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4 result(s) for "CPT absorption"
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Square root law model for the delivery and intestinal absorption of drugs: a case of hydrophilic captopril
The in vivo release and absorption of drugs are dependent on the interplay between many factors related to compound, formulation, and physiological properties. The mathematical models of oral drug absorption attempt to strike a balance between a complete description that takes into consideration as many independent factors as possible, and simple models that operate with fewer parameters, based mainly on critical factors. The latter models are by far more robust and easier to apply to predict the extent and sometimes even the rate of absorption. The present paper attempted to develop a simple model to describe the time course of absorption of the hydrophilic drug captopril (CPT) at the early phases of absorption, with implications mainly in the induction and early stages of achieving its therapeutic effect. As a phenomenological model, the instantaneous release of CPT was considered in the gastrointestinal fluid, leading to a constant drug concentration for a prolonged time, followed by a 'long path diffusion' inside the intestinal wall and a very low concentration at the interface intestinal wall-blood. These conditions regarding CPT concentration were translated into initial and boundary mathematical conditions for the diffusion equation in the intestinal wall. The solution of the diffusion equation led in the end to a square root law describing the dependence between the fraction of the drug absorbed and time. The model was successfully applied to data obtained in five bioequivalence studies: three comparing plasma levels achieved after the administration of a single dose of CPT 50 mg, one evaluating CPT pharmacokinetics after a 100 mg dose, and a fifth comparing CPT pharmacokinetics of two fixed-dose combinations of CPT 50 mg and hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg.
Influence of water absorption on the mechanical properties of discontinuous carbon fiber reinforced polyamide 6
Carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastics (CFRTP) have been developed to realize excellent formability and mechanical properties. Specifically, discontinuous CFRTP (DCFRTP) are promising candidates for decreasing production cost and for application to mass production. Polyamide 6 (PA6) is a promising matrix for CFRTP due to its good adhesion properties with carbon fibers (CFs). However, the degradation of the mechanical properties of CFRTP due to the hygroscopic properties of PA6 is an area of concern. Thus, an investigation of the effects of water absorption on the mechanical properties of discontinuous CF reinforced PA6 is necessary. Additionally, a theoretical prediction of the degradation in mechanical properties is useful to clarify the effect of the absorbed water. Therefore, in this study, the influence of water absorption on the mechanical properties of CFRTP was investigated by measuring the mechanical properties using a three-point bending test. In addition, the flexural modulus was calculated using the Timoshenko beam equation to predict the degradation due to water absorption.
Microfabricated Vapor Cells with Reflective Sidewalls for Chip Scale Atomic Sensors
We investigate the architecture of microfabricated vapor cells with reflective sidewalls for applications in chip scale atomic sensors. The optical configuration in operation is suitable for both one-beam and two-beam (pump & probe) schemes. In the miniaturized vapor cells, the laser beam is reflected twice by the aluminum reflectors on the wet etched 54.7° sidewalls to prolong the optical length significantly, thus resulting in a return reflectance that is three times that of bare silicon sidewalls. To avoid limitations faced in the fabrication process, a simpler, more universal and less constrained fabrication process of microfabricated vapor cells for chip scale atomic sensors with uncompromised performance is implemented, which also decreases the fabrication costs and procedures. Characterization measurements show that with effective sidewall reflectors, mm3 level volume and feasible hermeticity, the elongated miniature vapor cells demonstrate a linear absorption contrast improvement by 10 times over the conventional micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) vapor cells at ~50 °C in the rubidium D1 absorption spectroscopy experiments. At the operating temperature of ~90 °C for chip scale atomic sensors, a 50% linear absorption contrast enhancement is obtained with the reflective cell architecture. This leads to a potential improvement in the clock stability and magnetometer sensitivity. Besides, the coherent population trapping spectroscopy is applied to characterize the microfabricated vacuum cells with 46.3 kHz linewidth in the through cell configuration, demonstrating the effectiveness in chip scale atomic sensors.
Kinetics of Interactions of Matter, Antimatter and Radiation Consistent with Antisymmetric (CPT-Invariant) Thermodynamics
This work investigates the influence of directional properties of decoherence on kinetics rate equations. The physical reality is understood as a chain of unitary and decoherence events. The former are quantum-deterministic, while the latter introduce uncertainty and increase entropy. For interactions of matter and antimatter, two approaches are considered: symmetric decoherence, which corresponds to conventional symmetric (CP-invariant) thermodynamics, and antisymmetric decoherence, which corresponds to antisymmetric (CPT-invariant) thermodynamics. Radiation, in its interactions with matter and antimatter, is shown to be decoherence-neutral. The symmetric and antisymmetric assumptions result in different interactions of radiation with matter and antimatter. The theoretical predictions for these differences are testable by comparing absorption (emission) of light by thermodynamic systems made of matter and antimatter. Canonical typicality for quantum mixtures is briefly discussed in Appendix A.