *SPECTRUM analysis , *AUTOPSY , *HUMAN fingerprints , *FORENSIC sciences - Abstract
With the increase in global terrorism there is a higher probability of having to identify victims of incineration events secondary to incendiary explosive devices. The victims of incineration events challenge forensic odontologists when coronal restorations are no longer present to compile postmortem data. With 40 million root canals being completed annually in the United States, a very large pool of antemortem data is available to the forensic odontologist to make positive identifications. When complete and thorough dental records exist, individuals that have undergone surgical and nonsurgical root canal therapy may have materials present in the canal that may aid in identification. This study provides elemental fingerprints of root canal obturation materials to be utilized as a forensic identification aid. This study used scanning electron microscopy/energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM/EDS) to assess the elemental composition of materials before and after high temperature incineration. Sixteen endodontic materials were analyzed pre-incineration and placed in extracted teeth. The filled teeth were subjected to incineration at 900°C for 30 min to simulate incineration events or cremation. Incinerated materials were radiographed and re-analyzed to determine if they retained their original elemental composition. Endodontic sealers, gutta percha, root-end filling materials, silver points, and separated files were distinguishable in the canal and traceable after incineration. The authors present a fingerprint of the endodontic obturation materials that are capable of withstanding high heat incineration to be used as an aid for postmortem identification. This work represents the initial stage of database generation for root canal filling materials for use as an aid in forensic identification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Odor Analysis of Decomposing Buried Human Remains.
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Vass, Arpad A., Smith, Rob R., Thompson, Cyril V., Burnett, Michael N., Dulgerian, Nishan, and Eckenrode, Brian A.
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL human remains , *INTERMENT , *ANTHROPOLOGICAL research , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SPECTRUM analysis , *RESEARCH institutes , *HUMAN skeleton , *BIODEGRADATION - Abstract
This study, conducted at the University of Tennessee’s Anthropological Research Facility (ARF), lists and ranks the primary chemical constituents which define the odor of decomposition of human remains as detected at the soil surface of shallow burial sites. Triple sorbent traps were used to collect air samples in the field and revealed eight major classes of chemicals which now contain 478 specific volatile compounds associated with burial decomposition. Samples were analyzed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and were collected below and above the body, and at the soil surface of 1.5–3.5 ft. (0.46–1.07 m) deep burial sites of four individuals over a 4-year time span. New data were incorporated into the previously established Decompositional Odor Analysis (DOA) Database providing identification, chemical trends, and semi-quantitation of chemicals for evaluation. This research identifies the “odor signatures” unique to the decomposition of buried human remains with projected ramifications on human remains detection canine training procedures and in the development of field portable analytical instruments which can be used to locate human remains in shallow burial sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
- Full Text
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5. Strontium and Geolocation, the Pathway to Identification for Deceased Undocumented Mexican Border-Crossers: A Preliminary Report.
- Author
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Juarez, Chelsey A.
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STRONTIUM , *ALKALINE earth metals , *ISOTOPES , *NUCLIDES , *DEAD , *SPECTRUM analysis , *MASS spectrometry - Abstract
Much of the difficulty associated with identifying and repatriating deceased undocumented border-crossers stems from an inability to narrow down the search area to more probable options. Analysis of the isotopic variation in the tooth enamel of modern Mexican populations is currently underway at the University of California Santa Cruz. Using Thermo Ionization Mass Spectrometry, the pilot research analyzed strontium isotopes located in the donated permanent teeth of Mexican-born individuals of known origin from four states. The preliminary results reveal the formation of three distinctly significant regions in the data set. Using the technology outlined here, a map documenting the isotopic variation in modern Mexican tooth enamel is being complied to use for cross comparison with deceased border crossers of unknown origin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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6. AVAILABILITY OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS FROM LAMPBLACK-IMPACTED SOILS AT FORMER OIL-GAS PLANT SITES IN CALIFORNIA, USA.
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Lei Hong and Luthy, Richard G.
