250 results on '"Leali M"'
Search Results
202. ChemInform Abstract: SYNTHESIS AND PHARMACOLOGICAL EVALUATION OF A SERIES OF ANALGESIC AND ANTIINFLAMMATORY 4-AMINOPYRROLES
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P Schiatti, D Selva, Leali M, Burdisso M, G Tarzia, and G Panzone
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Clinical trial ,Chemistry ,Analgesic ,General Medicine ,Pharmacology - Abstract
The synthesis and the pharmacological evaluation of a series of analgesic, antiinflammatory beta-aminopyrroles is described. Qualitative structure activity relationships are discussed. One of the compounds reported in the study is a candidate for toxicological and clinical trials.
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- 1984
203. SYNTHESIS AND PHARMACOLOGICAL EVALUATION OF A SERIES OF ANALGESIC AND ANTI-INFLAMMATORY 4-AMINOPYRROLES
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Tarzia, Giorgio, Panzone, G, Leali, M, Burdisso, M, Schiatti, P, and Selva, D.
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- 1984
204. Measurement of charged-pion production in deep-inelastic scattering off nuclei with the CLAS detector
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Morán, S., Dupre, R., Hakobyan, H., Arratia, M., Brooks, W. K., Bórquez, A., Alaoui, A. El, Fassi, L. El, Hafidi, K., Mendez, R., Mineeva, T., Paul, S. J., Amaryan, M. J., Angelini, Giovanni, Armstrong, Whitney R., Atac, H., Baltzell, N. A., Barion, L., Bashkanov, M., Battaglieri, M., Bedlinskiy, I., Benmokhtar, Fatiha, Bianconi, A., Biondo, L., Biselli, A. S., Bossù, F., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Bulumulla, D., Burkert, V. D., Carman, D. S., Chatagnon, P., Chesnokov, V., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Costantini, G., D'Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Diehl, S., Djalali, C., Egiyan, H., Elouadrhiri, L., Eugenio, P., Fersch, R., Filippi, A., Gavalian, G., Ghandilyan, Y., Gilfoyle, G. P., Golubenko, A. A., Gothe, R. W., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Hattawy, M., Hauenstein, F., Hayward, T. B., Heddle, D., Hicks, K., Hobart, A., Holtrop, M., Ilieva, Y., Ireland, D. G., Isupov, E. L., Jo, H. S., Keller, D., Khanal, A., Khandaker, M., Kim, W., Klein, F. J., Kripko, A., Kubarovsky, V., Kuhn, S. E., Lanza, L., Leali, M., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. J. D., Marchand, D., Marsicano, L., Mascagna, V., McKinnon, B., McLauchlin, C., Meziani, Z. E., Migliorati, S., Mirazita, M., Mokeev, V., Camacho, C. Munoz, Nadel-Turonski, P., Neupane, K., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., O'Connell, T. R., Osipenko, M., Ostrovidov, A. I., Ouillon, M., Pandey, P., Paolone, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pogorelko, O., Poudel, J., Price, J. W., Prok, Y., Raue, B. A., Reed, Trevor, Ripani, M., Ritman, J., Rizzo, A., Rosner, G., Rowley, J., Sabatié, F., Salgado, C., Schmidt, A., Schumacher, R. A., Sharabian, Y. G., Shirokov, E. V., Shrestha, U., Sokhan, D., Soto, O., Sparveris, N., Stepanyan, S., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Tyson, R., Ungaro, M., Venturelli, L., Voskanyan, H., Vossen, A., Voutier, E., Watts, D. P., Wei, Kevin, Wei, X., Weinstein, L. B., Wishart, R., Wood, M. H., Yale, B., Zachariou, N., Zhang, J., Zhao, Z. W., Laboratoire de Physique des 2 Infinis Irène Joliot-Curie (IJCLab), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, and CLAS
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Electron-nucleon Scattering ,dimension: 3 ,Nuclear Theory ,Socio-culturale ,FOS: Physical sciences ,gluon: bremsstrahlung ,pi: production ,Newport News CEBAF Linac ,transverse momentum ,[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex] ,Nuclear Structure ,model: parton ,Computer Science::Digital Libraries ,fragmentation function ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Economica ,PE2_2 ,PE2_1 ,CLAS ,transport theory ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,ddc:530 ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,electron: beam ,quark: energy loss ,Nuclear Experiment ,PE2_3 ,pi: energy ,deep inelastic scattering: semi-inclusive reaction ,multiplicity: ratio ,Settore FIS/04 ,Deep Inelastic Scattering ,Ambientale ,multiplicity: dependence ,QCD ,flavor: dependence ,hadron: formation ,kinematics ,nuclear matter ,fractional ,Quarks and Gluons ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,hadronization ,experimental results - Abstract
Background: Energetic quarks in nuclear DIS propagate through the nuclear medium. Processes that are believed to occur inside nuclei include quark energy loss through medium-stimulated gluon bremsstrahlung and intra-nuclear interactions of forming hadrons. More data are required to gain a more complete understanding of these effects. Purpose: To test the theoretical models of parton transport and hadron formation, we compared their predictions for the nuclear and kinematic dependence of pion production in nuclei. Methods: We have measured charged-pion production in semi-inclusive DIS off D, C, Fe, and Pb using the CLAS detector and the CEBAF 5.014 GeV electron beam. We report results on the nuclear-to-deuterium multiplicity ratio for $\pi^{+}$ and $\pi^{-}$ as a function of energy transfer, four-momentum transfer, and pion energy fraction or transverse momentum - the first three-dimensional study of its kind. Results: The $\pi^{+}$ multiplicity ratio is found to depend strongly on the pion fractional energy $z$, and reaches minimum values of $0.67\pm0.03$, $0.43\pm0.02$, and $0.27\pm0.01$ for the C, Fe, and Pb targets, respectively. The $z$ dependences of the multiplicity ratios for $\pi^{+}$ and $\pi^{-}$ are equal within uncertainties for C and Fe targets but show differences at the level of 10$\%$ for the Pb-target data. The results are qualitatively described by the GiBUU transport model, as well as with a model based on hadron absorption, but are in tension with calculations based on nuclear fragmentation functions. Conclusions: These precise results will strongly constrain the kinematic and flavor dependence of nuclear effects in hadron production, probing an unexplored kinematic region. They will help to reveal how the nucleus reacts to a fast quark, thereby shedding light on its color structure, transport properties, and on the mechanisms of the hadronization process., Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, 12 tables
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205. Observation of Beam Spin Asymmetries in the Process $ep → e^{′}{\pi}^{+} {\pi}^{-} X$ with CLAS12
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Hayward, T. B., Dilks, C., Vossen, A., Avakian, H., Adhikari, S., Angelini, G., Arratia, M., Atac, H., Ayerbe Gayoso, C., Baltzell, N. A., Barion, L., Battaglieri, M., Bedlinskiy, I., Benmokhtar, F., Bianconi, A., Biselli, A. S., Bondì, M., Bossù, F., Boiarinov, S., Briscoe, W. J., Brooks, W. K., Bulumulla, D., Burkert, V. D., Carman, D. S., Carvajal, J. C., Celentano, A., Chatagnon, P., Chetry, T., Ciullo, G., Clary, B. A., Cole, P. L., Contalbrigo, M., Costantini, G., Crede, V., D’Angelo, A., Dashyan, N., De Vita, R., Defurne, M., Deur, A., Diehl, S., Djalali, C., Dupre, R., Dugger, M., Egiyan, H., Ehrhart, M., El Alaoui, A., El Fassi, L., Elouadrhiri, L., Fegan, S., Filippi, A., Forest, T. A., Gavalian, G., Gilfoyle, G. P., Girod, F. X., Glazier, D. I., Golubenko, A. A., Gothe, R. W., Gotra, Y., Griffioen, K. A., Guidal, M., Hafidi, K., Hakobyan, H., Hattawy, M., Hauenstein, F., Hicks, K., Hobart, A., Holtrop, M., Ireland, D. G., Isupov, E. L., Jo, H. S., Joo, K., Joosten, S., Keller, D., Khachatryan, M., Khanal, A., Kim, A., Kim, W., Kripko, A., Kubarovsky, V., Kuhn, S. E., Lanza, L., Leali, M., Lee, S., Lenisa, P., Livingston, K., MacGregor, I. J. D., Marchand, D., Markov, N., Marsicano, L., Mascagna, V., McKinnon, B., Meziani, Z. E., Mirazita, M., Mokeev, V., Movsisyan, A., Munoz Camacho, C., Nadel-Turonski, P., Naidoo, P., Nanda, S., Neupane, K., Niccolai, S., Niculescu, G., O’Connell, T. R., Osipenko, M., Paolone, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Paremuzyan, R., Pasyuk, E., Phelps, W., Pogorelko, O., Prok, Y., Raue, B. A., Ripani, M., Ritman, J., Rizzo, A., Rossi, P., Rowley, J., Sabatié, F., Salgado, C., Schmidt, A., Segarra, E. P., Sharabian, Y. G., Shrestha, U., Sokhan, D., Soto, O., Sparveris, N., Stepanyan, S., Strakovsky, I. I., Strauch, S., Thornton, A., Tyler, N., Tyson, R., Ungaro, M., Venturelli, L., Voskanyan, H., Voutier, E., Watts, D. P., Wei, K., Wei, X., Wood, M. H., Yale, B., Zachariou, N., and Zhang, J.
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3. Good health - Abstract
Physical review letters 126(15), 152501 (2021). doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.126.152501, Published by APS, College Park, Md.
