5,664 results on '"H, Nakajima"'
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2. First ground-based Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer observations of HFC-23 at Rikubetsu, Japan, and Syowa Station, Antarctica
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M. Takeda, H. Nakajima, I. Murata, T. Nagahama, I. Morino, G. C. Toon, R. F. Weiss, J. Mühle, P. B. Krummel, P. J. Fraser, and H.-J. Wang
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Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 ,Earthwork. Foundations ,TA715-787 - Abstract
We have developed a procedure for retrieving atmospheric abundances of HFC-23 (CHF3) with a ground-based Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer and analyzed the spectra observed at Rikubetsu, Japan (43.5∘ N, 143.8∘ E), and at Syowa Station, Antarctica (69.0∘ S, 39.6∘ E). The FTIR retrievals were carried out with the SFIT4 retrieval program, and the two spectral windows of 1138.5–1148.0 cm−1 and 1154.0–1160.0 cm−1 in the overlapping ν2 and ν5 vibrational–rotational transition bands of HFC-23 were used to avoid strong H2O absorption features. We considered O3, N2O, CH4, H2O, HDO, CFC-12 (CCl2F2), HCFC-22 (CHClF2), peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) (CH3C(O)OONO2), HCFC-141b (CH3CCl2F), and HCFC-142b (CH3CClF2) to be interfering species. Vertical profiles of H2O, HDO, and CH4 are preliminarily retrieved with other independent spectral windows because these profiles may induce large uncertainties in the HFC-23 retrieval. Each HFC-23 retrieval has only one piece of vertical information with sensitivity to HFC-23 in the troposphere and the lower stratosphere. Retrieval errors mainly arise from the systematic uncertainties of the spectroscopic parameters used to obtain HFC-23, H2O, HDO, and CH4 abundances. For comparison between FTIR-retrieved HFC-23 total columns and surface dry-air mole fractions provided by AGAGE (Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment), FTIR-retrieved HFC-23 dry-air column-averaged mole fractions (XHFC-23) were calculated. The FTIR-retrieved XHFC-23 values at Rikubetsu and Syowa Station have negative biases of −15 % to −20 % and −25 % compared to the AGAGE datasets, respectively. These negative biases might mainly come from systematic uncertainties of HFC-23 spectroscopic parameters. The trend of the FTIR-retrieved XHFC-23 data at Rikubetsu was derived for December to February (DJF) observations, which are considered to represent the background values when an air mass reaching Rikubetsu has the least influence by transport of HFC-23 emissions from nearby countries. The DJF trend of Rikubetsu over the 1997–2009 period is 0.810 ± 0.093 ppt yr−1 (ppt: parts per trillion), which is in good agreement with the trend derived from the annual global mean datasets of the AGAGE 12-box model for the same period (0.820 ± 0.013 ppt yr−1). The DJF trend of Rikubetsu over the 2008–2019 period is 0.928 ± 0.108 ppt yr−1, which is consistent with the trend in the AGAGE in situ measurements at Trinidad Head (41.1∘ N, 124.2∘ W) for the same period (0.994 ± 0.001 ppt yr−1). The trend of the FTIR-retrieved XHFC-23 data at Syowa Station over the 2007–2016 period is 0.819 ± 0.071 ppt yr−1, which is consistent with that derived from the AGAGE in situ measurements at Cape Grim (40.7∘ S, 144.7∘ E) for the same period (0.874 ± 0.002 ppt yr−1). Although there are systematic biases in the FTIR-retrieved XHFC-23 at both sites, these results indicate that ground-based FTIR observations have the capability to monitor the long-term trend of atmospheric HFC-23. If this FTIR measurement technique were extended to other Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) ground-based FTIR sites around world, the measurements reported from these sites would complement the global AGAGE observations by filling spatial and temporal gaps and may lead to improved insights about changes in regional and global emissions of HFC-23 and its role in global warming.
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- 2021
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3. Development of the Stool Color Card for Early Detection of Biliary Atresia using Multispectral Image.
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Masaru Tsuchida, Hikaru Gunji, H. Nakajima, Takahito Kawanishi, Kunio Kashino, and A. Matsui
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- 2019
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4. Chlorine partitioning near the polar vortex edge observed with ground-based FTIR and satellites at Syowa Station, Antarctica, in 2007 and 2011
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H. Nakajima, I. Murata, Y. Nagahama, H. Akiyoshi, K. Saeki, T. Kinase, M. Takeda, Y. Tomikawa, E. Dupuy, and N. B. Jones
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
We retrieved lower stratospheric vertical profiles of O3, HNO3, and HCl from solar spectra taken with a ground-based Fourier transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR) installed at Syowa Station, Antarctica (69.0∘ S, 39.6∘ E), from March to December 2007 and September to November 2011. This was the first continuous measurement of chlorine species throughout the ozone hole period from the ground in Antarctica. We analyzed temporal variation of these species combined with ClO, HCl, and HNO3 data taken with the Aura MLS (Microwave Limb Sounder) satellite sensor and ClONO2 data taken with the Envisat MIPAS (the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding) satellite sensor at 18 and 22 km over Syowa Station. An HCl and ClONO2 decrease occurred from the end of May at both 18 and 22 km, and eventually, in early winter, both HCl and ClONO2 were almost depleted. When the sun returned to Antarctica in spring, enhancement of ClO and gradual O3 destruction were observed. During the ClO-enhanced period, a negative correlation between ClO and ClONO2 was observed in the time series of the data at Syowa Station. This negative correlation was associated with the relative distance between Syowa Station and the edge of the polar vortex. We used MIROC3.2 chemistry–climate model (CCM) results to investigate the behavior of whole chlorine and related species inside the polar vortex and the boundary region in more detail. From CCM model results, the rapid conversion of chlorine reservoir species (HCl and ClONO2) into Cl2, gradual conversion of Cl2 into Cl2O2, increase in HOCl in the winter period, increase in ClO when sunlight became available, and conversion of ClO into HCl were successfully reproduced. The HCl decrease in the winter polar vortex core continued to occur due to both transport of ClONO2 from the subpolar region to higher latitudes, providing a flux of ClONO2 from more sunlit latitudes into the polar vortex, and the heterogeneous reaction of HCl with HOCl. The temporal variation of chlorine species over Syowa Station was affected by both heterogeneous chemistries related to polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) occurrence inside the polar vortex and transport of a NOx-rich air mass from the polar vortex boundary region, which can produce additional ClONO2 by reaction of ClO with NO2. The deactivation pathways from active chlorine into reservoir species (HCl and/or ClONO2) were confirmed to be highly dependent on the availability of ambient O3. At 18 km, where most ozone was depleted, most ClO was converted to HCl. At 22 km where some O3 was available, an additional increase in ClONO2 from the prewinter value occurred, similar to the Arctic.
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- 2020
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5. Prognosis and incidence of immunological and oncological complications after direct-acting antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis C
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Y, Kanayama, K, Sato, S, Saito, T, Ueno, Y, Shimada, T, Kohga, M, Shibasaki, A, Naganuma, S, Takakusagi, T, Nagashima, H, Nakajima, H, Takagi, D, Uehara, and T, Uraoka
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Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Incidence ,Liver Neoplasms ,Humans ,Female ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Prognosis ,Antiviral Agents ,Hepatitis C - Abstract
Background and study aims: The long-term comprehensive prognosis of chronic hepatitis C after direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapy is unclear. This study aimed to investigate the prognosis and incidence of immunological and oncological complications after DAA therapy. Patients and methods: The study included a total of 1461 patients who received DAA therapy in our university hospital and affiliated hospitals between September 3, 2014 and September 30, 2018. Results: The incidence rates of total malignancies in overall or female patients after DAA therapy were significantly greater than expected in the corresponding general population. The same was true for lung malignancies. Predictive risk factors associated with the occurrence and recurrence of hepatic malignancies after DAA therapy in patients with sustained virological response were cirrhosis and insulin use, protein induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist-II level, and albumin-bilirubin score, respectively. Eight (0.5%) patients were diagnosed with autoimmune diseases after starting DAA therapy. Importantly, the attending physician considered a possible causal relationship between DAA therapy and these autoimmune diseases in five cases (four rheumatoid arthritis and one membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis). The 5-year overall survival rate was 91.6%. The most frequent primary cause of death was malignancy in 41 (60.2%) patients, including 25 with hepatic malignancies. Lung and colorectal cancers were the next most common. Conclusions: Given that the incidence of total and lung cancers might increase and DAA-related autoimmune diseases might emerge after DAA therapy, we should be alert for the development of these diseases as well as hepatic malignancies.
