What's the difference between cartridge and reprimer?

Cartridge


Definition:

  • (n.) A complete charge for a firearm, contained in, or held together by, a case, capsule, or shell of metal, pasteboard, or other material.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) We have compared two new methods (a solvent extraction technique and a method involving a disposable, pre-packed reverse phase chromatography cartridge) with the standard method for determining the radiochemical purity of 99Tcm-HMPAO.
  • (2) The recoveries using the cartridges were between 90-102% for urine and 81-93% for plasma.
  • (3) When imitation examination was carried out using pontamine blue dye solution in 7 kinds of syringes for the use of cartridge, dye reflux was observed in all of them.
  • (4) Following incubation of tissue fractions with desferrioxamine, the parent compound and its iron-bound form, ferrioxamine, are extracted using solid-phase cartridges and quantitated by reversed-phase HPLC using uv detection.
  • (5) The vigilantes use shotguns and cartridges and have been short in supply, so the leader left yesterday for Maiduguri to procure more in the event of any attack,” he told AFP.
  • (6) The method uses a highly fluorescent dienophile, 4-[2-(6,7-dimethoxy-4-methyl-3-oxo-3,4-dihydroquinoxalyl)ethyl]-1, 2,4- triazoline-3,5-dione (DMEQ-TAD), to fluorescence-label vitamin D. Vitamin D metabolites were roughly purified with a short cartridge column followed by HPLC, labeled with DMEQ-TAD, and the product was analyzed on HPLC.
  • (7) The water was analysed after purification and concentration on a C18 cartridge.
  • (8) A Puf- strain of Rhodobacter sphaeroides (PUFB1) was constructed by deleting a portion of the proximal region of the puf operon and inserting a kanamycin resistance gene cartridge.
  • (9) We obtained stable mutants in which the chromosomal lysA gene, encoding meso-diaminopimelate decarboxylase, was interrupted by a chloramphenicol resistance cartridge, or in which an essential internal part of the lysA gene was deleted.
  • (10) A C18 solid-phase extraction cartridge is used to ensure quantitative salt-free recovery of the HGs, and the purified glycolipids are then rendered uv-absorbing by a per-O-benzoylation derivatization reaction for which optimal conditions have been established.
  • (11) The samples were extracted into a hydrochloric acid - glycine solution and the extracts concentrated and purified on cyclohexyl-bonded reversed-phase cartridges.
  • (12) Bile acids in human bile were first prefractionated into free, glycine- and taurine-conjugated bile acids using a Seppak C18 cartridge and a piperidinohydroxypropyl Sephadex LH-20 (PHP-LH-20) column.
  • (13) Multipolar cells with cell bodies distal (MP1) or proximal (MP2) to the plexiform layer send processes to several cartridges.
  • (14) The best conditions for extractions of free pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) from crude biological samples were investigated with various organic solvents and Sep-Pak C18 cartridges.
  • (15) In addition to their behavior on Sephadex G-50, the immunoactive insulin-related materials from the microbial sources behaved like authentic vertebrate insulins in their ability to be adsorbed to and eluted from disposable octadecasilylsilica cartridges, DEAE-Sephadex, DEAE-cellulose, and one system of high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC).
  • (16) The 2-methyl derivatives of tamoxifen (2-methyltamoxifen and 2-methyl-4-hydroxytamoxifen) were extracted from a cell culture medium at pH 5.4 (Earle's Minimum Essential Medium) with an internal standard (tamoxifen) on a phenyl sorbent cartridge.
  • (17) A number of veins and arteries were penetrated with 25- and 27-gauge needles attached to standard dental aspirating cartridge-type syringes.
  • (18) A cartridge was constructed which contained the divergent tet promoters of transposon Tn10 between an exoglucanase gene (cex) and an endoglucanase gene (cenA) of Cellulomonas fimi.
  • (19) ANF was extracted from plasma using an octadecasilyl silica cartridge with a recovery of 78.7%.
  • (20) The extract is then cleaned up on a silica cartridge.

Reprimer


Definition:

  • (n.) A machine or implement for applying fresh primers to spent cartridge shells, so that the shells be used again.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The repriming of K-contractures was more affected by changes in [Ca]0 in normal soleus than in normal extensor digitorum longus and this difference was unaffected by dystrophy.
  • (2) The difference in repriming time course shows that l.m.h.
  • (3) The method of measurement allows identification of charge or charges which are 'reprimed' by repolarization.
  • (4) Raising the external pH in the presence of GABA decreased the GABA-gated peak conductance and increased the fractional desensitization, while lowering the external pH produced opposite effects, and was capable of repriming the conductance from a desensitized state to the non-desensitized state.
  • (5) At these intermediate concentrations, repriming was less complete in denervated muscle, reflecting the increased speed of delayed contractile inactivation.
  • (6) The sensitivity of reprimed fibers to paralysis by D600 and D890 was similar.
  • (7) Attention is paid to some aspects of the sodium and calcium conductance which seem to be specific for heart muscle: 1) recent findings indicate that repriming of the sodium and calcium conductance in heart muscle cannot be described as the reverse process of inactivation; 2) the existence of an important calcium current is well established, but controversial findings have been obtained for the time constant of inactivation; 3) Na and Ca interact in determining the slow channel current.
  • (8) the time course of repriming of the labile heat, could be described by an equation with two exponential terms in 5% CO2 in accordance with the result of Peckham & Woledge (1986).
  • (9) However, in adult rat atria, isoprenaline often gave a complex effect, with a smaller degree of repriming at short intervals, and enhanced repriming at longer intervals.
  • (10) It is concluded that denervation caused changes in the kinetics of mechanical activation, inactivation and repriming and that these aspects of excitation-contraction coupling are normally controlled by an influence of the motor nerve.
  • (11) At 3 degrees C the long duration of potassium contractures and the delay in the repriming process allow one to carry out solution changes while the responses are still in progress, making it possible to study the processes that determine the contracture time course.2.
  • (12) In striking contrast, there was no effect of isoprenaline on tension repriming in neonatal guinea pig atria and a retardation in neonatal rat atria.
  • (13) With D-600, the activation curve was not modified, whereas the inactivation curve could not be obtained, because of repriming failure.
  • (14) However, at -150 mV, repriming in procaine was quite rapid, the time to half recovery being about 0.4 sec.3.
  • (15) It is concluded that the altered kinetics of iCa channel repriming caused by beta-adrenoceptor agonist in multicellular preparations is consistent with the action of these drugs in increasing the probability of channel opening and the time spent in the open state.
  • (16) The isometric twitch tension was measured during superfusion with hypoxic (PO2 less than 30 mmHg), acidic (pH 6.80), glucose-free, or their combined ("ischemic") Tyrode's solution at 20 degrees C. The time needed to fully recover the contraction induced by 10 mM caffeine (repriming time) was measured to indirectly estimate the Ca2+ uptake of the SR.
  • (17) However, the fact that contractures are prolonged in the cold, and the finding that repriming is delayed, can be utilized in further studies to clarify the mechanism that controls the release of calcium.
  • (18) The combined pH dependence and voltage dependence of repriming kinetics during lidocaine treatment can be explained by assuming that channels occupied by neutral drug can reactivate most readily at a rate that appears to be coupled to recovery from channel inactivation.
  • (19) The repriming curve is also shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction in 2T solutions.
  • (20) Tension appears to develop during repolarization when the reversal of inactivation occurs before the reversal of activation is completed, both steps being necessary to recover the reprimed resting state.

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