206. A Direct Detection Search for Hidden Sector New Particles in the 3-60 MeV Mass Range
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Ahmidouch, A., Davis, S., Gasparian, A., Hague, T. J., Mtingwa, S., Pedroni, R., Ayerbe-Gayoso, C., Bhatt, H., Bhetuwal, D., Chetry, T., Devkota, B., Dunne, J., Dutta, D., Fassi, L. El, Karki, A., Mohanmurthy, P., Peng, C., Ali, S., Bai, X., Boyd, J., Dharmasena, B., Gamage, V., Gnanvo, K., Jeffas, S., Jian, S., Liyanage, N., Matter, J., Nguyen, H., Rathnayake, A., Khandaker, M., Byer, D., Gao, H., Howell, C., Karki, B., Khachatryan, V., Matousek, G., Nieuwenhuizen, E., Smith, A., Yu, B., Zhao, Z., Zhou, J., Shahinyan, A., Higinbotham, D., Kubarovsky, V., Paremuzyan, R., Pasyuk, E., Stepanyan, S., Avakian, H., Battaglieri, M., Vita, R., Bianconi, A., Constantini, G., Gosta, G., Leali, M., Migliorati, S., Venturelli, L., Mascagna, V., Napoli, M., Larin, I., Miskimen, R., Cole, P., Xiong, W., and Jennifer Rittenhouse West
207. ASACUSA status report: ASACUSA progress during 2007 and plans for 2008
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Hayano, R. S., Andersen, H. H., Barna, D., Charlton, M., Corradini, M., Dax, A., Eades, J., Enomoto, Y., Higaki, H., Hori, M., Horvath, D., Hunniford, C. A., Ichioka, T., Imao, H., Juhasz, B., Kanai, Y., Knudsen, H., Kristiansen, P., Kuroda, N., Leali, M., Lodi-Rizzini, E., Malbrunot, C., Matsuda, Y., Mccullough, R. W., Moller, S. P., Mohri, A., Mozzanica, A., Nagata, Y., Ono, N., Pask, T., Pirkl, W., Andrea Puhm, Saito, H., Soter, A., Tokesi, K., Torii, H. A., Uggerhj, Ulrik Ingerslev, Varentsov, V. L., Venturelli, L., Widmann, E., Yamazaki, Y., Yoshida, Z., Zalan, P., and Zurlo, N.
208. ChemInform Abstract: SYNTHESIS AND PHARMACOLOGICAL EVALUATION OF A SERIES OF ANALGESIC AND ANTIINFLAMMATORY 4-AMINOPYRROLES
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TARZIA, G., primary, PANZONE, G., additional, LEALI, M., additional, BURDISSO, M., additional, SCHIATTI, P., additional, and SELVA, D., additional
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- 1984
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209. SDR, EVC, and SDREVC: Limitations and Extensions.
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Hunter, E.D., Amsler, C., Breuker, H., Bumbar, M., Chesnevskaya, S., Costantini, G., Ferragut, R., Giammarchi, M., Gligorova, A., Gosta, G., Higaki, H., Killian, C., Kraxberger, V., Kuroda, N., Lanz, A., Leali, M., Maero, G., Malbrunot, C., Mascagna, V., and Matsuda, Y.
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EVAPORATIVE cooling , *FUSION reactors , *PLASMA density , *SPACE charge , *MAGNETIC fields - Abstract
Methods for reducing the radius, temperature and space charge of a non-neutral plasma are usually reported for conditions which approximate an ideal Penning Malmberg trap. Here, we show that (i) similar methods are still effective under surprisingly adverse circumstances: we perform strong drive regime (SDR) compression and SDREVC in a strong magnetic mirror field using only 3 out of 4 rotating wall petals. In addition, we demonstrate (ii) an alternative to SDREVC, using e-kick instead of evaporative cooling (EVC) and (iii) an upper limit for how much plasma can be cooled to $T using EVC. This limit depends on the space charge, not on the number of particles or the plasma density. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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210. Reducing the background temperature for cyclotron cooling in a cryogenic Penning–Malmberg trap.
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Amsler, C., Breuker, H., Chesnevskaya, S., Costantini, G., Ferragut, R., Giammarchi, M., Gligorova, A., Gosta, G., Higaki, H., Hunter, E. D., Killian, C., Kletzl, V., Kraxberger, V., Kuroda, N., Lanz, A., Leali, M., Mäckel, V., Maero, G., Malbrunot, C., and Mascagna, V.
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PLASMA temperature , *PLASMA equilibrium , *CYCLOTRONS , *MICROWAVE materials , *ELECTRON plasma , *ENERGY density - Abstract
Magnetized nonneutral plasma composed of electrons or positrons couples to the local microwave environment via cyclotron radiation. The equilibrium plasma temperature depends on the microwave energy density near the cyclotron frequency. Fine copper meshes and cryogenic microwave absorbing material were used to lower the effective temperature of the radiation environment in ASACUSA's Cusp trap, resulting in significantly reduced plasma temperature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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211. Injection and capture of antiprotons in a Penning–Malmberg trap using a drift tube accelerator and degrader foil.
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Amsler, C., Breuker, H., Bumbar, M., Chesnevskaya, S., Costantini, G., Ferragut, R., Giammarchi, M., Gligorova, A., Gosta, G., Higaki, H., Hori, M., Hunter, E.D., Killian, C., Kraxberger, V., Kuroda, N., Lanz, A., Leali, M., Maero, G., Malbrunot, C., and Mascagna, V.
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ANTIPROTONS , *TUBES , *KINETIC energy , *ANTIHYDROGEN , *ALUMINUM foil , *QUADRUPOLES - Abstract
The Antiproton Decelerator (AD) at CERN provides antiproton bunches with a kinetic energy of 5.3 MeV. The Extra-Low ENergy Antiproton ring at CERN, commissioned at the AD in 2018, now supplies a bunch of electron-cooled antiprotons at a fixed energy of 100 keV. The MUSASHI antiproton trap was upgraded by replacing the radio-frequency quadrupole decelerator with a pulsed drift tube to re-accelerate antiprotons and optimize the injection energy into the degrader foils. By increasing the beam energy to 119 keV, a cooled antiproton accumulation efficiency of (26 ± 6) % was achieved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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212. The ASACUSA antihydrogen and hydrogen program: results and prospects.
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Malbrunot, C., Amsler, C., Cuendis, S. Arguedas, Breuker, H., Dupre, P., Fleck, M., Higaki, H., Kanai, Y., Kolbinger, B., Kuroda, N., Leali, M., Mäckel, V., Mascagna, V., Massiczek, O., Matsuda, Y., Nagata, Y., Simon, M. C., Spitzer, H., Tajima, M., and Ulmer, S.
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ANTIHYDROGEN , *GROUND state energy , *ATOMIC spectroscopy - Abstract
The goal of the ASACUSA-CUSP collaboration at the Antiproton Decelerator of CERN is to measure the ground-state hyperfine splitting of antihydrogen using an atomic spectroscopy beamline. A milestone was achieved in 2012 through the detection of 80 antihydrogen atoms 2.7m away from their production region. This was the first observation of 'cold' antihydrogen in a magnetic field free region. In parallel to the progress on the antihydrogen production, the spectroscopy beamline was tested with a source of hydrogen. This led to a measurement at a relative precision of 2.7 Ã--10-9 which constitutes the most precise measurement of the hydrogen hyperfine splitting in a beam. Further measurements with an upgraded hydrogen apparatus are motivated by CPT and Lorentz violation tests in the framework of the Standard Model Extension. Unlike for hydrogen, the antihydrogen experiment is complicated by the difficulty of synthesizing enough cold antiatoms in the ground state. The first antihydrogen quantum states scan at the entrance of the spectroscopy apparatus was realized in 2016 and is presented here. The prospects for a ppm measurement are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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213. Measurement of the antiproton–nucleus annihilation cross-section at low energy.
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Aghai-Khozani, H., Bianconi, A., Corradini, M., Hayano, R., Hori, M., Leali, M., Lodi Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Murakami, Y., Prest, M., Vallazza, E., Venturelli, L., and Yamada, H.
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PROTON & antiproton annihilation , *NUCLEAR cross sections , *NUCLEAR energy , *CARBON spectra , *ANTINUCLEONS - Abstract
Systematic measurements of the annihilation cross sections of low energy antinucleons were performed at CERN in the 80's and 90's. However the antiproton data on medium-heavy and heavy nuclear targets are scarce. The ASACUSA Collaboration at CERN has measured the antiproton annihilation cross section on carbon at 5.3 MeV: the value is (1.73 ± 0.25) barn. The result is compared with the antineutron experimental data and with the theoretical previsions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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214. Direct detection of antihydrogen atoms using a BGO crystal.
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Nagata, Y., Kuroda, N., Ohtsuka, M., Leali, M., Lodi-Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Tajima, M., Torii, H.A., Zurlo, N., Matsuda, Y., Venturelli, L., and Yamazaki, Y.
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ANTIHYDROGEN , *BISMUTH germanate , *CRYSTAL detectors , *SIMULATION methods & models , *ANNIHILATION reactions - Abstract
The ASACUSA collaboration has developed a detector consisting of a large size BGO crystal to detect an atomic antihydrogen beam, and performed the direct detection of antihydrogen atoms. Energy spectra from antihydrogen annihilation on the BGO crystal are discussed in comparison to simulation results from the GEANT4 toolkit. Background mainly originating from cosmic rays were strongly suppressed by analyzing the energy deposited in the BGO and requiring a multiplicity of charged pions. Thus antihydrogen events were identified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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215. Upgrade of ASACUSA's antihydrogen detector.
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Kraxberger, V., Amsler, C., Breuker, H., Chesnevskaya, S., Costantini, G., Ferragut, R., Giammarchi, M., Gligorova, A., Gosta, G., Higaki, H., Hunter, E.D., Killian, C., Kletzl, V., Kuroda, N., Lanz, A., Leali, M., Mäckel, V., Maero, G., Malbrunot, C., and Mascagna, V.
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ANTIHYDROGEN , *ANTIPROTONS , *DETECTORS , *COLLISION spectroscopy , *HYPERFINE coupling , *ATOMIC spectroscopy - Abstract
The goal of the ASACUSA (Atomic Spectroscopy And Collisions Using Slow Antiprotons) CUSP experiment at CERN's Antiproton Decelerator is to measure the ground state hyperfine splitting of antihydrogen in order to test whether CPT invariance is broken. The ASACUSA hodoscope is a detector consisting of two layers of 32 plastic scintillator bars individually read out by two serially connected silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) on each end. Two additional layers for position resolution along the beam axis were scintillator fibres, which will now be replaced by scintillating tiles placed onto the existing bars and also read out by SiPMs. If the antiproton of antihydrogen annihilates in the centre of the hodoscope, particles (mostly pions) are produced and travel through the various layers of the detector and produce signals. The hodoscope was successfully used during the last data taking period at CERN. The necessary time resolution to discriminate between particles travelling through the detector from outside and particles produced in the centre of the detector was achieved by the use of waveform digitisers and software constant fraction discrimination. The disadvantage of this readout scheme was the slow readout speed, which was improved by two orders of magnitude. This was done by omitting the digitisers and replacing them with TDCs reading out the digital time-over-threshold (ToT) signal using leading edge discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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216. Antihydrogen synthesis in a double-CUSP trap towards test of the CPT-symmetry.