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- 2022
6. The recent increase of atmospheric methane from 10 years of ground-based NDACC FTIR observations since 2005
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W. Bader, B. Bovy, S. Conway, K. Strong, D. Smale, A. J. Turner, T. Blumenstock, C. Boone, M. Collaud Coen, A. Coulon, O. Garcia, D. W. T. Griffith, F. Hase, P. Hausmann, N. Jones, P. Krummel, I. Murata, I. Morino, H. Nakajima, S. O'Doherty, C. Paton-Walsh, J. Robinson, R. Sandrin, M. Schneider, C. Servais, R. Sussmann, and E. Mahieu
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Changes of atmospheric methane total columns (CH4) since 2005 have been evaluated using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) solar observations carried out at 10 ground-based sites, affiliated to the Network for Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC). From this, we find an increase of atmospheric methane total columns of 0.31 ± 0.03 % year−1 (2σ level of uncertainty) for the 2005–2014 period. Comparisons with in situ methane measurements at both local and global scales show good agreement. We used the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model tagged simulation, which accounts for the contribution of each emission source and one sink in the total methane, simulated over 2005–2012. After regridding according to NDACC vertical layering using a conservative regridding scheme and smoothing by convolving with respective FTIR seasonal averaging kernels, the GEOS-Chem simulation shows an increase of atmospheric methane total columns of 0.35 ± 0.03 % year−1 between 2005 and 2012, which is in agreement with NDACC measurements over the same time period (0.30 ± 0.04 % year−1, averaged over 10 stations). Analysis of the GEOS-Chem-tagged simulation allows us to quantify the contribution of each tracer to the global methane change since 2005. We find that natural sources such as wetlands and biomass burning contribute to the interannual variability of methane. However, anthropogenic emissions, such as coal mining, and gas and oil transport and exploration, which are mainly emitted in the Northern Hemisphere and act as secondary contributors to the global budget of methane, have played a major role in the increase of atmospheric methane observed since 2005. Based on the GEOS-Chem-tagged simulation, we discuss possible cause(s) for the increase of methane since 2005, which is still unexplained.
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- 2017
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7. Structural and morphological dataset for rf-sputtered WC-Co thin films using synchrotron radiation methods
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R.R. Phiri, O.P. Oladijo, H. Nakajima, A. Rattanachata, and E.T. Akinlabi
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
Control and manipulation of synthesis parameters of thin film coatings is of critical concern in determination of material properties and performance. Structural and morphological properties of rf-sputtered WC-Co thin films deposited under varying deposition parameters namely, substrate temperature and rf power are presented in this data article. The surface morphology, crystallite size and nature were acquired using x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Grazing Incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy (GI-XAS). Furthermore, Synchrotron findings are correlated with complimentary data acquired from Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Raman spectroscopy and surface profilometry to predict and point out optimum synthesis parameters for best properties of the film. Keywords: WC-Co thin films, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Grazing incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy (GI-XAS), Synchrotron radiation, SEM
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- 2019
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8. An evaluation of IASI-NH3 with ground-based Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy measurements
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E. Dammers, M. Palm, M. Van Damme, C. Vigouroux, D. Smale, S. Conway, G. C. Toon, N. Jones, E. Nussbaumer, T. Warneke, C. Petri, L. Clarisse, C. Clerbaux, C. Hermans, E. Lutsch, K. Strong, J. W. Hannigan, H. Nakajima, I. Morino, B. Herrera, W. Stremme, M. Grutter, M. Schaap, R. J. Wichink Kruit, J. Notholt, P.-F. Coheur, and J. W. Erisman
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Global distributions of atmospheric ammonia (NH3) measured with satellite instruments such as the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) contain valuable information on NH3 concentrations and variability in regions not yet covered by ground-based instruments. Due to their large spatial coverage and (bi-)daily overpasses, the satellite observations have the potential to increase our knowledge of the distribution of NH3 emissions and associated seasonal cycles. However the observations remain poorly validated, with only a handful of available studies often using only surface measurements without any vertical information. In this study, we present the first validation of the IASI-NH3 product using ground-based Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) observations. Using a recently developed consistent retrieval strategy, NH3 concentration profiles have been retrieved using observations from nine Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) stations around the world between 2008 and 2015. We demonstrate the importance of strict spatio-temporal collocation criteria for the comparison. Large differences in the regression results are observed for changing intervals of spatial criteria, mostly due to terrain characteristics and the short lifetime of NH3 in the atmosphere. The seasonal variations of both datasets are consistent for most sites. Correlations are found to be high at sites in areas with considerable NH3 levels, whereas correlations are lower at sites with low atmospheric NH3 levels close to the detection limit of the IASI instrument. A combination of the observations from all sites (Nobs = 547) give a mean relative difference of −32.4 ± (56.3) %, a correlation r of 0.8 with a slope of 0.73. These results give an improved estimate of the IASI-NH3 product performance compared to the previous upper-bound estimates (−50 to +100 %).
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- 2016
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9. PRECURSORY SLOPE DEFORMATION AROUND LANDSLIDE AREA DETECTED BY INSAR THROUGHOUT JAPAN
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T. Nakano, K. Wada, M. Yamanaka, I. Kamiya, and H. Nakajima
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) technique is able to detect a slope deformation around landslide (e.g., Singhroy et al., 2004; Une et al., 2008; Riedel and Walther, 2008; Sato et al., 2014). Geospatial Information Authority (GSI) of Japan has been performing the InSAR analysis regularly by using ALOS/PALSAR data and ALOS-2/PALSAR-2 data throughout Japan. There are a lot of small phase change sites except for crustal deformation with earthquake or volcano activity in the InSAR imagery. Most of the phase change sites are located in landslide area. We conducted field survey at the 10 sites of those phase change sites. As a result, we identified deformation of artificial structures or linear depressions caused by mass movement at the 9 sites. This result indicates that InSAR technique can detect on the continual deformation of landslide block for several years. GSI of Japan will continue to perform the InSAR analysis throughout Japan. Therefore, we will be able to observe and monitor precursory slope deformation around landslide areas throughout Japan.
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- 2016
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10. Vortex-wide chlorine activation by a mesoscale PSC event in the Arctic winter of 2009/10
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T. Wegner, M. C. Pitts, L. R. Poole, I. Tritscher, J.-U. Grooß, and H. Nakajima
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
In the Arctic polar vortex of the 2009/10 winter temperatures were low enough to allow widespread formation of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs). These clouds occurred during the initial chlorine activation phase which provided the opportunity to investigate the impact of PSCs on chlorine activation. Satellite observations of gas-phase species and PSCs are used in combination with trajectory modeling to assess this initial activation. The initial activation occurred in association with the formation of PSCs over the east coast of Greenland at the beginning of January 2010. Although this area of PSCs covered only a small portion of the vortex, it was responsible for almost the entire initial activation of chlorine vortex wide. Observations show HCl (hydrochloric acid) mixing ratios decreased rapidly in and downstream of this region. Trajectory calculations and simplified heterogeneous chemistry modeling confirmed that the initial chlorine activation continued until ClONO2 (chlorine nitrate) was completely depleted and the activated air masses were advected throughout the polar vortex. For the calculation of heterogeneous reaction rates, surface area density is estimated from backscatter observations. Modeled heterogeneous reaction rates along trajectories intersecting with the PSCs indicate that the initial phase of chlorine activation occurred in just a few hours. These calculations also indicate that chlorine activation on the binary background aerosol is significantly slower than on the PSC particles and the observed chlorine activation can only be explained by an increase in surface area density due to PSC formation. Furthermore, there is a strong correlation between the magnitude of the observed HCl depletion and PSC surface area density.
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- 2016
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11. Polar stratospheric cloud evolution and chlorine activation measured by CALIPSO and MLS, and modeled by ATLAS
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H. Nakajima, I. Wohltmann, T. Wegner, M. Takeda, M. C. Pitts, L. R. Poole, R. Lehmann, M. L. Santee, and M. Rex
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
We examined observations of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) by CALIPSO, and of HCl and ClO by MLS along air mass trajectories, to investigate the dependence of the inferred PSC composition on the temperature history of the air parcels and the dependence of the level of chlorine activation on PSC composition. Several case studies based on individual trajectories from the Arctic winter 2009/2010 were conducted, with the trajectories chosen such that the first processing of the air mass by PSCs in this winter occurred on the trajectory. Transitions of PSC composition classes were observed to be highly dependent on the temperature history. In cases of a gradual temperature decrease, nitric acid trihydrate (NAT) and super-cooled ternary solution (STS) mixture clouds were observed. In cases of rapid temperature decrease, STS clouds were first observed, followed by NAT/STS mixture clouds. When temperatures dropped below the frost point, ice clouds formed and then transformed into NAT/STS mixture clouds when temperature increased above the frost point. The threshold temperature for rapid chlorine activation on PSCs is approximately 4 K below the NAT existence temperature, TNAT. Furthermore, simulations of the ATLAS chemistry and transport box model along the trajectories were used to corroborate the measurements and show good agreement with the observations. Rapid chlorine activation was observed when an air mass encountered PSCs. Usually, chlorine activation was limited by the amount of available ClONO2. Where ClONO2 was not the limiting factor, a large dependence on temperature was evident.