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POLYCYCLIC aromatic compounds , *ABSORPTION , *BIODEGRADATION of petroleum , *LIGHT elements , *COAL tar , *SOIL absorption & adsorption , *MAGNETIC resonance , *SPECTRUM analysis - Abstract
Lampblack-impacted soils at former oil-gas plant sites in California, USA, were characterized to assess the sorption of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and the concentration-dependent effects of a residual oil tar phase on sorption mechanism and availability of PAHs. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy demonstrated similar aromaticity for both lampblack carbon and the oil tar phase, with pronounced resonance signals in the range of 100 to 150 ppm. Scanning-electron microscopic images revealed a physically distinct oil tar phase, especially at high concentrations in lampblack, which resulted in an organic-like film structure when lampblack particles became saturated with the oil tar. Sorption experiments were conducted on a series of laboratoryprepared lampblack samples to systematically evaluate influences of an oil tar phase on PAH sorption to lampblack. Results indicate that the sorption of PAHs to lampblack exhibits a competition among sorption phases at low oil tar contents when micro- and mesopores are accessible. When the oil tar content increases to more than 5 to 10% by weight, this tar phase fills small pores, reduces surface area, and dominates PAH sorption on lampblack surface. A new PAH partitioning model, Kd = KLB-C(1 - ftar)α + ftarKtar (α = empirical exponent), incorporates these effects in which the control of PAH partitioning transits from being dominated by sorption in lampblack (KLB-C) to absorption in oil tar (Ktar), depending on the fraction of tar ( ftar). This study illustrates the importance of understanding interactions among PAHs, oil tar, and lampblack for explaining the differences in availability of PAHs among site soils and, consequently, for refining site-specific risk assessment and establishing soil cleanup levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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7. Infrared Spectra of U.S. Automobile Original Finishes. VII. Extended Range FT-IR and XRF Analyses of Inorganic Pigments In Situ—Nickel Titanate and Chrome Titanate.
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Suzuki, Edward M. and McDermot, Martin X.
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AUTOMOTIVE painting & paint shops , *INFRARED spectra , *PAINT materials , *SPECTRUM analysis , *AUTOMOBILES , *COMMERCIAL products - Abstract
The identification, analysis, and occurrence in U.S. automobile original finishes (1974–1989) of Nickel Titanate (yellow) and Chrome Titanate (yellow–orange) are described in this report. The titanate pigments are based on the rutile (titanium dioxide) structure and there are only minor differences between the infrared absorptions of rutile and the titanates. Titanate pigment absorptions in paint spectra can thus be easily mistaken for those of rutile. Each of the titanates, however, contains two elements in addition to titanium that can serve to distinguish them using elemental analyses. Fourier transform infrared (4000–220 cm−1) and X-ray fluorescence instruments were used in combination for the in situ analysis of the titanates. In addition to titanium, nickel, and antimony, the three main detectable elements comprising Nickel Titanate, all of the commercial products of this pigment that were examined also contained impurities of zirconium, niobium, and usually lead. These elements were also detected in most of the monocoats in which Nickel Titanate was identified, as well as in the Chrome Titanate pigments, and the zirconium to niobium ratio was found to exhibit a wide variation. Nickel Titanate is a relatively common pigment that was identified in nearly three dozen U.S. automobile yellow nonmetallic monocoats (1974–1989), while Chrome Titanate appears to have been used in only a few yellow and orange nonmetallic monocoats. The use of the titanate pigments likely increased after this time period as they were replacements for lead chromate pigments (last used in a U.S. automobile original finish in the early 1990s), and are more amenable for use in basecoat/clearcoat finishes than in monocoats. Minor distortions of the infrared absorptions of rutile, anatase, and the titanates obtained using accessories with diamond windows were noted, and their origins are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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8. Inaugural meeting of the Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry Associate Editorial Board.
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Trevorrow, Paul and Kilgour, David
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MEETINGS , *MASS spectrometry , *SPECTRUM analysis , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Information about the annual American Society of Mass Spectrometry meeting held in Minneapolis, Minnesota on June 9 to 13, 2013 is presented. Topics include the embryonic playground of editorial creativity. The meeting featured several representatives of the Associate Editorial Board including David Kilgour of Great Britain, Adam Trevitt of Australia and Sarah Trimpin of the U.S.
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- 2013
- Full Text
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9. New Newsletter for Testing Technology Available.
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HIGH technology industries , *COMPLEMENTARY metal oxide semiconductors , *JET fuel , *SHOCK absorbers , *SPECTRUM analysis - Abstract
A new newsletter, from the U.S.-based Sandia National Laboratories "Testing Technology," features some of Sandia's work in test activities, facilities and methods. Sandia is now accelerating efforts to exchange ideas and collaborate on technologies with private industry, universities and other laboratories. The first issue deals with photon correlation spectroscopy applied to jet fuel analysis, solar testing, shock isolation techniques, high-speed photography and radiation effects tests on CMOS semiconductors.
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- 1993
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