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Radics, B., Ishikawa, S., Kuroda, N., Murtagh, D., Nagata, Y., Tajima, M., Gorp, S., Abo, Y., Dupre, P., Higashi, Y., Kaga, C., Leali, M., Mascagna, V., Venturelli, L., Zurlo, N., Breuker, H., Higaki, H., Kanai, Y., Rizzini, E., and Matsuda, Y.
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ANTIHYDROGEN , *CPT theorem , *GROUND state (Quantum mechanics) , *HYPERFINE interactions , *HYDROGEN atom , *CHEMICAL synthesis - Abstract
The aim of the ASACUSA-CUSP experiment at CERN is to produce a cold, polarised antihydrogen beam and perform a high precision measurement of the ground-state hyperfine transition frequency of the antihydrogen atom and compare it with that of the hydrogen atom using the same spectroscopic beam line. Towards this goal a significant step was successfully accomplished: synthesised antihydrogen atoms have been produced in a CUSP magnetic configuration and detected at the end of our spectrometer beam line in 2012 [1]. During a long shut down at CERN the ASACUSA-CUSP experiment had been renewed by introducing a new double-CUSP magnetic configuration and a new semi-cylindrical tracking detector (AMT) [2], and by improving the transport feature of low energy antiproton beams. The new tracking detector monitors the antihydrogen synthesis during the mixing cycle of antiprotons and positrons. In this work the latest results and improvements of the antihydrogen synthesis will be presented including highlights from the last beam time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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217. Instrumentation for measurement of in-flight annihilations of 130 keV antiprotons on thin target foils.
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Todoroki, K., Barna, D., Hayano, R.S., Aghai-Khozani, H., Sótér, A., Corradini, M., Leali, M., Lodi-Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Venturelli, L., Prest, V., Vallazza, L., De Salvador, D., and Hori, M.
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ANNIHILATION reactions , *ANTIPROTONS , *NUCLEAR cross sections , *STOPPING power (Nuclear physics) , *TIME-of-flight measurements , *RUTHERFORD scattering - Abstract
We describe the instrumentation for an experiment to measure the cross sections of antiprotons with kinetic energies of 130±10 keV annihilating on carbon, palladium, and platinum target foils of sub-100 nm thicknesses. A 120 ns long pulsed beam containing 10 5 – 10 6 antiprotons was allowed to traverse the foils, and the signal annihilations that resulted from this were isolated using a time-of-flight method. Backgrounds arose from Rutherford scattering of the antiprotons off the target foils, their annihilations in the target chamber walls, and π → μ → e decay of the charged pions that emerged from the annihilations. Some antiprotons slowed down and annihilated in the contamination on the target surfaces. This reduced the signal-to-background ratio of the measurement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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218. New results of the antiproton-carbon annihilation cross section measurement at low energies.
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Aghai–Khozani, H., Hori, M., Corradini, M., Leali, M., Lodi–Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Venturelli, L., Hayano, R., Murakami, Y., Yamada, H., Prest, M., Solazzi, L., and Vallazza, E.
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ANTIPROTONS , *ANNIHILATION reactions , *NUCLEON-antinucleon interactions , *NUCLEAR physics - Abstract
The antinucleon-nuclei annihilation cross section at very low energy has been measured at the LEAR facility (CERN) during the 80’s and 90’s and recently at the Antiproton Decelerator. The results have raised some interesting questions that still need answers. The ASACUSA collaboration performed an experiment to measure the σann of 100 MeV/c antiprotons on carbon target and the preliminary results are presented here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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219. The ASACUSA CUSP: an antihydrogen experiment.
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Kuroda, N., Ulmer, S., Murtagh, D., Gorp, S., Nagata, Y., Diermaier, M., Federmann, S., Leali, M., Malbrunot, C., Mascagna, V., Massiczek, O., Michishio, K., Mizutani, T., Mohri, A., Nagahama, H., Ohtsuka, M., Radics, B., Sakurai, S., Sauerzopf, C., and Suzuki, K.
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ANTIHYDROGEN , *CPT theorem , *MICROWAVE spectroscopy , *BISMUTH germanate , *SINGLE crystals - Abstract
In order to test CPT symmetry between antihydrogen and its counterpart hydrogen, the ASACUSA collaboration plans to perform high precision microwave spectroscopy of ground-state hyperfine splitting of antihydrogen atom in-flight. We have developed an apparatus ('cusp trap') which consists of a superconducting anti-Helmholtz coil and multiple ring electrodes. For the preparation of slow antiprotons and positrons, Penning-Malmberg type traps were utilized. The spectrometer line was positioned downstream of the cusp trap. At the end of the beamline, an antihydrogen beam detector was located, which comprises an inorganic Bismuth Germanium Oxide (BGO) single-crystal scintillator housed in a vacuum duct and surrounding plastic scintillators. A significant fraction of antihydrogen atoms flowing out the cusp trap were detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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220. First measurement of the antiproton-nucleus annihilation cross section at 125 keV.
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Aghai-Khozani, H., Barna, D., Corradini, M., Salvador, D., Hayano, R., Hori, M., Kobayashi, T., Leali, M., Lodi-Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Prest, M., Seiler, D., Soter, A., Todoroki, K., Vallazza, E., and Venturelli, L.
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ANTIPROTONS , *NUCLEUS accumbens , *ANNIHILATION reactions , *NUCLEAR cross sections , *DATA analysis - Abstract
The first observation of in-flight antiproton-nucleus annihilation at ∼130 keV obtained with the ASACUSA detector has demonstrated that the measurement of the cross section of the process is feasible at such extremely low energies Aghai-Khozani, H., et al., Eur. Phys. J. Plus 127, 55 (). Here we present the results of the data analysis with the evaluations of the antiproton annihilation cross sections on carbon, palladium and platinum targets at ∼125 keV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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221. Limits on antiproton-nuclei annihilation cross sections at ∼125 keV.
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Aghai-Khozani, H., Barna, D., Corradini, M., De Salvador, D., Hayano, R.S., Hori, M., Leali, M., Lodi-Rizzini, E., Mascagna, V., Prest, M., Seiler, D., Sótér, A., Todoroki, K., Vallazza, E., and Venturelli, L.
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ANNIHILATION reactions , *KINETIC energy , *ANTIMATTER , *NUCLEAR reactions , *ANTIPROTONS , *PALLADIUM - Abstract
Some experimental limits on the annihilation cross sections σ ann of antiprotons on carbon, palladium, and platinum targets were determined at the previously unexplored kinetic energy region E ≈ 125 keV. Information on σ ann at such low antiproton energies is important in understanding the dynamics of the annihilation process, and provides useful data for models that attempt to describe the matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe by assuming the existence of islands of antimatter concentration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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222. Measurement of the principal quantum number distribution in a beam of antihydrogen atoms.
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Kolbinger, B., Amsler, C., Cuendis, S. Arguedas, Breuker, H., Capon, A., Costantini, G., Dupré, P., Fleck, M., Gligorova, A., Higaki, H., Kanai, Y., Kletzl, V., Kuroda, N., Lanz, A., Leali, M., Mäckel, V., Malbrunot, C., Mascagna, V., Massiczek, O., and Matsuda, Y.
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QUANTUM measurement , *ATOMIC beams , *HYPERFINE coupling , *COLLISION spectroscopy , *ATOMIC spectroscopy , *ANTIPROTONS - Abstract
The ASACUSA (Atomic Spectroscopy And Collisions Using Slow Antiprotons) collaboration plans to measure the ground-state hyperfine splitting of antihydrogen in a beam at the CERN Antiproton Decelerator with initial relative precision of 10 - 6 or better, to test the fundamental CPT (combination of charge conjugation, parity transformation and time reversal) symmetry between matter and antimatter. This challenging goal requires a polarised antihydrogen beam with a sufficient number of antihydrogen atoms in the ground state. The first measurement of the quantum state distribution of antihydrogen atoms in a low magnetic field environment of a few mT is described. Furthermore, the data-driven machine learning analysis to identify antihydrogen events is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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223. Personalized positive end-expiratory pressure in spontaneously breathing patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome by simultaneous electrical impedance tomography and transpulmonary pressure monitoring: a randomized crossover trial.
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Mauri T, Grieco DL, Spinelli E, Leali M, Perez J, Chiavieri V, Rosà T, Ferrara P, Scaramuzzo G, Antonelli M, Spadaro S, and Grasselli G
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Purpose: Personalized positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) might foster lung and diaphragm protection in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) who are undergoing pressure support ventilation (PSV). We aimed to compare the physiologic effects of personalized PEEP set according to synchronized electrical impedance tomography (EIT) and driving transpulmonary pressure (∆PL) monitoring against a classical lower PEEP/FiO
2 table in intubated ARDS patients undergoing PSV., Methods: A cross-over randomized multicenter study was conducted in 30 ARDS patients with simultaneous recording of the airway, esophageal and transpulmonary pressure, together with EIT during PSV. Following a decremental PEEP trial (18 cmH2 O to 4 cmH2 O), PEEPEIT-∆PL was identified as the level with the smallest difference between lung overdistension and collapse. A low PEEP/FiO2 table was used to select PEEPTABLE . Each PEEP strategy was applied for 20 min, and physiologic data were collected at the end of each step., Results: The PEEP trial was well tolerated. Median PEEPEIT-∆PL was higher than PEEPTABLE (10 [8-12] vs. 8 [5-10] cmH2 O; P = 0.021) and, at the individual patient level, PEEPEIT-∆PL level differed from PEEPTABLE in all patients. Overall, PEEPEIT-∆PL was associated with lower dynamic ∆PL (P < 0.001) and pressure-time product (P < 0.001), but there was variability among patients. PEEPEIT-∆PL also decreased respiratory drive and effort (P < 0.001), improved regional lung mechanics (P < 0.05) and reversed lung collapse (P = 0.007) without increasing overdistension (P = 0.695)., Conclusion: Personalized PEEP selected using synchronized EIT and transpulmonary pressure monitoring could be associated with reduced dynamic lung stress and metabolic work of breathing in ARDS patients undergoing PSV., Competing Interests: Declarations Conflict of interest GG, personal fees from Getinge (payment for lectures). TM, personal fees for speaking at sponsored symposia by Drager, Fisher and Paykel. All other authors, none., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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224. Pathophysiological Markers of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Severity Are Correlated With Ventilation-Perfusion Mismatch Measured by Electrical Impedance Tomography.