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- 2016
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12. ADC Level is Related to DWI Reversal in Patients Undergoing Mechanical Thrombectomy: A Retrospective Cohort Study
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T. Umemura, T. Hatano, T. Ogura, T. Miyata, Y. Agawa, H. Nakajima, R. Tomoyose, H. Sakamoto, Y. Tsujimoto, Y. Nakazawa, T. Wakabayashi, T. Hashimoto, R. Fujiki, W. Shiraishi, and I. Nagata
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Stroke ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Interventional ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Brain Ischemia ,Ischemic Stroke ,Retrospective Studies ,Thrombectomy - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: In patients with ischemic stroke, DWI lesions can occasionally be reversed by reperfusion therapy. This study aimed to ascertain the relationship between ADC levels and DWI reversal in patients with acute ischemic stroke who underwent recanalization treatment. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study in patients with acute ischemic stroke who underwent endovascular mechanical thrombectomy with successful recanalization between April 2017 and March 2021. DWI reversal was assessed through follow-up MR imaging approximately 24 hours after treatment. RESULTS: In total, 118 patients were included. DWI reversal was confirmed in 42 patients. The ADC level in patients with reversal was significantly higher than that in patients without reversal. Eighty-three percent of patients with DWI reversal areas had mean ADC levels of ≥520 × 10(−6) mm(2)/s, and 71% of patients without DWI reversal areas had mean ADC levels of
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- 2022
13. Past changes in the vertical distribution of ozone – Part 1: Measurement techniques, uncertainties and availability
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B. Hassler, I. Petropavlovskikh, J. Staehelin, T. August, P. K. Bhartia, C. Clerbaux, D. Degenstein, M. De Mazière, B. M. Dinelli, A. Dudhia, G. Dufour, S. M. Frith, L. Froidevaux, S. Godin-Beekmann, J. Granville, N. R. P. Harris, K. Hoppel, D. Hubert, Y. Kasai, M. J. Kurylo, E. Kyrölä, J.-C. Lambert, P. F. Levelt, C. T. McElroy, R. D. McPeters, R. Munro, H. Nakajima, A. Parrish, P. Raspollini, E. E. Remsberg, K. H. Rosenlof, A. Rozanov, T. Sano, Y. Sasano, M. Shiotani, H. G. J. Smit, G. Stiller, J. Tamminen, D. W. Tarasick, J. Urban, R. J. van der A, J. P. Veefkind, C. Vigouroux, T. von Clarmann, C. von Savigny, K. A. Walker, M. Weber, J. Wild, and J. M. Zawodny
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Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 ,Earthwork. Foundations ,TA715-787 - Abstract
Peak stratospheric chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) and other ozone depleting substance (ODS) concentrations were reached in the mid- to late 1990s. Detection and attribution of the expected recovery of the stratospheric ozone layer in an atmosphere with reduced ODSs as well as efforts to understand the evolution of stratospheric ozone in the presence of increasing greenhouse gases are key current research topics. These require a critical examination of the ozone changes with an accurate knowledge of the spatial (geographical and vertical) and temporal ozone response. For such an examination, it is vital that the quality of the measurements used be as high as possible and measurement uncertainties well quantified. In preparation for the 2014 United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)/World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion, the SPARC/IO3C/IGACO-O3/NDACC (SI2N) Initiative was designed to study and document changes in the global ozone profile distribution. This requires assessing long-term ozone profile data sets in regards to measurement stability and uncertainty characteristics. The ultimate goal is to establish suitability for estimating long-term ozone trends to contribute to ozone recovery studies. Some of the data sets have been improved as part of this initiative with updated versions now available. This summary presents an overview of stratospheric ozone profile measurement data sets (ground and satellite based) available for ozone recovery studies. Here we document measurement techniques, spatial and temporal coverage, vertical resolution, native units and measurement uncertainties. In addition, the latest data versions are briefly described (including data version updates as well as detailing multiple retrievals when available for a given satellite instrument). Archive location information for each data set is also given.
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- 2014
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14. 1195 How is hypopigmentation formed in psoriasis lesions?
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K. Nakajima, M. Matsuda, Y. Araki, L. Yang, F. Yang, H. Sano, H. Nakajima, I. Katayama, T. Suzuki, and S. Sano
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Cell Biology ,Dermatology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2023
15. A Dynamic Gate Driver IC with Automated Pattern Optimization for SiC Power MOSFETs
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W. T. Cui, W. J. Zhang, J. Y. Liang, H. Nishio, H. Sumida, H. Nakajima, Yuan-Ta Hsieh, Hann-Huei Tsai, Ying-Zong Juang, Wen-Kuan Yeh, and W. T. Ng
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- 2022
16. Observation of spin textures in La1−xSrxMnO3 (x = 0.175)
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A. Kotani, H. Nakajima, Y. Ishii, K. Harada, and S. Mori
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We have investigated topological spin textures in the ferromagnetic metallic phase of La0.825Sr0.175MnO3 with the centrosymmetric crystal structure by small-angle electron diffraction (SmAED) and low-temperature Lorentz transmission electron microscopy (TEM) experiments. In-situ Lorentz TEM and SmAED experiments revealed that type-I and type-II magnetic bubbles evolved from magnetic stripe domains with the Bloch-type domain wall by applying vertical magnetic field. Type-I magnetic bubbles with left-handed and right-handed spin helicity were randomly distributed and simultaneously type-II magnetic bubbles are formed locally. The important point about type-I and type-II magnetic bubbles is that their emergence depends strongly on whether perpendicular magnetic field is applied parallel to the magnetic easy axis along the [001] direction. Our experimental results suggested that the stabilization of magnetic bubbles should originate from the long-range dipole-dipole interactions, as opposed to the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in helical magnets.
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- 2016
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17. Formation of HfOxNy nanorod GLAD films growth by rapid thermal oxidation
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W. Phae-ngam, J. Prathumsit, C. Chananonnawathorn, H. Nakajima, T. Lertvanithphol, T. Pogfay, N. Limsuwan, D. Phokharatkul, A. Vora-ud, N. Triamnak, A. Mungchamnankit, M. Horprathum, and P. Limsuwan
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Condensed Matter Physics ,Instrumentation ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films - Published
- 2023
18. Structural, mechanical properties and corrosion performance of multilayer Ti doped-DLC/Ti films deposited on low-carbon steel
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U Rittihong, S Tunmee, R Supruangnet, A Chingsungnoen, P Poolcharuansin, T Singhapetcharat, P Kiattikomol, T Eknapakul, H Nakajima, and P Songsiriritthigul
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History ,Computer Science Applications ,Education - Abstract
In this work, the successful preparation of the multilayer Titanium doped diamond-like carbon/Ti (Ti-DLC/Ti) films deposited on low-carbon steel (CS) using hybrid magnetron sputtering (MS) and plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition methods has been reported. The Ti and Ti-DLC films were alternately deposited on the CS substrate of up to 4 stacks with an average deposition rate of 16.4±1.7 nm/min and 15.1±1.5 nm/min, respectively, yielding a total thickness of up to 1703 nm. Raman spectroscopic analysis revealed a gradual increase in the I D/I G ratio with an increase in Ti layer numbers. Both XPS and NEXAFS results indicate an increase in the C-sp 2 content by increasing the number of Ti layer, which may influence on the hardness reduction. The adhesive properties were found to be improved by adding the number of Ti interlayers between the CS substrate. Moreover, the thicker multilayer films exhibit progressive homogeneity resulting in better corrosion resistance.
