Industries that rely on additive manufacturing of metallic parts, especially biomedical companies, require material science-based knowledge of how process parameters and methods affect the properties ...of manufactured elements, but such phenomena are incompletely understood. In this study, we investigated the influence of selective laser melting (SLM) process parameters and additional heat treatment on mechanical properties. The research included structural analysis of residual stress, microstructure, and scleronomic hardness in low-depth measurements. Tensile tests with specimen deformation analysis using digital image correlation (DIC) were performed as well. Experiment results showed it was possible to observe the porosity growth mechanism and its influence on the material strength. Specimens manufactured with 20% lower energy density had almost half the elongation, which was directly connected with the porosity growth during energy density reduction. Hot isostatic pressing (HIP) treatment allowed for a significant reduction of porosity and helped achieve properties similar to specimens manufactured using different levels of energy density.
The effects of repeated antidepressant drug treatment on behavioral outcome in Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats, a putative animal model of depressive behavior, were compared to Wistar and Sprague–Dawley (SD) ...rats. Rats were treated with desipramine (norepinephrine NE uptake blocker), nomifensine (NE and dopamine DA uptake blocker), paroxetine (serotonin 5-HT uptake blocker) or saline, for 12 days. On Day 11, rats were tested in the Porsolt forced swim test (FST). On Day 12, rats were tested in the open field test (OFT). Stress reactivity was assessed on Day 13 when all rats were exposed to water-restraint ulcerogenic stress. Significant strain differences in behavioral responses to the drug treatments were observed. Control WKY rats showed the typical freezing behavior in the OFT and excessive floating behavior in the FST as compared to Wistar and SD rats. Desipramine and nomifensine decreased immobility and increased swim time in the FST in WKY rats. Nomifensine reduced response latency in the OFT in WKY rats and increased activity in the OFT in WKY and SD rats. None of the drugs altered the FST in SD rats. Following ulcerogenic stress, desipramine was the only antidepressant that decreased ulcer incidence in all rat strains compared to saline controls. These results suggest that the “depressive behavior” in WKY rats may be modified by antidepressants that alter synaptic levels of NE and/or DA, but not 5-HT.
Strain differences in stress responsiveness have been previously described, but specific components of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis responsible for stress hypo- or hyperactivity have ...not yet been characterized. This study proposed to analyze the effect of restraint stress on different measures of HPA function and stress ulcer in stress-ulcer prone Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and Fisher 344 (F-344) rats and in the ulcer-resistant Wistar strain. Adult male rats of these strains were sham adrenalectomized, adrenalectomized, and adrenalectomized-replaced with corticosterone pellet. Ten days after surgery, animals were subjected to the 2-h ulcerogenic water-restraint stress and killed 2 h later. Intact WKY rats had dramatically more ulcers and higher anterior pituitary adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and proopiomelanocortin mRNA levels than the other two strains. In WKY rats, adrenalectomy increased ulcer incidence but did not affect thymus weight, ACTH content, or hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor mRNA levels, in contrast to the profound effects of adrenalectomy on these parameters in the other strains. Furthermore, corticosterone replacement was either without effect or enhanced the effect of adrenalectomy on these parameters in WKY rats, while it reversed the effects of adrenalectomy in the other strains. These data imply that WKY rats respond to stress with enhanced and prolonged changes in peripheral functions that are regulated by glucocorticoids, suggesting the presence of impaired efficacy of the glucocorticoid negative feedback on HPA function.
Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats show endogenous depressive behavior that can be reversed by antidepressants. Given that WKYs exhibit decreased sensitivity to some antidepressants and treatment-resistant ...depressed patients often show hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid (HPT) dysregulation, we examined the behavioral and HPT hormonal responses of WKYs to altered thyroid status. "Euthyroid" WKYs had elevated basal plasma TSH and T(3) levels as compared to Wistars. Hypothyroidism increased TSH levels more in WKYs than in Wistars and increased response latency in the open field test (OFT) of WKYs only. Administration of T(4) and T(3) suppressed plasma TSH equally in both strains. Wistars responded to increased T(3) levels with decreased response latency and increased activity in the OFT, but increased immobility in the forced swim test. In contrast, WKYs responded only to the high T(3) levels with decreased response latency in the OFT. These results suggest the existence of a decreased central nervous system sensitivity to thyroid hormones in WKYs that could be related to their depressive behavior.