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Spinelli E, Perez J, Chiavieri V, Leali M, Mansour N, Madotto F, Rosso L, Panigada M, Grasselli G, Vaira V, and Mauri T
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Objectives: Pulmonary ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) mismatch measured by electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is associated with the outcome of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), but the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. The present study aimed to verify the correlation between relevant pathophysiological markers of ARDS severity and V/Q mismatch., Design: Prospective observational study., Setting: General ICU of a university-affiliated hospital., Patients: Deeply sedated intubated adult patients with ARDS under controlled mechanical ventilation., Interventions: Measures of V/Q mismatch by EIT, respiratory mechanics, gas exchange, lung imaging, and plasma biomarkers., Measurements and Main Results: Unmatched V/Q units were assessed by EIT as the fraction of ventilated nonperfused plus perfused nonventilated lung units. At the same time, plasma biomarkers with proven prognostic and mechanistic significance for ARDS (carbonic anhydrase 9 [CA9], hypoxia-inducible factor 1 [HIF1], receptor for advanced glycation endproducts [RAGE], angiopoietin 2 [ANG2], gas exchange, respiratory mechanics, and quantitative chest CT scans were measured. Twenty-five intubated ARDS patients were included with median unmatched V/Q units of 37.1% (29.2-49.2%). Unmatched V/Q units were correlated with plasma levels of CA9 (rho = 0.47; p = 0.01), HIF1 (rho = 0.40; p = 0.05), RAGE (rho = 0.46; p = 0.02), and ANG2 (rho = 0.42; p = 0.03). Additionally, unmatched V/Q units correlated with plateau pressure (r = 0.38; p = 0.05) and with the number of quadrants involved on chest radiograph (r = 0.73; p < 0.01). Regional unmatched V/Q units were correlated with the corresponding fraction of poorly aerated lung tissue (r = 0.62; p = 0.01) and of lung tissue weight (rho: 0.51; p = 0.04) measured by CT scan., Conclusions: In ARDS patients, unmatched V/Q units are correlated with pathophysiological markers of lung epithelial and endothelial dysfunction, increased lung stress, and lung edema. Unmatched V/Q units could represent a comprehensive marker of ARDS severity, reflecting the complex organ pathophysiology and reinforcing their prognostic significance., Competing Interests: Dr. Grasselli received personal fees from Getinge, Draeger Medical (payment for lectures), Aerogen, and Fisher & Paykel (payment for lectures and unrestricted research grant) outside the submitted work; he disclosed the Italian Ministry of Health. Dr. Mauri received personal fees for speaking at sponsored symposia by Draeger, Fisher and Paykel, and Aerogen, outside of the submitted work. Dr. Rosso’s institution received funding from Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
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- 2024
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225. Absolute values of regional ventilation-perfusion mismatch in patients with ARDS monitored by electrical impedance tomography and the role of dead space and shunt compensation.
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Leali M, Marongiu I, Spinelli E, Chiavieri V, Perez J, Panigada M, Grasselli G, and Mauri T
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Respiratory Dead Space physiology, Respiration, Artificial methods, Adult, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Cardiac Output physiology, Respiratory Distress Syndrome physiopathology, Respiratory Distress Syndrome therapy, Electric Impedance therapeutic use, Ventilation-Perfusion Ratio physiology, Tomography methods
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Background: Assessment of regional ventilation/perfusion (V'/Q) mismatch using electrical impedance tomography (EIT) represents a promising advancement for personalized management of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). However, accuracy is still hindered by the need for invasive monitoring to calibrate ventilation and perfusion. Here, we propose a non-invasive correction that uses only EIT data and characterized patients with more pronounced compensation of V'/Q mismatch., Methods: We enrolled twenty-one ARDS patients on controlled mechanical ventilation. Cardiac output was measured invasively, and ventilation and perfusion were assessed by EIT. Relative V'/Q maps by EIT were calibrated to absolute values using the minute ventilation to invasive cardiac output (MV/CO) ratio (V'/Q-ABS), left unadjusted (V'/Q-REL), or corrected by MV/CO ratio derived from EIT data (V'/Q-CORR). The ratio between ventilation to dependent regions and perfusion reaching shunted units ( V D ' /Q
SHUNT ) was calculated as an index of more effective hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. The ratio between perfusion to non-dependent regions and ventilation to dead space units (QND / V DS ' ) was calculated as an index of hypocapnic pneumoconstriction., Results: Our calibration factor correlated with invasive MV/CO (r = 0.65, p < 0.001), showed good accuracy and no apparent bias. Compared to V'/Q-ABS, V'/Q-REL maps overestimated ventilation (p = 0.013) and perfusion (p = 0.002) to low V'/Q units and underestimated ventilation (p = 0.011) and perfusion (p = 0.008) to high V'/Q units. The heterogeneity of ventilation and perfusion reaching different V'/Q compartments was underestimated. V'/Q-CORR maps eliminated all these differences with V'/Q-ABS (p > 0.05). Higher V D ' / Q SHUNT correlated with higher PaO2 /FiO2 (r = 0.49, p = 0.025) and lower shunt fraction (ρ = - 0.59, p = 0.005). Higher Q ND / V DS ' correlated with lower PEEP (ρ = - 0.62, p = 0.003) and plateau pressure (ρ = - 0.59, p = 0.005). Lower values of both indexes were associated with less ventilator-free days (p = 0.05 and p = 0.03, respectively)., Conclusions: Regional V'/Q maps calibrated with a non-invasive EIT-only method closely approximate the ones obtained with invasive monitoring. Higher efficiency of shunt compensation improves oxygenation while compensation of dead space is less needed at lower airway pressure. Patients with more effective compensation mechanisms could have better outcomes., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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226. Clinical and Experimental Evidence for Patient Self-Inflicted Lung Injury (P-SILI) and Bedside Monitoring.
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Marongiu I, Slobod D, Leali M, Spinelli E, and Mauri T
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Patient self-inflicted lung injury (P-SILI) is a major challenge for the ICU physician: although spontaneous breathing is associated with physiological benefits, in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the risk of uncontrolled inspiratory effort leading to additional injury needs to be assessed to avoid delayed intubation and increased mortality. In the present review, we analyze the available clinical and experimental evidence supporting the existence of lung injury caused by uncontrolled high inspiratory effort, we discuss the pathophysiological mechanisms by which increased effort causes P-SILI, and, finally, we consider the measurements and interpretation of bedside physiological measures of increased drive that should alert the clinician. The data presented in this review could help to recognize injurious respiratory patterns that may trigger P-SILI and to prevent it.
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- 2024
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227. Pathophysiological profile of non-ventilated lung injury in healthy female pigs undergoing mechanical ventilation.
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Spinelli E, Damia A, Damarco F, Gregori B, Occhipinti F, Busani Z, Leali M, Battistin M, Lonati C, Zhao Z, Storaci AM, Lopez G, Vaira V, Ferrero S, Rosso L, Gatti S, and Mauri T
- Abstract
Background: Lung regions excluded from mechanical insufflation are traditionally assumed to be spared from ventilation-associated lung injury. However, preliminary data showed activation of potential mechanisms of injury within these non-ventilated regions (e.g., hypoperfusion, inflammation)., Methods: In the present study, we hypothesized that non-ventilated lung injury (NVLI) may develop within 24 h of unilateral mechanical ventilation in previously healthy pigs, and we performed extended pathophysiological measures to profile NVLI. We included two experimental groups undergoing exclusion of the left lung from the ventilation with two different tidal volumes (15 vs 7.5 ml/kg) and a control group on bilateral ventilation. Pathophysiological alteration including lung collapse, changes in lung perfusion, lung stress and inflammation were measured. Lung injury was quantified by histological score., Results: Histological injury score of the non-ventilated lung is significantly higher than normally expanded lung from control animals. The histological score showed lower intermediate values (but still higher than controls) when the tidal volume distending the ventilated lung was reduced by 50%. Main pathophysiological alterations associated with NVLI were: extensive lung collapse; very low pulmonary perfusion; high inspiratory airways pressure; and higher concentrations of acute-phase inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-1β and TNF-α and of Angiopoietin-2 (a marker of endothelial activation) in the broncho-alveolar lavage. Only the last two alterations were mitigated by reducing tidal volume, potentially explaining partial protection., Conclusions: Non-ventilated lung injury develops within 24 h of controlled mechanical ventilation due to multiple pathophysiological alterations, which are only partially prevented by low tidal volume., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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228. Antiproton annihilation at rest in thin solid targets and comparison with Monte Carlo simulations.
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Amsler C, Breuker H, Bumbar M, Cerwenka M, Costantini G, Ferragut R, Fleck M, Giammarchi M, Gligorova A, Gosta G, Hunter ED, Killian C, Kolbinger B, Kraxberger V, Kuroda N, Lackner M, Leali M, Maero G, Mascagna V, Matsuda Y, Migliorati S, Murtagh DJ, Nanda A, Nowak L, Rheinfrank S, Romé M, Simon MC, Tajima M, Toso V, Ulmer S, van Beuzekom M, Venturelli L, Weiser A, Widmann E, Yamazaki Y, and Zmeskal J
- Abstract
The mechanism of antiproton-nucleus annihilation at rest is not fully understood, despite substantial previous experimental and theoretical work. In this study we used slow extracted antiprotons from the ASACUSA apparatus at CERN to measure the charged particle multiplicities and their energy deposits from antiproton annihilations at rest on three different nuclei: carbon, molybdenum and gold. The results are compared with predictions from different models in the simulation tools Geant4 and FLUKA. A model that accounts for all the observed features is still missing, as well as measurements at low energies, to validate such models., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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229. Left cardiac vagotomy rapidly reduces contralateral cardiac vagal electrical activity in anesthetized Göttingen minipigs.