- Published
- 2023
19. Chronic Atherosclerotic Mesenteric Ischemia That Started to Develop Symptoms Just after Anaphylaxis
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M. Goto, M. Matsuzaki, A. Fuchinoue, N. Urabe, N. Kawagoe, I. Takemoto, H. Tanaka, T. Watanabe, T. Miyazaki, M. Takeuchi, Y. Honda, K. Nakanishi, Y. Urita, N. Shimada, H. Nakajima, M. Sugimoto, and T. Goto
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Atherosclerosis ,Mesenteric ischemia ,Anaphylaxis ,Functional abdominal pain syndrome ,Patient-physician relationship ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
An 83-year-old woman was referred to our emergency department with acute urticaria and sudden shortness of breath approximately 30 min after taking rectal diclofenac potassium for lumbago. After treatment with adrenaline and corticosteroids, the patient became hemodynamically stable and left the hospital on the next day. She attended our hospital 1 week after the onset of anaphylaxis because of repeated postprandial epigastric pain. No abnormal lesions were found in endoscopy. Radiographic selective catheter angiography revealed chronic mesenteric ischemia caused by atherosclerosis and abundant collateral arteries between the celiac trunk, the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior mesenteric artery. Patients with chronic mesenteric ischemia usually present with a clinical syndrome characterized by painful abdominal cramps and colic occurring typically during the postprandial phase. Fear of eating resulted in malnutrition. She was prescribed proton pump inhibitor, digestants, anticholinergic agents, serine protease inhibitors, prokinetics, antiplatelet agents and transdermal nitroglycerin intermittently, but these had no beneficial effects. It was most probable that this patient with chronic atherosclerotic mesenteric ischemia was suffering from functional abdominal pain syndrome induced by anaphylaxis. Since psychiatric disorders were associated with alterations in the processing of visceral sensation, we facilitated the patient’s understanding of functional abdominal pain syndrome with the psychologist. Postprandial abdominal pain gradually faded after administration of these drugs and the patient left the hospital. Developing a satisfactory patient-physician relationship was considered more effective for the management of persistent abdominal pain caused by complicated mechanisms.
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- 2012
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20. Observed and simulated time evolution of HCl, ClONO2, and HF total column abundances
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B.-M. Sinnhuber, C. Senten, C. Servais, M. Schneider, C. P. Rinsland, E. Rozanov, M. Rettinger, Th. Reddmann, U. Raffalski, C. Paton-Walsh, M. Palm, H. Nakajima, I. Murata, I. Morino, B. Monge-Sanz, R. L. Mittermeier, E. Mahieu, R. Lindenmaier, W. Kouker, O. Kirner, Y. Kasai, I. Kaiser, A. Kagawa, N. B. Jones, F. Hase, J. W. Hannigan, K. Hamann, D. W. T. Griffith, A. Goldman, W. Feng, H. Fast, M. T. Coffey, P. Demoulin, Th. Blumenstock, R. D. Blatherwick, R. L. Batchelor, S. Barthlott, M. De Mazière, J. Notholt, M. P. Chipperfield, R. Ruhnke, R. Kohlhepp, D. Smale, K. Strong, R. Sussmann, J. R. Taylor, G. Vanhaelewyn, T. Warneke, C. Whaley, M. Wiehle, and S. W. Wood
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Time series of total column abundances of hydrogen chloride (HCl), chlorine nitrate (ClONO2), and hydrogen fluoride (HF) were determined from ground-based Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra recorded at 17 sites belonging to the Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) and located between 80.05° N and 77.82° S. By providing such a near-global overview on ground-based measurements of the two major stratospheric chlorine reservoir species, HCl and ClONO2, the present study is able to confirm the decrease of the atmospheric inorganic chlorine abundance during the last few years. This decrease is expected following the 1987 Montreal Protocol and its amendments and adjustments, where restrictions and a subsequent phase-out of the prominent anthropogenic chlorine source gases (solvents, chlorofluorocarbons) were agreed upon to enable a stabilisation and recovery of the stratospheric ozone layer. The atmospheric fluorine content is expected to be influenced by the Montreal Protocol, too, because most of the banned anthropogenic gases also represent important fluorine sources. But many of the substitutes to the banned gases also contain fluorine so that the HF total column abundance is expected to have continued to increase during the last few years. The measurements are compared with calculations from five different models: the two-dimensional Bremen model, the two chemistry-transport models KASIMA and SLIMCAT, and the two chemistry-climate models EMAC and SOCOL. Thereby, the ability of the models to reproduce the absolute total column amounts, the seasonal cycles, and the temporal evolution found in the FTIR measurements is investigated and inter-compared. This is especially interesting because the models have different architectures. The overall agreement between the measurements and models for the total column abundances and the seasonal cycles is good. Linear trends of HCl, ClONO2, and HF are calculated from both measurement and model time series data, with a focus on the time range 2000–2009. This period is chosen because from most of the measurement sites taking part in this study, data are available during these years. The precision of the trends is estimated with the bootstrap resampling method. The sensitivity of the trend results with respect to the fitting function, the time of year chosen and time series length is investigated, as well as a bias due to the irregular sampling of the measurements. The measurements and model results investigated here agree qualitatively on a decrease of the chlorine species by around 1% yr−1. The models simulate an increase of HF of around 1% yr−1. This also agrees well with most of the measurements, but some of the FTIR series in the Northern Hemisphere show a stabilisation or even a decrease in the last few years. In general, for all three gases, the measured trends vary more strongly with latitude and hemisphere than the modelled trends. Relative to the FTIR measurements, the models tend to underestimate the decreasing chlorine trends and to overestimate the fluorine increase in the Northern Hemisphere. At most sites, the models simulate a stronger decrease of ClONO2 than of HCl. In the FTIR measurements, this difference between the trends of HCl and ClONO2 depends strongly on latitude, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Acute Liver Dysfunction in the Course of Norovirus Gastroenteritis
- Author
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H. Nakajima, T. Watanabe, T. Miyazaki, M. Takeuchi, Y. Honda, N. Shimada, K. Nakanishi, Y. Urita, and M. Sugimoto
- Subjects
Acute gastroenteritis ,Liver dysfunction ,Norovirus ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
A 48-year-old female with abdominal pain and malaise who showed delayed symptom of acute gastroenteritis came to see us. Her illness was diagnosed as norovirus infection, but liver dysfunction accompanied this gastroenteritis. We investigated the pathogenesis of this hepatitis for all causes including drugs, but we could not detect norovirus infection. The liver damage improved shortly in course of the gastroenteritis. She recovered completely within 2 weeks without any damage left. Norovirus-induced liver dysfunction is not known, and there is no report in the literature. We report, for the first time, the case of liver dysfunction with norovirus gastroenteritis.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Band offset determination of p-NiO/n-TiO2 heterojunctions for applications in high-performance UV photodetectors
- Author
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H. Nakajima, Siriporn Pansri, Ratchadaporn Supruangnet, S. Rattanasuporn, and Suttinart Noothongkaew
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,Band gap ,020502 materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Non-blocking I/O ,Photodetector ,Heterojunction ,02 engineering and technology ,Band offset ,Responsivity ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0205 materials engineering ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Titanium dioxide ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,Quantum efficiency ,business - Abstract
Nickel oxide (NiO)-decorated titanium dioxide (TiO2) heterojunction photodetectors were prepared by two-step anodization. Surface scattering of NiO particles was successfully controlled by varying second-step anodizing voltage, with substantially less clustering of NiO particles on the TiO2 nanotubes (NTs) observed as the voltage increased. Fabricated photodetectors exhibited higher sensitivity to UV light as NiO surface dispersion increased. Electronic bandgap of TiO2 and that of NiO was determined as ~ 3.35 eV and ~ 3.80 eV, respectively. Introduction of NiO particles on well-ordered TiO2 NTs narrowed the bandgap of TiO2, and the difference between work functions of TiO2 and NiO produced sufficient built-in electric field to separate the electron–hole pairs. This led to an enhanced performance of NiO/TiO2 heterojunction photodetectors, which showed high values of responsivity (86 A/W), external quantum efficiency (292%), and detectivity (2.2 × 1010 Jones) under 365 nm UV light illumination. The valence and conduction band offsets at the interface of the NiO/TiO2 heterojunction were determined as ~ 1.54 eV and ~ 1.99 eV, respectively.
