(1) The elimination of enoximone is also reduced which might be caused by reconversion of enoximone sulfoxide to enoximone in this pathophysiologic condition.
(2) These major modifications will be illustrated by the French "sectorisation" which will be replaced in the context of complete reconversion of the French mental health care system.
(3) Evidence was obtained indicating that neither the presence of an inhibitor in the assay system nor reconversion of PAF to lyso-PAF in vitro produced the unexpected depression of plasma lyso-PAF.
(4) The clivus with marrow reconversion was uniformly hypointense relative to the pons on T1-weighted images and isointense relative to normal marrow on T2-weighted images.
(5) Both 5 mM NNAl (rate, 0.073) and 5 mM 1-MeNNAl (rate, 0.054) induce SSB indicating that NNAl does not require reconversion to NNK to be activated to DNA damaging intermediates.
(6) Direct duodenal reconversion by means of the transformation of gastrojejunostomy into gastroduodenostomy is recommended in the light of results obtained in 25 cases of p.o.p.u., dumping syndrome, inflammation of the anastomosis, and ALS.
(7) This strategy was developed to demonstrate that an improvement in oral absorption could be obtained through reconversion in vivo.
(8) A comparative study showed that the membranes reconstituted by a dialysis or absorption do not differ from each other in terms of membrane proteins incorporation into lipid vesicles and cytochrome P-450 reconversion into cytochrome P-450.
(9) Particularly serious is the dehiscence of gastroduodenal anastomosis which requires emergency reconversion intervention, namely gastrojejunostomy with sinking of the duodenal stump.
(10) The reconversion of S-sulfonated antitetanus gamma-globulin (S-GG) into the original gamma-globulin was studied.
(11) Reversal of the vanadate effect and reconversion of the binding sites to the high-affinity state was demonstrated by adding appropriate calcium concentrations to the enzyme-vanadate complex, and showing the appearance of the intrinsic fluorescence signal which is indicative of calcium occupancy of the sites in the high-affinity state.
(12) Following the infusion of [3H]LTD4 (10 nmol.l-1), a major biliary metabolite was LTC4 indicating a reconversion of LTD4 to LTC4.
(13) The similarity in the acids of the sn-1 and sn-3 positions of the chylomicron triacylglycerols from rats fed oil or ester is consistent with a hydrolysis of the acylglycerol products of the phosphatidic acid pathway to 2-monoacylglycerols prior to reconversion to triacylglycerols via the monoacylglycerol pathway and secretion as chylomicrons.
(14) Although reconversion is apparently blocked to a large extent by warfarin, the plasma disappearance of tritiated vitamin K in the presence of warfarin is almost superimpossible to that observed in the absence of drugs.
(15) 103:265-275), removal of dMM did not result in reconversion of high-mannose oligosaccharides to complex-type sugars, even after prolonged periods of culture.
(16) (4) Reconversion of the activated permeability factor into an inactive form was not observed under high salt conditions, under which the latent permeability factor was stable in its own form.
(17) Reconversion from bradyzoites to tachyzoites may occur in immunocompromised patients.
(18) Increased hepatic gluconeogenesis provides glucose which is converted to three-carbon precursors in the periphery and returns to the liver for reconversion to new glucose, utilising the Cori and alanine cycles.
(19) The results are encouraging enough to propose improving the survival rate in a prospective clinical study of early breast cancer treated by local and regional means using a protocol incorporating an immunostimulation based on the existing immunocompetence with interferon-induced reconversion of the target cells in the hope of specific stimulation.
(20) Transfer of these cells into ammonium-free seawater (pH 7.4) results in the rephosphorylation of the cyclase, its reconversion to 160 kD, and recovery of the enzymatic activity lost upon dephosphorylation.
Reconvert
Definition:
(v. t.) To convert again.
(n.) A person who has been reconverted.
Example Sentences:
(1) An acid extract of the green enzyme reconverts the yellow into the green form.
(2) One pair reverted to bilirubin in polar media and gave chemical reactions similar to bilirubin; the other pair were not reconverted into bilirubin by chemical means and gave reactions distinct from those of bilirubin.
(3) Elastic osteosynthesis is capable of producing the biomechanical conditions required to reconvert mature fibro-cartilaginous tissue interposed in the non-union in bone tissue.
(4) When the Tn1-containing SalI fragment 5 was reconverted, by homologous recombination, to the original SalI fragment 5 (9.6 kb), serum resistance was recovered to the same level as that of a parent strain 52401.
(5) We investigated the incidence of areas of residual and reconverted hematopoietic marrow in the distal femur in a series of 50 adult patients using conventional spin-echo and opposed-phase gradient-echo MR images.
(6) Concatemers formed at 30 degrees were reconverted to mature DNA by packaging in vitro.
(7) The products of the CuAO-catalysed reactions cannot be reconverted into polyamines (terminal catabolism) and therefore usually escape observation.
(8) The oxidation of NO reconverts it to a nitrosating agent which may react again with the remaining ASC.
(9) The second phase acting on the target employs interferon and arginine butyrate since they reconvert a number of transformed target cells to normal phenotype.
(10) Twenty-three beagle dogs were ventilated with perfluorinated liquid, perfluoro-1-isopropoxy-hexane (Caroxin-F) for 1 h and were reconverted to gaseous breathing.
(11) Blue illumination converts BR and BS into the excited states BR* and BS*, which either relax by photon emission to BR or BS, or convert into an intermediate Y, which after deprotonation reconverts into the primary pigment AR or AS.
(12) This cycle converts AMP into IMP and reconverts IMP into AMP via adenylosuccinate, thereby producing NH3 and forming fumarate from aspartate.
(13) Clofibrate alone did not affect the disposition of tritiated vitamin K. Warfarin alone produced an accumulation in plasma of substantial amounts of vitamin K epoxide, a metabolite of vitamin K which is reconverted to vitamin K by a specific reductase.
(14) Reconverted red marrow appears to be related to increased erythrocyte demand.
(15) The pink adduct can be reconverted to an isoalloxazine chromophore by reduction with borohydride and subsequent reoxidation with oxygen.
(16) This species, which we name iso-halorhodopsin, is stable in the dark at room temperature for at least a day, but can be quantitatively reconverted into a mixture of all-trans and 13-cis halorhodopsin by blue-light illumination.
(17) The vitamin K epoxide data suggest that, in the absence of drugs, a relatively small proportion of the epoxide is reconverted to the vitamin.
(18) Flavocyanines can be reconverted to starting flavin by base.
(19) Despite the inconclusive results with the isolated chromophore, the observations on the enzyme suggest that it may contain a pyridoxal derivative bound as a Schiff's base which is converted into the pyridoxamine form on aerobic treatment with methylamine and reconverted into the pyridoxal form with phenazine methosulphate.
(20) The slow-dissociating component obtained after charcoal treatment was reconverted to fast-dissociating state by adding dithiothreitol or by incubation with cytosol at 20 degrees C. The charcoal treatment did not change the sedimentation coefficient (approximately 9 S) and the Stokes radius (approximately 7 nm) of the [3H]E2-8-9 S ER, and the slow-dissociating form obtained did not bind to DNA-cellulose either in the presence or absence of molybdate ions.