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Vallone F, Dushpanova A, Leali M, Strauss I, Agnesi F, Zinno C, Casieri V, Carrozzo A, Bernini F, Terlizzi D, Carpaneto J, Micera S, and Lionetti V
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- Humans, Male, Swine, Animals, Swine, Miniature, Vagotomy, Heart Rate physiology, Vagus Nerve surgery, Vagus Nerve physiology, Heart innervation
- Abstract
Background: The impact of acute unilateral injury on spontaneous electrical activity in both vagus nerves at the heart level is poorly understood. We investigated the immediate neuroelectrical response after right or left cardiac vagal nerve transection (VNTx) by recording spiking activity of each heart vagus nerve (VN)., Methods: Fourteen male Göttingen minipigs underwent sternotomy. Multi-electrode cuffs were implanted below the cut level to record vagal electroneurographic signals during electrocardiographic and hemodynamic monitoring, before and immediately after cardiac VNTx (left: L-cut, n = 6; right: R-cut, n = 8)., Results: Left cardiac VNTx significantly reduced multi-unit electrical activity (MUA) firing rate in the vagal stump (-30.7% vs pre-cut) and intact right VN (-21.8% vs pre-cut) at the heart level, without affecting heart rate, heart rate variability, or hemodynamics. In contrast, right cardiac VNTx did not acutely alter MUA in either VN but slightly increased (p < 0.022) the root mean square of successive RR interval differences (rMSSD), an index of parasympathetic outflow, without affecting hemodynamics., Conclusions: Our study reveals an early left-lateralized pattern in vagal spiking activity following unilateral cardiac vagotomy. These findings enhance understanding of the neuroelectrical response to vagal injury and provide insights into preserving vagal outflow after unilateral cardiac vagotomy. Importantly, monitoring spiking activity of the cardiac right VN may predict onset of left vagal pathway injury, which is detrimental to cardiac patients and can occur as a complication of catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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230. First Measurement of Hard Exclusive π^{-}Δ^{++} Electroproduction Beam-Spin Asymmetries off the Proton.
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Diehl S, Trotta N, Joo K, Achenbach P, Akbar Z, Armstrong WR, Atac H, Avakian H, Baashen L, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bossù F, Brinkmann KT, Briscoe WJ, Bulumulla D, Burkert V, Capobianco R, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Charles G, Chatagnon P, Chesnokov V, Ciullo G, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Deur A, Djalali C, Dupre R, Ehrhart M, El Alaoui A, El Fassi L, Elouadrhiri L, Fegan S, Filippi A, Gavalian G, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gosta G, Gothe RW, Gotra Y, Griffioen K, Hafidi K, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Illari I, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Johnston R, Keller D, Khachatryan M, Khanal A, Kim A, Kim W, Klimenko V, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lagerquist V, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Li X, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, Matousek G, McKinnon B, McLauchlin C, Meziani ZE, Migliorati S, Milner RG, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Moran P, Munoz Camacho C, Naidoo P, Neupane K, Niccolai S, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Paul SJ, Phelps W, Pilleux N, Pokhrel M, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Radic A, Raue BA, Reed T, Richards J, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rossi P, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schadmand S, Schmidt A, Sharabian YG, Shrestha U, Sokhan D, Sparveris N, Spreafico M, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky I, Strauch S, Turisini M, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei X, Williams R, Wishart R, Wood MH, Yurov M, Zachariou N, Zhao ZW, and Zurek M
- Abstract
The polarized cross-section ratio σ_{LT^{'}}/σ_{0} from hard exclusive π^{-}Δ^{++} electroproduction off an unpolarized hydrogen target has been extracted based on beam-spin asymmetry measurements using a 10.2 GeV/10.6 GeV incident electron beam and the CLAS12 spectrometer at Jefferson Lab. The study, which provides the first observation of this channel in the deep-inelastic regime, focuses on very forward-pion kinematics in the valence regime, and photon virtualities ranging from 1.5 GeV^{2} up to 7 GeV^{2}. The reaction provides a novel access to the d-quark content of the nucleon and to p→Δ^{++} transition generalized parton distributions. A comparison to existing results for hard exclusive π^{+}n and π^{0}p electroproduction is provided, which shows a clear impact of the excitation mechanism, encoded in transition generalized parton distributions, on the asymmetry.
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- 2023
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231. Cardiac magnetic resonance findings and prognosis in type 1 myotonic dystrophy.
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Leali M, Aimo A, Ricci G, Torri F, Todiere G, Vergaro G, Grigoratos C, Giannoni A, Aquaro GD, Siciliano G, Emdin M, Passino C, and Barison A
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- Humans, Male, Female, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Retrospective Studies, Contrast Media, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Ventricular Function, Right, Gadolinium, Myocardium pathology, Prognosis, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy adverse effects, Predictive Value of Tests, Cardiomyopathies, Myotonic Dystrophy complications, Myotonic Dystrophy diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Cardiac involvement is a major determinant of prognosis in type 1 myotonic dystrophy (DM1), but limited information is available about myocardial remodeling and tissue changes. The aim of the study was to investigate cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) findings and their prognostic significance in DM1., Methods: We retrospectively identified all DM1 patients referred from a neurology unit to our CMR laboratory from 2009 to 2020., Results: Thirty-four patients were included (aged 45 ± 12, 62% male individuals) and compared with 68 age-matched and gender-matched healthy volunteers (43 male individuals, age 48 ± 15 years). At CMR, biventricular and biatrial volumes were significantly smaller (all P < 0.05), as was left ventricular mass (P < 0.001); left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) were significantly lower (all P < 0.01). Five (15%) patients had a LVEF less than 50% and four (12%) a RVEF less than 50%. Nine patients (26%) showed mid-wall late gadolinium enhancement (LGE; 5 ± 2% of LVM), and 14 (41%) fatty infiltration. Native T1 in the interventricular septum (1041 ± 53 ms) was higher than for healthy controls (1017 ± 28 ms) and approached the upper reference limit (1089 ms); the extracellular volume was slightly increased (33 ± 2%, reference <30%). Over 3.7 years (2.0-5.0), 6 (18%) patients died of extracardiac causes, 5 (15%) underwent device implantation; 5 of 21 (24%) developed repetitive ventricular ectopic beats (VEBs) on Holter monitoring. LGE mass was associated with the occurrence of repetitive VEBs (P = 0.002). Lower LV stroke volume (P = 0.017), lower RVEF (P = 0.016), a higher LVMi/LVEDVI ratio (P = 0.016), fatty infiltration (P = 0.04), and LGE extent (P < 0.001) were associated with death., Conclusion: DM1 patients display structural and functional cardiac abnormalities, with variable degrees of cardiac muscle hypotrophy, fibrosis, and fatty infiltration. Such changes, as evaluated by CMR, seem to be associated with the development of ventricular arrhythmias and a worse outcome., (Copyright © 2023 Italian Federation of Cardiology - I.F.C. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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232. First CLAS12 Measurement of Deeply Virtual Compton Scattering Beam-Spin Asymmetries in the Extended Valence Region.
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Christiaens G, Defurne M, Sokhan D, Achenbach P, Akbar Z, Amaryan MJ, Atac H, Avakian H, Gayoso CA, Baashen L, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benkel B, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Booth WA, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Brinkmann KT, Briscoe WJ, Bueltmann S, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Cao T, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chesnokov V, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clash G, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Deur A, Diehl S, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dupre R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, Alaoui AE, Fassi LE, Elouadrhiri L, Fegan S, Filippi A, Gates K, Gavalian G, Ghandilyan Y, Gilfoyle GP, Girod FX, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gosta G, Gothe RW, Gotra Y, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Hafidi K, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hauenstein F, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holmberg DE, Holtrop M, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Keller D, Khachatryan M, Khanal A, Kim W, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lagerquist V, Lanza L, Kabir ML, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Li X, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, Matousek G, McKinnon B, McLauchlin C, Meziani ZE, Migliorati S, Milner RG, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Molina E, Camacho CM, Nadel-Turonski P, Naidoo P, Neupane K, Niccolai S, Nicol M, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Ouillon M, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Paul SJ, Phelps W, Pilleux N, Pokhrel M, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Radic A, Ramasubramanian N, Raue BA, Reed T, Richards J, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rossi P, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schadmand S, Schmidt A, Scott MBC, Sharabian YG, Shirokov EV, Shrestha U, Simmerling P, Sparveris N, Spreafico M, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tan JA, Trotta N, Turisini M, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei X, Williams R, Wishart R, Wood MH, Zachariou N, Zhang J, Zhao ZW, Ziegler V, and Zurek M
- Abstract
Deeply virtual Compton scattering (DVCS) allows one to probe generalized parton distributions describing the 3D structure of the nucleon. We report the first measurement of the DVCS beam-spin asymmetry using the CLAS12 spectrometer with a 10.2 and 10.6 GeV electron beam scattering from unpolarized protons. The results greatly extend the Q^{2} and Bjorken-x phase space beyond the existing data in the valence region and provide 1600 new data points measured with unprecedented statistical uncertainty, setting new, tight constraints for future phenomenological studies.
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- 2023
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233. First Measurement of Λ Electroproduction off Nuclei in the Current and Target Fragmentation Regions.
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Chetry T, El Fassi L, Brooks WK, Dupré R, El Alaoui A, Hafidi K, Achenbach P, Adhikari KP, Akbar Z, Armstrong WR, Arratia M, Atac H, Avakian H, Baashen L, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benkel B, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Booth WA, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Brinkmann KT, Briscoe WJ, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chesnokov V, Ciullo G, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Diehl S, Djalali C, Egiyan H, Elouadrhiri L, Eugenio P, Fegan S, Filippi A, Gavalian G, Ghandilyan Y, Gilfoyle GP, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gosta G, Gothe RW, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Guo L, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jenkins D, Jo HS, Kabir ML, Khanal A, Khandaker M, Kim A, Kim W, Klein FJ, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Lagerquist V, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Li X, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, McLauchlin C, Meziani ZE, Migliorati S, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Munoz Camacho C, Nadel-Turonski P, Neupane K, Niccolai S, Nicol M, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Ostrovidov AI, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Paul SJ, Phelps W, Pilleux N, Pokhrel M, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Raue BA, Reed T, Richards J, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rosner G, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schadmand S, Schmidt A, Schumacher RA, Sharabian YG, Shirokov EV, Shrestha U, Simmerling P, Sokhan D, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tan JA, Trotta N, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Wei X, Weinstein LB, Williams R, Wishart R, Wood MH, Yurov M, Zachariou N, Zhao ZW, and Zurek M
- Abstract
We report results of Λ hyperon production in semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering off deuterium, carbon, iron, and lead targets obtained with the CLAS detector and the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility 5.014 GeV electron beam. These results represent the first measurements of the Λ multiplicity ratio and transverse momentum broadening as a function of the energy fraction (z) in the current and target fragmentation regions. The multiplicity ratio exhibits a strong suppression at high z and an enhancement at low z. The measured transverse momentum broadening is an order of magnitude greater than that seen for light mesons. This indicates that the propagating entity interacts very strongly with the nuclear medium, which suggests that propagation of diquark configurations in the nuclear medium takes place at least part of the time, even at high z. The trends of these results are qualitatively described by the Giessen Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck transport model, particularly for the multiplicity ratios. These observations will potentially open a new era of studies of the structure of the nucleon as well as of strange baryons.