- Published
- 2019
23. Calcinosis and acro-osteolysis in systemic sclerosis
- Author
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T Horino, S Inotani, H Nakajima, H Ohnishi, M Komori, and Y Terada
- Subjects
Scleroderma, Systemic ,Acro-Osteolysis ,Calcinosis ,Humans ,General Medicine - Published
- 2021
24. 225 Possible mechanism underlying hypopigmentation in psoriatic lesion
- Author
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K. Nakajima, M. Yamamoto, L. Yang, H. Sano, H. Nakajima, I. Katayama, T. Suzuki, and S. Sano
- Subjects
Cell Biology ,Dermatology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
25. Anti-Aquaporin-4 Antibody-Positive Neuromyelitis Optica Presenting with Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuretic Hormone Secretion as an Initial Manifestation
- Author
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H. Nakajima, Y. Fujiki, T. Ito, H. Kitaoka, and T. Takahashi
- Subjects
Hypothalamus ,Neuromyelitis optica ,Anti-aquaporin-4 antibody ,Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
The distribution of neuromyelitis optica (NMO)-characteristic brain lesions corresponds to sites of high aquaporin-4 (AQP4) expression, and the brainstem and hypothalamus lesions that express high levels of AQP4 protein are relatively characteristic of NMO. The syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) is one of the important causes of hyponatremia and results from an abnormal production or sustained secretion of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). SIADH has been associated with many clinical states or syndromes, and the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal system regulates the feedback control system for ADH secretion. We report the case of a 63-year-old man with NMO, whose initial manifestation was hyponatremia caused by SIADH. Retrospective analysis revealed that the serum anti-AQP4 antibody was positive, and an MRI scan showed a unilateral lesion in the hypothalamus. SIADH recovered completely with regression of the hypothalamic lesion. As such, NMO should even be considered in patients who develop SIADH and have no optic nerve or spinal cord lesions but have MRI-documented hypothalamic lesions.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Interactive Multi modal Explanations and their Temporal Coordination.
- Author
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Tsuneaki Kato, Yukiko I. Nakano, H. Nakajima, and Takaaki Hasegawa
- Published
- 1996
27. Evaluation of CLaMS, KASIMA and ECHAM5/MESSy1 simulations in the lower stratosphere using observations of Odin/SMR and ILAS/ILAS-II
- Author
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F. Khosrawi, R. Müller, M. H. Proffitt, R. Ruhnke, O. Kirner, P. Jöckel, J.-U. Grooß, J. Urban, D. Murtagh, and H. Nakajima
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
1-year data sets of monthly averaged nitrous oxide (N2O) and ozone (O3) derived from satellite measurements were used as a tool for the evaluation of atmospheric photochemical models. Two 1-year data sets, one solar occultation data set derived from the Improved Limb Atmospheric Spectrometer (ILAS and ILAS-II) and one limb sounding data set derived from the Odin Sub-Millimetre Radiometer (Odin/SMR) were employed. Here, these data sets are used for the evaluation of two Chemical Transport Models (CTMs), the Karlsruhe Simulation Model of the Middle Atmosphere (KASIMA) and the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS) as well as for one Chemistry-Climate Model (CCM), the atmospheric chemistry general circulation model ECHAM5/MESSy1 (E5M1) in the lower stratosphere with focus on the Northern Hemisphere. Since the Odin/SMR measurements cover the entire hemisphere, the evaluation is performed for the entire hemisphere as well as for the low latitudes, midlatitudes and high latitudes using the Odin/SMR 1-year data set as reference. To assess the impact of using different data sets for such an evaluation study we repeat the evaluation for the polar lower stratosphere using the ILAS/ILAS-II data set. Only small differences were found using ILAS/ILAS-II instead of Odin/SMR as a reference, thus, showing that the results are not influenced by the particular satellite data set used for the evaluation. The evaluation of CLaMS, KASIMA and E5M1 shows that all models are in agreement with Odin/SMR and ILAS/ILAS-II. Differences are generally in the range of ±20%. Larger differences (up to −40%) are found in all models at 500±25 K for N2O mixing ratios greater than 200 ppbv, thus in air masses of tropical character. Generally, the largest differences were found for the tropics and the lowest for the polar regions. However, an underestimation of polar winter ozone loss was found both in KASIMA and E5M1 both in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere.
- Published
- 2009
28. Validation of water vapour profiles (version 13) retrieved by the IMK/IAA scientific retrieval processor based on full resolution spectra measured by MIPAS on board Envisat
- Author
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M. Milz, T. v. Clarmann, P. Bernath, C. Boone, S. A. Buehler, S. Chauhan, B. Deuber, D. G. Feist, B. Funke, N. Glatthor, U. Grabowski, A. Griesfeller, A. Haefele, M. Höpfner, N. Kämpfer, S. Kellmann, A. Linden, S. Müller, H. Nakajima, H. Oelhaf, E. Remsberg, S. Rohs, J. M. Russell III, C. Schiller, G. P. Stiller, T. Sugita, T. Tanaka, H. Vömel, K. Walker, G. Wetzel, T. Yokota, V. Yushkov, and G. Zhang
- Subjects
Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 ,Earthwork. Foundations ,TA715-787 - Abstract
Vertical profiles of stratospheric water vapour measured by the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) with the full resolution mode between September 2002 and March 2004 and retrieved with the IMK/IAA scientific retrieval processor were compared to a number of independent measurements in order to estimate the bias and to validate the existing precision estimates of the MIPAS data. The estimated precision for MIPAS is 5 to 10% in the stratosphere, depending on altitude, latitude, and season. The independent instruments were: the Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE), the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS), the Improved Limb Atmospheric Spectrometer-II (ILAS-II), the Polar Ozone and Aerosol Measurement (POAM III) instrument, the Middle Atmospheric Water Vapour Radiometer (MIAWARA), the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding, balloon-borne version (MIPAS-B), the Airborne Microwave Stratospheric Observing System (AMSOS), the Fluorescent Stratospheric Hygrometer for Balloon (FLASH-B), the NOAA frostpoint hygrometer, and the Fast In Situ Hygrometer (FISH). For the in-situ measurements and the ground based, air- and balloon borne remote sensing instruments, the measurements are restricted to central and northern Europe. The comparisons to satellite-borne instruments are predominantly at mid- to high latitudes on both hemispheres. In the stratosphere there is no clear indication of a bias in MIPAS data, because the independent measurements in some cases are drier and in some cases are moister than the MIPAS measurements. Compared to the infrared measurements of MIPAS, measurements in the ultraviolet and visible have a tendency to be high, whereas microwave measurements have a tendency to be low. The results of χ2-based precision validation are somewhat controversial among the comparison estimates. However, for comparison instruments whose error budget also includes errors due to uncertainties in spectrally interfering species and where good coincidences were found, the χ2 values found are in the expected range or even below. This suggests that there is no evidence of systematically underestimated MIPAS random errors.
- Published
- 2009
29. Technical Note: Intercomparison of ILAS-II version 2 and 1.4 trace species with MIPAS-B measurements
- Author
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G. Wetzel, T. Sugita, H. Nakajima, T. Tanaka, T. Yokota, F. Friedl-Vallon, A. Kleinert, G. Maucher, and H. Oelhaf
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The Improved Limb Atmospheric Spectrometer (ILAS)-II sensor aboard the Japanese ADEOS-II satellite was launched into its sun-synchronous orbit on 14 December 2002 and performed solar occultation measurements of trace species, aerosols, temperature, and pressure in the polar stratosphere until 25 October 2003. Vertical trace gas profiles obtained with the balloon version of the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS-B) provide one of the sparse data sets for validating ILAS-II version 2 and 1.4 data. The MIPAS-B limb emission spectra were collected on 20 March 2003 over Kiruna (Sweden, 68° N) at virtually the same location that has been sounded by ILAS-II about 5.5 h prior to the sampling of MIPAS-B. The intercomparison of the new ILAS-II version 2 (Northern Hemispheric sunrise) data to MIPAS-B vertical trace gas profiles shows a good to excellent agreement within the combined error limits for the species O3, N2O, CH4, H2O (above 21 km), HNO3, ClONO2, and CFC-11 (CCl3F) in the compared altitude range between 16 and 31 km such that these data appear to be very useful for scientific analysis. With regard to the previous version 1.4 ILAS-II data, significant improvements in the consistency with MIPAS-B are obvious especially for the species CH4 and H2O, but also for O3, HNO3, ClONO2, NO2, and N2O5. However, comparing gases like NO2, N2O5, and CFC-12 (CCl2F2) exhibits only poor agreement with MIPAS-B such that these species cannot be assumed to be validated at the present time.
