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Regenerant delivery

Most of the NADH used in electron transport is produced in the mitochondrial matrix space, an appropriate site because NADH is oxidized by Complex I on the matrix side of the inner membrane. Furthermore, the inner mitochondrial membrane is impermeable to NADH. Recall, however, that NADH is produced in glycolysis by glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase in the cytosol. If this NADH were not oxidized to regenerate NAD, the glycolytic pathway would cease to function due to NAD limitation. Eukaryotic cells have a number of shuttle systems that harvest the electrons of cytosolic NADH for delivery to mitochondria without actually transporting NADH across the inner membrane (Figures 21.33 and 21.34). [Pg.702]

Despite the evidence for the cytotoxicity of CNTs, there are an increasing number of published studies that support the potential development of CNT-based biomaterials for tissue regeneration (e.g., neuronal substrates [143] and orthopedic materials [154—156]), cancer treatment [157], and drug/vaccine delivery systems [158, 159]. Most of these applications will involve the implantation and/or administration of such materials into patients as for any therapeutic or diagnostic agent used, the toxic potential of the CNTs must be evaluated in relation to their potential benefits [160]. For this reason, detailed investigations of the interactions between CNTs/CNT-based implants and various cell types have been carried out [154, 155, 161]. A comprehensive description of such results, however, is beyond the scope of this chapter. Extensive reviews on the biocompatibility of implantable CNT composite materials [21, 143, 162] and of CNT drug-delivery systems [162] are available. [Pg.198]

An air inlet area of at least 400 cm2 and a louvered exit of 75 cm2 are recommended for target capacity and physical size of the appliance. The efficient and quiet centrifugal fan unit is popularly used in air conditioners and air purifiers. It costs less than the other fan units of similar size and is easy to install and assemble. A fan with adjustable air deliver rate of 0 to 250 cfm will be used to draw air through the air filter, dehumidifier and purifier units. A smaller fan with air delivery rate of up to 10 cfm is needed for the regeneration... [Pg.383]

Surya K. Mallapragada and Jennifer B. Recknor, Polymeric Biomaterias for Nerve Regeneration Anthony M. Lowman, Thomas D. Dziubla, Petr Bures, and Nicholas A. Peppas, Structural and Dynamic Response of Neutral and Intelligent Networks in Biomedical Environments F. Kurds Kasper and Antonios G. Mikos, Biomaterials and Gene Therapy Balaji Narasimhan and Matt J. Kipper, Surface-Erodihle Biomaterials for Drug Delivery... [Pg.187]

Yamamoto has proposed a mechanism for the palladium-catalyzed cyclization/hydrosilylation of enynes that accounts for the selective delivery of the silane to the more substituted C=C bond. Initial conversion of [(77 -C3H5)Pd(GOD)] [PF6] to a cationic palladium hydride species followed by complexation of the diyne could form the cationic diynylpalladium hydride intermediate Ib (Scheme 2). Hydrometallation of the less-substituted alkyne would form the palladium alkenyl alkyne complex Ilb that could undergo intramolecular carbometallation to form the palladium dienyl complex Illb. Silylative cleavage of the Pd-G bond, perhaps via cr-bond metathesis, would then release the silylated diene with regeneration of a palladium hydride species (Scheme 2). [Pg.370]

Significant developments have occurred in recent years in the fields of biopolymers and biomaterials. New synthetic materials have been synthesized and tested for a variety of biomedical and related applications from linings for artifical hearts to artifical pancreas devices and from intraocular lenses to drug delivery systems. Of particular interest in the future is the development of intelligent polymers or materials with special functional groups that can be used either for specialty medical applications or as templates or scaffolds for tissue regeneration. [Pg.294]

Busch, O., Solheim, E., Bang, G., and Tomes, K. (1996). Guided tissue regeneration and local delivery of insulinlike growth factor I by bioerodible polyorthoester membranes in rat calvarial defects. Int. J. Oral Maxillofac. Implants, 11, 498-505. [Pg.303]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.154 , Pg.158 , Pg.163 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.113 ]




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Cell delivery tissue regeneration

Regenerent delivery

Tissue regeneration scaffold-drug delivery

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