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- 2023
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234. Observation of Correlations between Spin and Transverse Momenta in Back-to-Back Dihadron Production at CLAS12.
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Avakian H, Hayward TB, Kotzinian A, Armstrong WR, Atac H, Ayerbe Gayoso C, Baashen L, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benkel B, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biondo L, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Boiarinov S, Bossù F, Brinkman KT, Briscoe WJ, Brooks WK, Bueltmann S, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Capobianco R, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chesnokov V, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Diehl S, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dupre R, Egiyan H, El Alaoui A, El Fassi L, Elouadrhiri L, Fegan S, Filippi A, Forest T, Gates K, Gavalian G, Ghandilyan Y, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gosta G, Gothe RW, Gotra Y, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hauenstein F, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Hyde CE, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Johnston R, Joo K, Kabir ML, Keller D, Khachatryan M, Khanal A, Kim A, Kim W, Klimenko V, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lagerquist V, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Li X, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, Migliorati S, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Montgomery RA, Munoz Camacho C, Nadel-Turonski P, Naidoo P, Neupane K, Nguyen D, Niccolai S, Nicol M, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Paul SJ, Phelps W, Pilleux N, Pogorelko O, Pokhrel M, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Raue BA, Reed T, Richards J, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rossi P, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Sharabian YG, Shirokov EV, Shrestha U, Simmerling P, Sokhan D, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tan JA, Trotta N, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Vossen A, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei X, Wishart R, Wood MH, Zachariou N, Zhao ZW, and Zurek M
- Abstract
We report the first measurements of deep inelastic scattering spin-dependent azimuthal asymmetries in back-to-back dihadron electroproduction in the deep inelastic scattering process. In this reaction, two hadrons are produced in opposite hemispheres along the z axis in the virtual photon-target nucleon center-of-mass frame, with the first hadron produced in the current-fragmentation region and the second in the target-fragmentation region. The data were taken with longitudinally polarized electron beams of 10.2 and 10.6 GeV incident on an unpolarized liquid-hydrogen target using the CLAS12 spectrometer at Jefferson Lab. Observed nonzero sinΔϕ modulations in ep→e^{'}pπ^{+}X events, where Δϕ is the difference of the azimuthal angles of the proton and pion in the virtual photon and target nucleon center-of-mass frame, indicate that correlations between the spin and transverse momenta of hadrons produced in the target- and current-fragmentation regions may be significant. The measured beam-spin asymmetries provide a first access in dihadron production to a previously unexplored leading-twist spin- and transverse-momentum-dependent fracture function. The fracture functions describe the hadronization of the target remnant after the hard scattering of a virtual photon off a quark in the target particle and provide a new avenue for studying nucleonic structure and hadronization.
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- 2023
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235. Pathophysiology and Clinical Meaning of Ventilation-Perfusion Mismatch in the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.
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Slobod D, Damia A, Leali M, Spinelli E, and Mauri T
- Abstract
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains an important clinical challenge with a mortality rate of 35-45%. It is being increasingly demonstrated that the improvement of outcomes requires a tailored, individualized approach to therapy, guided by a detailed understanding of each patient's pathophysiology. In patients with ARDS, disturbances in the physiological matching of alveolar ventilation (V) and pulmonary perfusion (Q) ( V / Q mismatch) are a hallmark derangement. The perfusion of collapsed or consolidated lung units gives rise to intrapulmonary shunting and arterial hypoxemia, whereas the ventilation of non-perfused lung zones increases physiological dead-space, which potentially necessitates increased ventilation to avoid hypercapnia. Beyond its impact on gas exchange, V / Q mismatch is a predictor of adverse outcomes in patients with ARDS; more recently, its role in ventilation-induced lung injury and worsening lung edema has been described. Innovations in bedside imaging technologies such as electrical impedance tomography readily allow clinicians to determine the regional distributions of V and Q, as well as the adequacy of their matching, providing new insights into the phenotyping, prognostication, and clinical management of patients with ARDS. The purpose of this review is to discuss the pathophysiology, identification, consequences, and treatment of V / Q mismatch in the setting of ARDS, employing experimental data from clinical and preclinical studies as support.
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- 2022
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236. Observation of Azimuth-Dependent Suppression of Hadron Pairs in Electron Scattering off Nuclei.
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Paul SJ, Morán S, Arratia M, El Alaoui A, Hakobyan H, Brooks W, Amaryan MJ, Armstrong WR, Atac H, Baashen L, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benkel B, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biondo L, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Brinkmann KT, Briscoe WJ, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Capobianco R, Carman DS, Celentano A, Chesnokov V, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Diehl S, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dupre R, Egiyan H, El Fassi L, Eugenio P, Fegan S, Filippi A, Gavalian G, Ghandilyan Y, Gilfoyle GP, Golubenko AA, Gosta G, Gothe RW, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Johnston R, Joo K, Joosten S, Keller D, Khanal A, Khandaker M, Kim W, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Lagerquist V, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Li X, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, Meziani ZE, Migliorati S, Milner RG, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev VI, Moran P, Munoz Camacho C, Neupane K, Nguyen D, Niccolai S, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Ostrovidov AI, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pilleux N, Pocanic D, Pogorelko O, Pokhrel M, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Raue BA, Reed T, Ripani M, Rosner G, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Schumacher RA, Sharabian YG, Shirokov EV, Shrestha U, Simmerling P, Sokhan D, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tan JA, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Wei X, Wishart R, Wood MH, Zachariou N, Zhao ZW, Ziegler V, and Zurek M
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of dihadron angular correlations in electron-nucleus scattering. The data were taken with the CLAS detector and a 5.0 GeV electron beam incident on deuterium, carbon, iron, and lead targets. Relative to deuterium, the nuclear yields of charged-pion pairs show a strong suppression for azimuthally opposite pairs, no suppression for azimuthally nearby pairs, and an enhancement of pairs with large invariant mass. These effects grow with increased nuclear size. The data are qualitatively described by the gibuu model, which suggests that hadrons form near the nuclear surface and undergo multiple scattering in nuclei.These results show that angular correlation studies can open a new way to elucidate how hadrons form and interact inside nuclei.
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- 2022
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237. Integrating electrical impedance tomography and transpulmonary pressure monitoring to personalize PEEP in hypoxemic patients undergoing pressure support ventilation.
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Slobod D, Leali M, Spinelli E, Grieco DL, Spadaro S, and Mauri T
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- Humans, Electric Impedance therapeutic use, Hypoxia diagnostic imaging, Hypoxia therapy, Positive-Pressure Respiration methods, Tomography methods
- Abstract
Monitoring with electrical impedance tomography (EIT) during a decremental PEEP trial has been used to identify the PEEP that yields the optimal balance of pulmonary overdistension and collapse. This method is based on pixel-level changes in respiratory system compliance and depends on fixed or measured airway driving pressure. We developed a novel approach to quantify overdistension and collapse during pressure support ventilation (PSV) by integrating transpulmonary pressure and EIT monitoring and performed pilot tests in three hypoxemic patients. We report that our experimental approach is feasible and capable of identifying a PEEP that balances overdistension and collapse in intubated hypoxemic patients undergoing PSV., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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238. Multidimensional, High Precision Measurements of Beam Single Spin Asymmetries in Semi-inclusive π^{+} Electroproduction off Protons in the Valence Region.
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Diehl S, Kim A, Angelini G, Joo K, Adhikari S, Amaryan M, Arratia M, Atac H, Avakian H, Ayerbe Gayoso C, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bastami S, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Brinkmann KT, Briscoe WJ, Brooks W, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clark L, Clary BA, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dugger M, Dupre R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, El Alaoui A, El Fassi L, Elouadrhiri L, Fegan S, Filippi A, Forest T, Gavalian G, Gilfoyle GP, Girod FX, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gothe RW, Gotra Y, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Hafidi K, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hauenstein F, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hicks K, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Hyde CE, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Johnston R, Joosten S, Keller D, Khachatryan M, Khanal A, Kim W, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Livingston K, Lu Z, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Markov N, Marsicano L, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, Meziani ZE, Milner RG, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Moran P, Movsisyan A, Munoz Camacho C, Nadel-Turonski P, Naidoo P, Nanda S, Neupane K, Niccolai S, Niculescu G, O'Connell TR, Osipenko M, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pogorelko O, Prok Y, Prokudin A, Raue BA, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rizzo A, Roberts CD, Rossi P, Rowley J, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Segarra EP, Sharabian YG, Shrestha U, Simmerling P, Sokhan D, Soto O, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Stoler P, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tezgin K, Thornton A, Tyler N, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Vossen A, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei K, Wei X, Xu SS, Yale B, Zachariou N, and Zhang J
- Abstract
High precision measurements of the polarized electron beam-spin asymmetry in semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering (SIDIS) from the proton have been performed using a 10.6 GeV incident electron beam and the CLAS12 spectrometer at Jefferson Lab. We report here a high precision multidimensional study of single π^{+} SIDIS data over a large kinematic range in Bjorken x, fractional energy, and transverse momentum of the hadron as well as photon virtualities Q^{2} ranging from 1-7 GeV^{2}. In particular, the structure function ratio F_{LU}^{sinϕ}/F_{UU} has been determined, where F_{LU}^{sinϕ} is a twist-3 quantity that can reveal novel aspects of emergent hadron mass and quark-gluon correlations within the nucleon. The data's impact on the evolving understanding of the underlying reaction mechanisms and their kinematic variation is explored using theoretical models for the different contributing transverse momentum dependent parton distribution functions.