- Published
- 2008
30. Intercomparison of ILAS-II version 1.4 and version 2 target parameters with MIPAS-Envisat measurements
- Author
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A. Griesfeller, T. von Clarmann, J. Griesfeller, M. Höpfner, M. Milz, H. Nakajima, T. Steck, T. Sugita, T. Tanaka, and T. Yokota
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
This paper assesses the mean differences between the two ILAS-II data versions (1.4 and 2) by comparing them with MIPAS measurements made between May and October 2003. For comparison with ILAS-II results, MIPAS data processed at the Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung, Karlsruhe, Germany (IMK) in cooperation with the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA) in Granada, Spain, were used. The coincidence criteria of ±300 km in space and ±12 h in time for H2O, N2O, and CH4 and the coincidence criteria of ±300 km in space and ±6 h in time for ClONO2, O3, and HNO3 were used. The ILAS-II data were separated into sunrise (= Northern Hemisphere) and sunset (= Southern Hemisphere). For the sunrise data, a clear improvement from version 1.4 to version 2 was observed for H2O, CH4, ClONO2, and O3. In particular, the ILAS-II version 1.4 mixing ratios of H2O and CH4 were unrealistically small, and those of ClONO2 above altitudes of 30 km unrealistically large. For N2O and HNO3, there were no large differences between the two versions. Contrary to the Northern Hemisphere, where some exceptional profiles deviated significantly from known climatology, no such outlying profiles were found in the Southern Hemisphere for both versions. Generally, the ILAS-II version 2 data were in better agreement with the MIPAS data than the version 1.4, and are recommended for quantitative analysis in the stratosphere. For H2O data in the Southern Hemisphere, further data quality evaluation is necessary.
- Published
- 2008
31. Validation of MIPAS HNO3 operational data
- Author
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C. D. Boone, P. F. Bernath, D. Murtagh, T. Sugita, J. Urban, N. Jones, H. Nakajima, D. Smale, S. Wood, P. Demoulin, E. Mahieu, C. Vigouroux, M. De Mazière, N. Huret, V. Catoire, G. Redaelli, M. Pirre, G. Bianchini, F. Mencaraglia, U. Cortesi, G. Wetzel, H. Oelhaf, S. Mikuteit, G. Y. Liu, C. Keim, F. Hase, T. Blumenstock, H. Fischer, W. E. Ward, C. E. Blom, M. Höpfner, D. Y. Wang, K. A. Walker, J. Kuttippurath, A. Kleinböhl, G. Toon, and C. Piccolo
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Nitric acid (HNO3) is one of the key products that are operationally retrieved by the European Space Agency (ESA) from the emission spectra measured by the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) onboard ENVISAT. The product version 4.61/4.62 for the observation period between July 2002 and March 2004 is validated by comparisons with a number of independent observations from ground-based stations, aircraft/balloon campaigns, and satellites. Individual HNO3 profiles of the ESA MIPAS level-2 product show good agreement with those of MIPAS-B and MIPAS-STR (the balloon and aircraft version of MIPAS, respectively), and the balloon-borne infrared spectrometers MkIV and SPIRALE, mostly matching the reference data within the combined instrument error bars. In most cases differences between the correlative measurement pairs are less than 1 ppbv (5–10%) throughout the entire altitude range up to about 38 km (~6 hPa), and below 0.5 ppbv (15–20% or more) above 30 km (~17 hPa). However, differences up to 4 ppbv compared to MkIV have been found at high latitudes in December 2002 in the presence of polar stratospheric clouds. The degree of consistency is further largely affected by the temporal and spatial coincidence, and differences of 2 ppbv may be observed between 22 and 26 km (~50 and 30 hPa) at high latitudes near the vortex boundary, due to large horizontal inhomogeneity of HNO3. Similar features are also observed in the mean differences of the MIPAS ESA HNO3 VMRs with respect to the ground-based FTIR measurements at five stations, aircraft-based SAFIRE-A and ASUR, and the balloon campaign IBEX. The mean relative differences between the MIPAS and FTIR HNO3 partial columns are within ±2%, comparable to the MIPAS systematic error of ~2%. For the vertical profiles, the biases between the MIPAS and FTIR data are generally below 10% in the altitudes of 10 to 30 km. The MIPAS and SAFIRE HNO3 data generally match within their total error bars for the mid and high latitude flights, despite the larger atmospheric inhomogeneities that characterize the measurement scenario at higher latitudes. The MIPAS and ASUR comparison reveals generally good agreements better than 10–13% at 20–34 km. The MIPAS and IBEX measurements agree reasonably well (mean relative differences within ±15%) between 17 and 32 km. Statistical comparisons of the MIPAS profiles correlated with those of Odin/SMR, ILAS-II, and ACE-FTS generally show good consistency. The mean differences averaged over individual latitude bands or all bands are within the combined instrument errors, and generally within 1, 0.5, and 0.3 ppbv between 10 and 40 km (~260 and 4.5 hPa) for Odin/SMR, ILAS-II, and ACE-FTS, respectively. The standard deviations of the differences are between 1 to 2 ppbv. The standard deviations for the satellite comparisons and for almost all other comparisons are generally larger than the estimated measurement uncertainty. This is associated with the temporal and spatial coincidence error and the horizontal smoothing error which are not taken into account in our error budget. Both errors become large when the spatial variability of the target molecule is high.
- Published
- 2007
32. Validation of nitric acid retrieved by the IMK-IAA processor from MIPAS/ENVISAT measurements
- Author
-
D. Y. Wang, M. Höpfner, G. Mengistu Tsidu, G. P. Stiller, T. von Clarmann, H. Fischer, T. Blumenstock, N. Glatthor, U. Grabowski, F. Hase, S. Kellmann, A. Linden, M. Milz, H. Oelhaf, M. Schneider, T. Steck, G. Wetzel, M. López-Puertas, B. Funke, M. E. Koukouli, H. Nakajima, T. Sugita, H. Irie, J. Urban, D. Murtagh, M. L. Santee, G. Toon, M. R. Gunson, F. W. Irion, C. D. Boone, K. Walker, and P. F. Bernath
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) onboard the ENVISAT satellite provides profiles of temperature and various trace-gases from limb-viewing mid-infrared emission measurements. The stratospheric nitric acid (HNO3) from September 2002 to March 2004 was retrieved from the MIPAS observations using the science-oriented data processor developed at the Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung (IMK), which is complemented by the component of non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE) treatment from the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA). The IMK-IAA research product, different from the ESA operational product, is validated in this paper by comparison with a number of reference data sets. Individual HNO3 profiles of the IMK-IAA MIPAS show good agreement with those of the balloon-borne version of MIPAS (MIPAS-B) and the infrared spectrometer MkIV, with small differences of less than 0.5 ppbv throughout the entire altitude range up to about 38 km, and below 0.2 ppbv above 30 km. However, the degree of consistency is largely affected by their temporal and spatial coincidence, and differences of 1 to 2 ppbv may be observed between 22 and 26 km at high latitudes near the vortex boundary, due to large horizontal inhomogeneity of HNO3. Statistical comparisons of MIPAS IMK-IAA HNO3 VMRs with respect to those of satellite measurements of Odin/SMR, ILAS-II, ACE-FTS, as well as the MIPAS ESA product show good consistency. The mean differences are generally ±0.5 ppbv and standard deviations of the differences are of 0.5 to 1.5 ppbv. The maximum differences are 2.0 ppbv around 20 to 25 km. This gives confidence in the general reliability of MIPAS HNO3 VMR data and the other three satellite data sets.
- Published
- 2007
33. Superhydrophobic fluorinated carbon powders for improved water management in hydrogen fuel cells
- Author
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E.M. Can, A. Mufundirwa, P. Wang, S. Iwasaki, T. Kitahara, H. Nakajima, M. Nishihara, K. Sasaki, and S.M. Lyth
- Subjects
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Published
- 2022
34. Passive dual-probe near-field microscopy
- Author
-
R. Sakuma, Y. Nagai, H. Nakajima, K.-T. Lin, and Y. Kajihara
- Subjects
Instrumentation - Abstract
Accurate and simultaneous multiposition near-field measurements are essential to study the time-dependent local dynamics, including heat and carrier transfer. The existing passive long-wavelength infrared (LWIR) scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) systems with a single probe cannot perform precise near-field measurements of the heat or carrier transporting process at the nanoscale level. Therefore, in this study, we developed a passive LWIR s-SNOM system with two probes. To test the effectiveness of the proposed passive LWIR dual-probe s-SNOM system, each probe was precisely controlled using a shear-force feedback system, and the mechanical interference between the probes was used to monitor the distance between the probes. We achieved simultaneous near-field measurements at two different positions 500 nm apart using the proposed passive LWIR dual-probe s-SNOM system. The simultaneously detected near-field signals from two different points were extracted individually, making this technique an effective nanoscale analysis tool for local carrier dynamics.
- Published
- 2022
35. Centrifuge modeling of one-step outflow tests for unsaturated parameter estimations
- Author
-
H. Nakajima and A. T. Stadler
- Subjects
Technology ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Centrifuge modeling of one-step outflow tests were carried out using a 2-m radius geotechnical centrifuge, and the cumulative outflow and transient pore water pressure were measured during the tests at multiple gravity levels. Based on the scaling laws of centrifuge modeling, the measurements generally showed reasonable agreement with prototype data calculated from forward simulations with input parameters determined from standard laboratory tests. The parameter optimizations were examined for three different combinations of input data sets using the test measurements. Within the gravity level examined in this study up to 40g, the optimized unsaturated parameters compared well when accurate pore water pressure measurements were included along with cumulative outflow as input data. With its capability to implement variety of instrumentations under well controlled initial and boundary conditions and to shorten testing time, the centrifuge modeling technique is attractive as an alternative experimental method that provides more freedom to set inverse problem conditions for the parameter estimation.