Our multifactor theory of stress ulcer assumes that environmental factors that operate during early growth stages influence the elaboration of stress ulcer in adult rats. The theory would predict ...that rats exposed to either neonatal handling, or raised in a stimulus enriched environment, would reveal differences in stress ulcer susceptibility. In study 1, some Wistar rats and ulcer-susceptible Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats were handled daily from birth to day 21, whereas other rats from each strain were not disturbed. In study 2, Wistar and WKY rats were raised (3 months) in a large stimulus-dense enriched environment, whereas other rats from each strain were raised in standard rat cages where visual and auditory stimuli were minimized. At 3 months all rats were observed in the open field test (OFT), a test of emotionality, as well as the Porsolt forced swim test (FST), a test of behavioral depression, and subsequently exposed to the ulcerogenic water restraint procedure. Neonatal handling produced results suggesting increased wall climbing activity in the FST, reduced response latency in the OFT, increased body weight and reduced ulcer severity, but these differences were not significant. Rearing in an enriched environment produced similar results but these difference were more pronounced and significant in the Wistar rats as compared to the WKY rats. Thus early environmental manipulations can influence adult behavior and the elaboration of stress ulcer disease, but the impact of these manipulations is less salient in an organism with an endogenous susceptibility to the disease.
1.
The Emergence Test (ET), a variation of the open field test in which the rat is not handled, and is purported to measure neophobia, was applied to Wistar Kyoto (WKY) and Sprague Dawley (S-D) rats.
...2.
While no-stress control WKY rats were less active in the ET, pre-treatment with shock stress exacerbated strain differences. WKY rats, previously exposed to shock, did not emerge from the home cage start box during repeated testing, whereas previously stressed S-D rats vacated the home cage quickly and revealed increasing behavioral agitation.
3.
Diazepam reduced emergence latency only in S-D rats, whereas nomifensine significantly increased head poke responses in WKY rats.
4.
WKY rats responded to the ET with characteristically depressive behavior, whereas S-D rats responded to the same ET with behavioral agitation and anxiety. The implications of these behavior patterns for discriminating between anxiety and depressive behavior are presented.
Recent findings with respect to the role of spiral gram-negative bacteria in peptic ulcer disease have stimulated interest in discerning the role of these agents in stress ulcer disease. We tested ...the hypothesis that a standard restraint-cold ulcerogenic procedure would fail to produce ulcers in axenic rats. Axenic, as well as normal Sprague Dawley rats, were exposed to a cold-restraint procedure. The germ-free condition was maintained throughout the study in the axenic rats. Axenic rats had significantly fewer ulcers as compared to normal rats exposed to the standard cold-restraint procedure, as well as handling control rats. The data represent the first report suggesting a microbiologic component in the development of stress ulcer using the rat model.
Paré, W. P and J. Kluczynski. Differences in the stress response of Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats from different vendors. Physiol Behav 62(3) 643–648, 1997.—Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats are hyperresponsive to ...stress and prone to stress ulcer. However, some variability in these general findings has been reported. This variability may reflect differences in the rat stock from different WKY rat vendors. WKY rats from Taconic (WKY-T), Harlan Sprague-Dawley (WKY-H), and Charles River (WKY-CR) were observed in the open-field test (OFT) and the forced-swim test (FST), and subsequently exposed to ulcerogenic water-restraint stress. There were no differences between vendor stocks in the FST, but WKY-CR rats were significantly more immobile in the OFT as compared to WKY-T and a Wistar control group. WKY-CR and WKY-H rats revealed significantly more ulcers as compared to WKY-T and Wistar rats. The WKY inbreeding programs at Charles River and Harlan, as compared to the outbreeding practice at Taconic may contribute to these vendor differences. These data indicate that WKY rat sublines from different vendors represent an important source of variability when comparing studies of stress reactivity using WKY rats.
PARÉ, A. M. T., W. P. PARÉ AND J. KLUCZYNSKI.
Negative affect and voluntary alcohol consumption in Wistar–Kyoto (WKY) rats and Sprague–Dawley rats. PHYSIOL BEHAV
67(2) 219–225, 1999.—Based on the ...assumption that the Wistar–Kyoto (WKY) rat strain represents an animal model for depressive behavior, the purported relationship between depression and alcohol consumption was investigated in three experiments. WKY rats consumed more alcohol than Sprague–Dawley (S-D) rats when offered a choice between a 7% alcohol solution and tap water. Subsequently, the severity of stress-induced stomach ulcers was significantly less in WKY rats that had access to alcohol. In Experiment 2, WKY and S-D rats were assigned to either an alcohol access treatment or to a water-only treatment for 27 days and subsequently observed in the open-field test (OFT) and the elevated plus-maze (EPM). Access to alcohol reduced response latency in the OFT, and increased the percent time in the open arm and the total number of arm entries in the EPM for WKY rats. In Experiment 3, the antidepressant, imipramine, reduced alcohol consumption in both strains and significantly increased percent time in the open arms of the EPM for WKY rats. These studies support the assumption that depression and alcohol consumption may be related.