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- 2022
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239. First Measurement of Timelike Compton Scattering.
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Chatagnon P, Niccolai S, Stepanyan S, Amaryan MJ, Angelini G, Armstrong WR, Atac H, Ayerbe Gayoso C, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Bashkanov M, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biondo L, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Briscoe WJ, Brooks WK, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Caudron M, Celentano A, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clark L, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Costantini G, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, Defurne M, De Vita R, Deur A, Diehl S, Djalali C, Dupré R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, El Alaoui A, El Fassi L, Elouadrhiri L, Fegan S, Fersch R, Filippi A, Gavalian G, Ghandilyan Y, Gilfoyle GP, Girod FX, Glazier DI, Golubenko AA, Gothe RW, Gotra Y, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Guo L, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Hyde CE, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jo HS, Joo K, Kabir ML, Keller D, Khachatryan G, Khanal A, Kim A, Kim W, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lanza L, Leali M, Lee S, Lenisa P, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Marsicano L, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, McLauchlin C, Migliorati S, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Montgomery RA, Munoz Camacho C, Nadel-Turonski P, Naidoo P, Neupane K, O'Connell TR, Osipenko M, Ouillon M, Pandey P, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pogorelko O, Poudel J, Price JW, Prok Y, Raue BA, Reed T, Ripani M, Rizzo A, Rossi P, Rowley J, Sabatié F, Schmidt A, Segarra EP, Sharabian YG, Shirokov EV, Shrestha U, Sokhan D, Soto O, Sparveris N, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tyler N, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Vallarino S, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Vossen A, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei K, Wei X, Wishart R, Yale B, Zachariou N, Zhang J, and Zhao ZW
- Abstract
We present the first measurement of the timelike Compton scattering process, γp→p^{'}γ^{*}(γ^{*}→e^{+}e^{-}), obtained with the CLAS12 detector at Jefferson Lab. The photon beam polarization and the decay lepton angular asymmetries are reported in the range of timelike photon virtualities 2.25
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- 2021
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240. Photoproduction of the f_{2}(1270) Meson Using the CLAS Detector.
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Carver M, Celentano A, Hicks K, Marsicano L, Mathieu V, Pilloni A, Adhikari KP, Adhikari S, Amaryan MJ, Angelini G, Atac H, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bondi M, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Briscoe WJ, Brooks WK, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Chatagnon P, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clark L, Clary BA, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Diehl S, Djalali C, Dugger M, Dupre R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, Alaoui AE, Fassi LE, Eugenio P, Fedotov G, Fegan S, Filippi A, Gavalian G, Gevorgyan N, Gilfoyle GP, Girod FX, Gothe RW, Griffioen KA, Hafidi K, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Holtrop M, Huang Q, Hyde CE, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Isupov EL, Jenkins D, Jo HS, Joo K, Joosten S, Keller D, Khanal A, Khandaker M, Kim A, Kim CW, Klein FJ, Kripko A, Kubarovsky V, Lanza L, Leali M, Lenisa P, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Mascagna V, McCracken ME, McKinnon B, Meziani ZE, Mokeev V, Movsisyan A, Munevar E, Camacho CM, Nadel-Turonski P, Neupane K, Niccolai S, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Ostrovidov AI, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pogorelko O, Prok Y, Protopopescu D, Ripani M, Ritchie BG, Ritman J, Rizzo A, Rosner G, Rowley J, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Schumacher RA, Sharabian YG, Shrestha U, Sokhan D, Soto O, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tyler N, Tyson R, Ungaro M, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei K, Wei X, Yale B, Zachariou N, Zhang J, and Zhao ZW
- Abstract
The quark structure of the f_{2}(1270) meson has, for many years, been assumed to be a pure quark-antiquark (qq[over ¯]) resonance with quantum numbers J^{PC}=2^{++}. Recently, it was proposed that the f_{2}(1270) is a molecular state made from the attractive interaction of two ρ mesons. Such a state would be expected to decay strongly to final states with charged pions due to the dominant decay ρ→π^{+}π^{-}, whereas decay to two neutral pions would likely be suppressed. Here, we measure for the first time the reaction γp→π^{0}π^{0}p, using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer detector at Jefferson Lab for incident beam energies between 3.6 and 5.4 GeV. Differential cross sections, dσ/dt, for f_{2}(1270) photoproduction are extracted with good precision due to low backgrounds and are compared to theoretical calculations.
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- 2021
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241. Beam Spin Asymmetry in Semi-Inclusive Electroproduction of Hadron Pairs.
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Mirazita M, Avakian H, Courtoy A, Pisano S, Adhikari S, Amaryan MJ, Angelini G, Atac H, Baltzell NA, Barion L, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Briscoe WJ, Brooks WK, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clary B, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Diehl S, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dupre R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, Alaoui AE, Fassi LE, Eugenio P, Fegan S, Fersch R, Filippi A, Forest TA, Ghandilyan Y, Gavalian G, Gilfoyle GP, Giovanetti KL, Girod FX, Glazier DI, Golovatch E, Gothe RW, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Guo L, Hafidi K, Hakobyan H, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hicks K, Hobart A, Holtrop M, Huang Q, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Ishkhanov BS, Isupov EL, Jenkins D, Jo HS, Joo K, Keller D, Khanal A, Khandaker M, Kim CW, Kim W, Klein FJ, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lanza L, Leali M, Lenisa P, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Markov N, Marsicano L, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, Milner RG, Mineeva T, Mokeev V, Mullen C, Camacho CM, Neupane K, Niculescu G, O'Connell T, Osipenko M, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Paremuzyan R, Park K, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pocanic D, Pogorelko O, Poudel J, Prok Y, Raue BA, Ripani M, Ritman J, Rizzo A, Rossi P, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Schumacher RA, Sharabian YG, Shrestha U, Soto O, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tyler N, Ungaro M, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Vossen A, Voutier E, Watts D, Wei K, Wei X, Wood MH, Yale B, Zachariou N, Zhang J, and Zhao ZW
- Abstract
A first measurement of the longitudinal beam spin asymmetry A_{LU} in the semi-inclusive electroproduction of pairs of charged pions is reported. A_{LU} is a higher-twist observable and offers the cleanest access to the nucleon twist-3 parton distribution function e(x). Data have been collected in the Hall-B at Jefferson Lab by impinging a 5.498-GeV electron beam on a liquid-hydrogen target, and reconstructing the scattered electron and the pion pair with the CLAS detector. One-dimensional projections of the A_{LU}^{sinϕ_{R}} moments are extracted for the kinematic variables of interest in the valence quark region. The understanding of dihadron production is essential for the interpretation of observables in single-hadron production in semi-inclusive DIS, and pioneering measurements of single-spin asymmetries in dihadron production open a new avenue in studies of QCD dynamics.
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- 2021
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242. Imaging of Neurologic Disease in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19: An Italian Multicenter Retrospective Observational Study.
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Mahammedi A, Saba L, Vagal A, Leali M, Rossi A, Gaskill M, Sengupta S, Zhang B, Carriero A, Bachir S, Crivelli P, Paschè A, Premi E, Padovani A, and Gasparotti R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, COVID-19, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2, Young Adult, Betacoronavirus, Brain diagnostic imaging, Coronavirus Infections complications, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Nervous System Diseases diagnostic imaging, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Pneumonia, Viral complications
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- 2020
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243. Extraction of Beam-Spin Asymmetries from the Hard Exclusive π^{+} Channel off Protons in a Wide Range of Kinematics.
- Author
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Diehl S, Joo K, Kim A, Avakian H, Kroll P, Park K, Riser D, Semenov-Tian-Shansky K, Tezgin K, Adhikari KP, Adhikari S, Amaryan MJ, Angelini G, Asryan G, Atac H, Barion L, Battaglieri M, Bedlinskiy I, Benmokhtar F, Bianconi A, Biselli AS, Bossù F, Boiarinov S, Briscoe WJ, Brooks WK, Bulumulla D, Burkert VD, Carman DS, Carvajal JC, Celentano A, Chatagnon P, Chetry T, Ciullo G, Clark L, Cole PL, Contalbrigo M, Crede V, D'Angelo A, Dashyan N, De Vita R, Defurne M, Deur A, Dilks C, Djalali C, Dupre R, Egiyan H, Ehrhart M, El Alaoui A, El Fassi L, Eugenio P, Filippi A, Forest TA, Ghandilyan Y, Gilfoyle GP, Giovanetti KL, Girod FX, Glazier DI, Golovatch E, Gothe RW, Griffioen KA, Guidal M, Guo L, Hakobyan H, Harrison N, Hattawy M, Hayward TB, Heddle D, Hicks K, Holtrop M, Ilieva Y, Ireland DG, Ishkhanov BS, Isupov EL, Jenkins D, Jo HS, Joosten S, Keller D, Khachatryan M, Khanal A, Khandaker M, Kim CW, Kim W, Kubarovsky V, Kuhn SE, Lanza L, Leali M, Lenisa P, Livingston K, MacGregor IJD, Marchand D, Markov N, Marsicano L, Mascagna V, McKinnon B, Meziani ZE, Mineeva T, Mirazita M, Mokeev V, Munoz Camacho C, Nadel-Turonski P, Niculescu G, Osipenko M, Paolone M, Pappalardo LL, Pasyuk E, Phelps W, Pogorelko O, Price JW, Prok Y, Raue BA, Ripani M, Rizzo A, Rossi P, Rowley J, Sabatié F, Salgado C, Schmidt A, Schumacher RA, Sharabian YG, Shrestha U, Soto O, Sparveris N, Stepanyan S, Stoler P, Strakovsky II, Strauch S, Tan JA, Tyler N, Ungaro M, Venturelli L, Voskanyan H, Voutier E, Watts DP, Wei X, Wood MH, Zachariou N, Zhang J, and Zhao ZW
- Abstract
We have measured beam-spin asymmetries to extract the sinϕ moment A_{LU}^{sinϕ} from the hard exclusive e[over →]p→e^{'}nπ^{+} reaction above the resonance region, for the first time with nearly full coverage from forward to backward angles in the center of mass. The A_{LU}^{sinϕ} moment has been measured up to 6.6 GeV^{2} in -t, covering the kinematic regimes of generalized parton distributions (GPD) and baryon-to-meson transition distribution amplitudes (TDA) at the same time. The experimental results in very forward kinematics demonstrate the sensitivity to chiral-odd and chiral-even GPDs. In very backward kinematics where the TDA framework is applicable, we found A_{LU}^{sinϕ} to be negative, while a sign change was observed near 90° in the center of mass. The unique results presented in this Letter will provide critical constraints to establish reaction mechanisms that can help to further develop the GPD and TDA frameworks.