- Published
- 2006
36. Development of the Stool Color Card for Early Detection of Biliary Atresia using Multispectral Image
- Author
-
Takahito Kawanishi, Masaru Tsuchida, Kunio Kashino, H. Gunji, H. Nakajima, and A. Matsui
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Biliary atresia ,Stool color ,Multispectral image ,medicine ,Early detection ,Radiology ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2019
37. Investigation of omnidirectional transmittance related to ITO nanorods orientation for optical applications
- Author
-
T. Chaikeeree, N. Mungkung, N. Kasayapanand, H. Nakajima, T. Lertvanithphol, K. Tantiwanichapan, A. Sathukarn, and M. Horprathum
- Subjects
Inorganic Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Spectroscopy ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2022
38. PD-13 Plasma RAS dynamics and efficacy of anti-EGFR rechallenge in patients with RAS/BRAF wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer: REMARRY and PURSUIT trials
- Author
-
Y. Kagawa, D. Kotani, H. Bando, N. Takahashi, Y. Horita, A. Kanazawa, T. Kato, K. Ando, H. Satake, E. Shinozaki, Y. Sunakawa, A. Takashima, K. Yamazaki, S. Yuki, H. Nakajima, Y. Nakamura, M. Wakabayashi, H. Taniguchi, T. Ohta, and T. Yoshino
- Subjects
Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
39. Slope Sensing for Optimum Dynamic Gate Driving of SiC Power MOSFETs
- Author
-
Mengqi Wang, Wai Tung Ng, H. Nishio, H. Nakajima, Jingyuan Liang, Wei Jia Zhang, Wen Tao Cui, and H. Sumida
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,Transistor ,Electrical engineering ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,Integrated circuit ,law.invention ,Switching time ,Analogue filter ,law ,Logic gate ,MOSFET ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,Gate driver ,Power MOSFET ,business ,Hardware_LOGICDESIGN - Abstract
To suppress excessive gate voltage swings during switching, a resistance is normally used to limit the charging rate of the gate capacitance (C G ). Modern solutions, such as segmented gate drivers, can be used to dynamically control the gate resistance R G to minimize ringing while maintaining the fast-switching speed of the transistor. The timing or dynamic pattern of the gate resistance is critical in the optimization of the device and circuit performance. Traditionally, this gate drive pattern is obtained via a trial-and-error or iterative procedure. This paper proposes a method to automatically determine the timing intervals by monitoring the gate signal (V GATE ) through slope sensing with analog filter and subsequent mixed-signal processing. The output timing indicator (T SEG ) is then fed back to the segmented gate driver IC to achieve automatic adjustments of the dynamic driving pattern. The proposed system is able to determine the optimum T SEG for dynamic gate driving. For the SiC power MOSFET used in our testing, segmented R G driving between 2.5 and 10 Ω does not hinder the switching speed, while keeping the undershoot of the SiC module to be within 1 V or 5% of the total applied gate voltage.
- Published
- 2021
40. Interplay of negative electronic compressibility and capacitance enhancement in lightly-doped metal oxide Bi0.95La0.05FeO3 by quantum capacitance model
- Author
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R. Supruangnet, T. Eknapakul, H. Nakajima, T. Saisopa, S. Nathabumroong, Sung-Kwan Mo, Panupong Jaiban, Benjaporn Yotburut, Worawat Meevasana, S. Siriroj, Santi Maensiri, and Rattikorn Yimnirun
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Multidisciplinary ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Photoemission spectroscopy ,lcsh:R ,Doping ,Binding energy ,lcsh:Medicine ,02 engineering and technology ,Dielectric ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Capacitance ,Quantum capacitance ,Electrical resistance and conductance ,0103 physical sciences ,lcsh:Q ,Irradiation ,lcsh:Science ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Light-sensitive capacitance variation of Bi0.95La0.05FeO3 (BLFO) ceramics has been studied under violet to UV irradiation. The reversible capacitance enhancement up to 21% under 405 nm violet laser irradiation has been observed, suggesting a possible degree of freedom to dynamically control this in high dielectric materials for light-sensitive capacitance applications. By using ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy (UPS), we show here that exposure of BLFO surfaces to UV light induces a counterintuitive shift of the O2p valence state to lower binding energy of up to 243 meV which is a direct signature of negative electronic compressibility (NEC). A decrease of BLFO electrical resistance agrees strongly with the UPS data suggesting the creation of a thin conductive layer on its insulating bulk under light irradiation. By exploiting the quantum capacitance model, we find that the negative quantum capacitance due to this NEC effect plays an important role in this capacitance enhancement
- Published
- 2020
41. Optical excitation and electron donation at the surface of MoS2
- Author
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P. Chanprakhon, H. Nakajima, Worawat Meevasana, S. Polin, A. Rattanachatta, S. Thila, and T. Eknapakul
- Subjects
Materials science ,Photoemission spectroscopy ,Doping ,Band diagram ,Binding energy ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy ,Electron ,Electronic structure ,Atomic physics ,Excitation - Abstract
In this work, electronic structure variations of MoS2 under violet laser irradiation and potassium evaporation have been studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). By exposing violet laser on the fresh MoS2 surface, we found the shift of valence band to the higher binding energy of 140±10 meV. This behavior can be described by the optical excitation where electrons in the valence band are temporary pumped to the conduction band edge. By using potassium evaporation, the shift of valence band of 280±20 meV to higher binding energy as well as the emerging of conduction pockets at K point which are a result of electron donation from alkali metals. Another shift of valence band up to 40±10 meV have been observed after irradiating violet laser on the doped sample. The schematic band diagram which can be described the chemical shifts based on experimental ARPES data has been proposed. By using transport measurement, a variation of MoS2 electrical resistance under light irradiation supports the nonequilibrium electron donation induced by optical excitation.
- Published
- 2020
42. Microwave exfoliated graphene-based materials for flexible solid-state supercapacitor
- Author
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Abdul Bashid, Hamra Assyaima, Lim, H. N., Huang, N. M., N.S.K., Gowthaman, H., Nakajima, Rahman, M. Mahbubur, Abdul Bashid, Hamra Assyaima, Lim, H. N., Huang, N. M., N.S.K., Gowthaman, H., Nakajima, and Rahman, M. Mahbubur
- Abstract
Herein, we report the simultaneous exfoliation and reduction of graphene oxide (GO) and graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs) by rapid microwave irradiation, to overcome the hurdles of their low electrical conductivity and tendency to restack, and realize their full potential as supercapacitor electrode materials. After microwave treatment, the ID/IG value of the microwaved GO (MW-GO) increased by 0.11, whereas the I2D/IG value of the microwaved GNPs (MW-GNPs) decreased by 0.48, revealing that the graphene-based materials were reduced and exfoliated as observed in the Raman spectra. Morphological studies revealed a porous structure of MW-GO and loose stacked layers of MW-GNPs, which showed the exfoliation of the graphene-based materials. A supercapacitor device was constructed using a mixture of MW-GO, MW-GNPs, and polypyrrole and yielded a specific capacitance value of 137.2 F g−1 with a cycling stability of 89.8% after 1000 charge/discharge cycles. The electrochemical performance of the device remains unchanged when bent continuously at 180° because the cyclic voltammetry and galvanostatic charge/discharge curves remained the same after 50 bending repetitions. Therefore, the simultaneous reduction and exfoliation of these graphene-based materials by rapid microwaves provides a promising route for the scalable and cost-effective preparation of supercapacitor electrode materials.
