2,996 research outputs found

    The Use of the "Preclosure” Technique for Antegrade Aspiration Thrombectomy with Large Catheters in Acute Limb Ischemia

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    Purpose: This study was designed to assess retrospectively short- and mid-term outcomes of the use of a suture-mediated closure device to close the antegrade access in patients undergoing percutaneous aspiration thrombectomy with large catheters for acute leg ischemia. Methods: Between November 2005 and February 2010, a suture-mediated active closure system (ProGlide® 6F, Abbott) was placed before arterial sheath (mean 9F, range 6-12F) introduction in 101 patients (74 men, 73%, mean age 70.1±12.6years standard deviation). Data regarding mortality, complications, and factors contributing to vascular complications at the access site was collected for 6month after the intervention to detect device-related problems. As a coincidence, 77 patients had follow-up visits for a duplex ultrasound. Results: There were a total of 19 vascular complications (19%) at the puncture site, all of which were of hemorrhagic nature and none of which consisted of vessel occlusion. Two major outcome complications (2%) occurred. A retroperitoneal hematoma and a serious inguinal bleeding required additive treatment and did not result in permanent sequelae. Nine cases involved death of which eight were not attributable to the closure and one remained unclear. Successful closure was achieved in 95 patients (94%); additional manual compression was sufficient in the majority of the remaining patients. Numerous factors contributing to vascular complications were encountered. Conclusions: With acceptable short- and mid-term outcomes, the "preclose” technique can be a reliable option for the closure of a large antegrade femoral access even for patients at a high risk of vascular complications, such as those undergoing aspiration thrombectom

    Is there a "native" band gap in ion conducting glasses?

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    It is suggested that the spectrum of ion site energies in glasses exhibits a band gap, establishing an analogy between ion conducting glasses and intrinsic semiconductors. This implies that ion conduction in glasses takes place via vacancies and interstitial ions (as in crystals).Comment: 3 page

    Large Scale Image Segmentation with Structured Loss based Deep Learning for Connectome Reconstruction

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    We present a method combining affinity prediction with region agglomeration, which improves significantly upon the state of the art of neuron segmentation from electron microscopy (EM) in accuracy and scalability. Our method consists of a 3D U-NET, trained to predict affinities between voxels, followed by iterative region agglomeration. We train using a structured loss based on MALIS, encouraging topologically correct segmentations obtained from affinity thresholding. Our extension consists of two parts: First, we present a quasi-linear method to compute the loss gradient, improving over the original quadratic algorithm. Second, we compute the gradient in two separate passes to avoid spurious gradient contributions in early training stages. Our predictions are accurate enough that simple learning-free percentile-based agglomeration outperforms more involved methods used earlier on inferior predictions. We present results on three diverse EM datasets, achieving relative improvements over previous results of 27%, 15%, and 250%. Our findings suggest that a single method can be applied to both nearly isotropic block-face EM data and anisotropic serial sectioned EM data. The runtime of our method scales linearly with the size of the volume and achieves a throughput of about 2.6 seconds per megavoxel, qualifying our method for the processing of very large datasets

    Climate change mitigation in aging societies: Motivational and cognitive aspects

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    The success of mitigating climate change depends on actions taken within the upcoming four decades. In Western societies, this timeframe coincides with a demographic shift increasing the age of the median voter and decision maker. The willingness to contribute to climate change mitigation may decrease with age since the benefi ts may lie beyond the life span whereas the costs are immediate. In several experimental studies, we investigate cognitive limitations and motivational factors in relation to climate change mitigation. In a fi rst set of studies subjects are given the chance to invest up to 10€ into the reduction of CO2 via the EU ETS. Contrary to theoretical considerations, we fi nd evidence for a strong and positive effect of age. Furthermore we show that social cues can be used to in uence contributions. Moreover we demonstrate that independent of age most subjects are able to understand complex stock flow problems if the mode of presentation is adequate. System thinking ability is not firmly linked with a motivation to contribute to climate change mitigation. In a training study we show however that an increase of information about climate change can lead to a reduction of contributions

    Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the Chemistry Climate Model ECHAM5/MESSy1

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    International audienceThe chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1 (E5/M1) in a setup extending from the surface to 80 km with a vertical resolution of about 600 m near the tropopause with nudged tropospheric meteorology allows a direct comparison with satellite data of chemical species at the same time and location. Here we present results out of a transient 10 years simulation for the period of the Antarctic vortex split in September 2002, where data of MIPAS on the ENVISAT-satellite are available. For the first time this satellite instrument opens the opportunity, to evaluate all stratospheric nitrogen containing species simultaneously with a good global coverage, including the source gas N2O which allows an estimate for NOx-production in the stratosphere. We show correlations between simulated and observed species in the altitude region between 10 and 50 hpa for different latitude belts, together with the Probability Density Functions (PDFs) of model results and observations. This is supplemented by global charts on pressure levels showing the satellite data and the simulated data sampled at the same time and location. We demonstrate that the model in most cases captures the partitioning in the nitrogen family, the diurnal cycles and the spatial distribution within experimental uncertainty. There appears to be, however, a problem to reproduce the observed nighttime partitioning between N2O5 and NO2 in the middle stratosphere

    Monte Carlo Simulation Calculation of Critical Coupling Constant for Continuum \phi^4_2

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    We perform a Monte Carlo simulation calculation of the critical coupling constant for the continuum {\lambda \over 4} \phi^4_2 theory. The critical coupling constant we obtain is [{\lambda \over \mu^2}]_crit=10.24(3).Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, LaTe

    Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking of phi4(1+1) in Light Front Field Theory

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    We study spontaneous symmetry breaking in phi^4_(1+1) using the light-front formulation of the field theory. Since the physical vacuum is always the same as the perturbative vacuum in light-front field theory the fields must develop a vacuum expectation value through the zero-mode components of the field. We solve the nonlinear operator equation for the zero-mode in the one-mode approximation. We find that spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs at lambda_critical = 4 pi(3+sqrt 3), which is consistent with the value lambda_critical = 54.27 obtained in the equal time theory. We calculate the value of the vacuum expectation value as a function of the coupling constant in the broken phase both numerically and analytically using the delta expansion. We find two equivalent broken phases. Finally we show that the energy levels of the system have the expected behavior within the broken phase.Comment: 17 pages, OHSTPY-HEP-TH-92-02
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