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- 2020
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244. Correction to: Magnetic resonance imaging features of the superior cervical ganglion and expected changes after radiation therapy to the head and neck in a long-term follow-up.
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Ravanelli M, Tononcelli E, Leali M, Buffa I, Loke SC, Karandikar A, Chokkappan K, Yue GOC, Goh JPN, Tan TY, and Farina D
- Abstract
In the article "Magnetic resonance imaging features of the superior cervical ganglion and expected changes after radiation therapy to the head and neck in a long-term follow-up", one of the author names, K Chokkappan, was spelled incorrectly.
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- 2020
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245. Magnetic resonance imaging features of the superior cervical ganglion and expected changes after radiation therapy to the head and neck in a long-term follow-up.
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Ravanelli M, Tononcelli E, Leali M, Buffa I, Loke SC, Karandikar A, Chokkapan K, Yue GOC, Goh JPN, Tan TY, and Farina D
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Head and Neck Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Superior Cervical Ganglion diagnostic imaging, Superior Cervical Ganglion radiation effects
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to assess the magnetic resonance (MRI) features of the superior cervical ganglion (SCG) and to track changes to it induced using radiotherapy across a long-term follow-up., Methods: In total, 75 patients who underwent radiotherapy for head and neck malignancies and who were studied with MRI were recruited from two centers. MRI was performed before and after radiotherapy, with a median long-term follow-up of 4.5 years. Baseline SCG features were assessed. Changes in axial cross-sectional area, T2-normalized signal, and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) (the latter available in about half of the patients) were analyzed. Repeated measures analysis of variance with Bonferroni's correction was used to analyze changes in the aforementioned parameters (significance level 0.05)., Results: Out of a potential 149 SCGs, 136 were visible at baseline MRI. A variable spatial relationship with the internal carotid artery was found. SCGs showed the "black dot" sign in almost all of the patients. ADC was higher in SCGs than in regional lymph nodes. Cross-sectional area, normalized T2, and ADC increased in the period up to 1 year after radiotherapy and then remained stable in subsequent longer-term follow-up., Conclusion: The SCG has unusual features that allow differentiation from the regional lymph nodes. Changes in morphology and signal after radiotherapy must be taken into account by radiologists to avoid misdiagnosis as recurrent nodal disease. Changes induced using radiotherapy are stable in long-term follow-up and are thus likely attributed to other factors (such as Schwann cell hypertrophy/proliferation) rather than edema.
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- 2020
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246. Correlation between Human Papillomavirus Status and Quantitative MR Imaging Parameters including Diffusion-Weighted Imaging and Texture Features in Oropharyngeal Carcinoma.
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Ravanelli M, Grammatica A, Tononcelli E, Morello R, Leali M, Battocchio S, Agazzi GM, Buglione di Monale E Bastia M, Maroldi R, Nicolai P, and Farina D
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Papillomaviridae, Papillomavirus Infections pathology, Retrospective Studies, Oropharyngeal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Oropharyngeal Neoplasms virology, Papillomavirus Infections diagnostic imaging, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck diagnostic imaging, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck virology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The incidence of Oropharyngeal Squampus Cell Carcinoma (OPSCC) cases is increasing especially in the Western countries due to the spreading of human papilloma virus (HPV) infection. Radiological investigations, MRI in particular, are used in the daily clinical practice to stage OPSCC. The aim of this study was to investigate the association of quantitative MR imaging features including diffusion-weighted imaging and human papillomavirus status in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma., Materials and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 59 patients with untreated histologically proved T2-T4 oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma. Human papillomavirus status was determined by viral DNA detection on tissue samples. MR imaging protocol included T2-weighted, contrast-enhanced T1-weighted (volumetric interpolated brain examination), and DWI sequences. Parametric maps of apparent diffusion coefficient were obtained from DWI sequences. Texture analysis was performed on T2 and volumetric-interpolated brain examination sequences and on ADC maps. Differences in quantitative MR imaging features between tumors positive and negative for human papillomavirus and among subgroups of patients stratified by smoking status were tested using the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test; the false discovery rate was controlled using the Benjamini-Hochberg correction; and a predictive model for human papillomavirus status was built using multivariable logistic regression., Results: Twenty-eight patients had human papillomavirus-positive oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma, while 31 patients had human papillomavirus-negative oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma. Tumors positive for human papillomavirus had a significantly lower mean ADC compared with those negative for it (median, 850.87 versus median, 1033.68; P < .001). Texture features had a lower discriminatory power for human papillomavirus status. Skewness on volumetric interpolated brain examination sequences was significantly higher in the subgroup of patients positive for human papillomavirus and smokers ( P = .003). A predictive model based on smoking status and mean ADC yielded a sensitivity of 83.3% and specificity 92.6% in classifying human papillomavirus status., Conclusions: ADC is significantly lower in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma positive for human papillomavirus compared with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma negative for it. ADC and smoking status allowed noninvasive prediction of human papillomavirus status with a good accuracy. These results should be validated and further investigated on larger prospective studies., (© 2018 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Thorotrast: analysis of the time evolution of its α activity concentration, in the 70 years following the chemical purification of Thorium.
- Author
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Bianconi A, Corradini M, Leali M, Lodi Rizzini E, Venturelli L, and Zurlo N
- Subjects
- Models, Theoretical, Radiochemistry, Thorium isolation & purification, Thorium Dioxide chemistry, Time Factors, Alpha Particles, Thorium chemistry
- Abstract
We simulate the α-activity of the Thorium series elements present in the contrast medium named Thorotrast, used until 1960 and cause of certified deaths until today. Assuming, as active components at t=0, (232)Th and (228)Th in the same relative concentration they have in nature, α-activity oscillates for some decades before reaching a stationary value that in absence of biological depletion would be AST =24000Bq/g. Our Montecarlo code generates the nuclear decays of the Thorium series with and without in-vivo biological depletion, arriving to three kinds of results for the activity: 1) Theoretical activity concentration (no biological depletion). Our result is fitted by: A(t)=A(ST).{[1-exp(-t/10)]+[exp(-t/tB)(1-0.8exp(-t/tA))]}, with t in years, tA=1.07.10(-2) years, and tB=2.38 years. 2) Weak biological depletion (228Ra/232 Th equilibrium activity ratio 0.6, 224Ra/228Ra e.a.r 0.9, 10% excretion for 220Rn). The ratio of the activity concentration to the theoretical activity concentration is fitted by: A weak (t)/A(t)=0.61+0.29 exp[-(t/15)2] (t in years). 3) Strong biological depletion (228Ra/232Th e.a.r 0.4, 224Ra/228Ra e.a.r. 0.8, 10% excretion for 220Rn). The ratio of the activity concentration to the theoretical activity concentration is fitted by A(strong)(t)/A(t)=0.44+0.4 exp[-(t/13)2](t in years). We also report fluctuation calculation for two cases where standard statistical behavior is not expected., (Copyright © 2013 Associazione Italiana di Fisica Medica. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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248. Highly selective antiinflammatory and analgesic activity of 3-(1-methylethyl)-2-(4-methoxyphenyl)-3H-naphth[1,2-d]imidazole, a new non-acidic molecule.
- Author
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Schiatti P, Selva D, Galliani G, Baldoli E, Diena A, Glässer A, Leali M, and Toja E
- Subjects
- Animals, Arachidonic Acid, Arachidonic Acids antagonists & inhibitors, Arthritis, Experimental pathology, Behavior, Animal drug effects, Blood Pressure drug effects, Cricetinae, Diarrhea prevention & control, Dogs, Endocrine Glands drug effects, Female, Fertility drug effects, Imidazoles toxicity, Liver Glycogen metabolism, Luteinizing Hormone metabolism, Male, Mesocricetus, Mice, Ovulation drug effects, Peptic Ulcer chemically induced, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Water-Electrolyte Balance drug effects, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal pharmacology, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal toxicity, Imidazoles pharmacology
- Abstract
3-(1-Methylethyl)-2-(4-methoxyphenyl)-3H-naphth[1,2-d] imidazole (MDL-035) has antiinflammatory activity in various antiinflammatory models such as carrageenin and nystatin oedemas, cotton pellet granuloma and adjuvant arthritis. The antiinflammatory potency of MDL-035 is greater than that of acetylsalicylic acid and phenylbutazone, but lower than that of indomethacin. MDL-035 has practically no gastroulcerogenic activity in rats, does not affect water or salt excretion, has no hormonal or antihormonal effects and has no other unwanted pharmacological effects. Its acute toxicity is very low.
- Published
- 1986
249. Synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of a series of analgesic and antiinflammatory 4-aminopyrroles.
- Author
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Tarzia G, Panzone G, Leali M, Burdisso M, Schiatti P, and Selva D
- Subjects
- Animals, Arachidonic Acid, Arachidonic Acids antagonists & inhibitors, Arthritis, Experimental drug therapy, Carrageenan, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Diarrhea drug therapy, Edema drug therapy, Lethal Dose 50, Male, Pyrroles pharmacology, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Structure-Activity Relationship, Ulcer chemically induced, Analgesics chemical synthesis, Anti-Inflammatory Agents chemical synthesis, Pyrroles chemical synthesis
- Abstract
The synthesis and the pharmacological evaluation of a series of analgesic, antiinflammatory beta-aminopyrroles is described. Qualitative structure activity relationships are discussed. One of the compounds reported in the study is a candidate for toxicological and clinical trials.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. [Puerperal morbidity].
- Author
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De Virgiliis G, Leali MG, Mauri L, Melandri M, Monga D, Rainoldi R, Sideri M, Valente I, and Zaninetti P
- Subjects
- Adult, Bacterial Infections etiology, Cesarean Section adverse effects, Female, Fever etiology, Humans, Italy, Postoperative Complications, Pregnancy, Puerperal Infection epidemiology, Puerperal Infection therapy, Puerperal Disorders epidemiology, Puerperal Disorders therapy
- Published
- 1979
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