- Published
- 2020
43. Quantum-Dot-Based Photon Emission and Media Conversion for Quantum Information Applications
- Author
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H. Kumano, H. Nakajima, S. Ekuni, Y. Idutsu, H. Sasakura, and I. Suemune
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Single-photon as well as polarization-correlated photon pair emission from a single semiconductor quantum dots is demonstrated. Single photon generation and single photon-pair generation with little uncorrelated multiphoton emission and the feasibility of media conversion of the quantum states between photon polarization and electron spin are fundamental functions for quantum information applications. Mutual media conversion for the angular momentum between photon polarization and electron spin is also achieved with high fidelity via positively charged exciton state without external magnetic field. This is a clear indication that the coupling of photon polarizations and electron spins keeps secured during whole processes before photon emission. Possibility of a metal-embedded structure is demonstrated with the observation of drastic enhancement of excitation and/or collection efficiency of luminescence as well as clear antibunching of photons generated from a quantum dot.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Preferential vertically oriented nanopillar perovskite induced by poly(9-vinylcarbazole) field-effect transistor
- Author
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J. Chaiprapa, P. Songsiriritthigul, Y. Subramaniam, H. Nakajima, and Kai Lin Woon
- Subjects
Electron mobility ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Microstructure ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Indium tin oxide ,Mechanics of Materials ,Materials Chemistry ,Optoelectronics ,Grain boundary ,Field-effect transistor ,Thin film ,business ,Nanopillar ,Perovskite (structure) - Abstract
Organic-inorganic hybrid perovskite could potentially be used to create field-effect transistors (FETs) with high field-effect mobility. However, the energy level mismatch at the deep valence band maximum perovskite-contact junction and morphological defects greatly limit the charge transport in the thin film. In this work, we demonstrated charge injection can be improved by introducing Nafion as a surface modifier on top of the Indium tin oxide. Incorporating poly (9-vinylcarbazole) PVK into a quasi-one-dimensional precursor solution induced preferential vertically orientated nanopillars as revealed by synchrotron-based two-dimensional grazing incident X-ray diffraction. This simultaneously reduced the grain boundaries and improved pin-hole free films. As a result, maximum hole mobility of 0.012 cm2/Vs was achieved with a reduction in the hysteresis. Our work demonstrated the dependence of FETs performance on the injection barrier and perovskite nanopillar microstructure.
- Published
- 2021
45. Posterior 360-Degree Stabilisation of the Upper Thoracic Spine: A Technical Note
- Author
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G Timbihurira, H Nakajima, S Kobayashi, R Sato, T Yayama, K Uchida, Y Horiuchi, and H Baba
- Subjects
Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Purpose. To describe a technique involving posterior 360-degree stabilisation of the upper thoracic spine: spinal cord decompression, posterior vertebral body replacement, and then posterior instrumentation and intercostal posterolateral vertebral stabilisation. Methods. Three men and 4 women aged 41 to 77 (mean, 58) years underwent posterior 360-degree stabilisation of the upper thoracic spine. Their indications for surgery were bone metastasis (n=5), burst fracture (n=1), and osteoporotic collapse with cord compression (n=1). Their clinical and radiological findings and treatment outcomes were retrospectively reviewed. Results. Pain status of all patients improved after surgery: 4 had severe and 3 had mild pain preoperatively; in 3 pain became minimal and 4 had none postoperatively. All patients except one had Frankel/American Spinal Injury Association scores of E after surgery indicating complete recovery of sensory and motor function. There were no complications related to surgery or instrumentation construct. At the time of review, one patient had died of old age 8.6 years after surgery and another from local recurrence and lung metastasis 5.7 years after surgery. All other patients were living. Conclusion. One-stage posterior 360-degree stabilisation and vertebral body replacement is a useful technique for upper thoracic spine surgery.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Quantitative analysis of the joint space narrowing speed in each Kellgren-Lawrence grade of knee osteoarthritis
- Author
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Takumi Sakamoto, Y. Watanabe, A. Matsumine, Tsuyoshi Miyazaki, H. Nakajima, and H. Oki
- Subjects
Orthodontics ,Joint space narrowing ,Rheumatology ,business.industry ,Kellgren lawrence grade ,Biomedical Engineering ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Osteoarthritis ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2020
47. Interplay of negative electronic compressibility and capacitance enhancement in lightly-doped metal oxide Bi
- Author
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S, Nathabumroong, T, Eknapakul, P, Jaiban, B, Yotburut, S, Siriroj, T, Saisopa, S-K, Mo, R, Supruangnet, H, Nakajima, R, Yimnirun, S, Maensiri, and W, Meevasana
- Subjects
Ferroelectrics and multiferroics ,Ceramics ,Surfaces, interfaces and thin films ,Electronic properties and materials ,Article - Abstract
Light-sensitive capacitance variation of Bi0.95La0.05FeO3 (BLFO) ceramics has been studied under violet to UV irradiation. The reversible capacitance enhancement up to 21% under 405 nm violet laser irradiation has been observed, suggesting a possible degree of freedom to dynamically control this in high dielectric materials for light-sensitive capacitance applications. By using ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy (UPS), we show here that exposure of BLFO surfaces to UV light induces a counterintuitive shift of the O2p valence state to lower binding energy of up to 243 meV which is a direct signature of negative electronic compressibility (NEC). A decrease of BLFO electrical resistance agrees strongly with the UPS data suggesting the creation of a thin conductive layer on its insulating bulk under light irradiation. By exploiting the quantum capacitance model, we find that the negative quantum capacitance due to this NEC effect plays an important role in this capacitance enhancement
- Published
- 2019
48. Present Status of the Chopper-Type Marx Modulator Development at Kek
- Author
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Taichi Sugai, M. Akemoto, H. Nakajima, Y. Sawamura, T. Natsui, M. Kawamura, Weihua Jiang, and A. Tokuchi
- Subjects
Chopper ,Physics ,Klystron ,International Linear Collider ,law ,business.industry ,High energy accelerator ,Electrical engineering ,business ,Pulse-width modulation ,law.invention - Abstract
A Chopper-type Marx modulator is being developed to drive a 10 MW L-band multi-beam klystron for the international linear collider at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK). Twenty units are connected in series to provide the klystron with a −120 kV, 140 A, 1.65 ms pulse at a repetition rate of 5 pps. This paper describes the present status of the Chopper-type Marx modulator being developed at KEK.
- Published
- 2019
49. Clinical presentation, aetiology and outcomes of infective endocarditis. Results of the ESC-EORP EURO-ENDO (European infective endocarditis) registry: a prospective cohort study
- Author
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Habib G., Erba P. A., Iung B., Donal E., Cosyns B., Laroche C., Popescu B. A., Prendergast B., Tornos P., Sadeghpour A., Oliver L., Vaskelyte J. -J., Sow R., Axler O., Maggioni A. P., Lancellotti P, C P Gale, B Beleslin, A Budaj, O Chioncel, N Dagres, N Danchin, J Emberson, D Erlinge, M Glikson, A Gray, M Kayikcioglu, A P Maggioni, V K Nagy, A Nedoshivin, A-S Petronio, J Roos-Hesselink, L Wallentin, U Zeymer, G Habib, P Lancellotti, B Cosyns, E Donal, P Erba, B Iung, B A Popescu, B Prendergast, P Tornos, M Andarala, C Berle, A Brunel-Lebecq, E Fiorucci, C Laroche, V Missiamenou, C Taylor, N N Ali Tatar-Chentir, M Al-Mallah, M Astrom Aneq, G Athanassopoulos, L P Badano, S Benyoussef, E Calderon Aranda, N M Cardim, K-L Chan, I Cruz, T Edvardsen, G Goliasch, A Hagendorff, K Hristova, O Kamp, D-H Kang, W Kong, S Matskeplishvili, M Meshaal, M Mirocevic, A N Neskovic, M Pazdernik, E Plonska-Gosciniak, M Raissouni, R Ronderos, L E Sade, A Sadeghpour, A Sambola, S Sengupta, J Separovic-Hanzevacki, M Takeuchi, E Tucay, A C Tude Rodrigues, A Varga, J Vaskelyte, K Yamagata, K Yiangou, H Zaky, I Granada, M Mahia, S Ressi, F Nacinovich, A Iribarren, P Fernandez Oses, G Avegliano, E Filipini, R Obregon, M Bangher, J Dho, L Cartasegna, M L Plastino, V Novas, C Shigel, G Reyes, M De Santos, N Gastaldello, M Granillo Fernandez, M Potito, G Streitenberger, P Velazco, J H Casabé, C Cortes, E Guevara, F Salmo, M Seijo, F Weidinger, M Heger, R Brooks, C Stöllberger, C-Y Ho, L Perschy, L Puskas, C Binder, R Rosenhek, M Schneider, M-P Winter, E Hoffer, M Melissopoulou, E Lecoq, D Legrand, S Jacquet, M Massoz, L Pierard, S Marchetta, R Dulgheru, C D Emal, C Oury, S Droogmans, D Kerkhove, D Plein, L Soens, C Weytjens, A Motoc, B Roosens, I Lemoine, I Rodrigus, B Paelinck, B Amsel, P Unger, D Konopnicki, C Beauloye, A Pasquet, J L Vanoverschelde, S Pierard, D Vancraeynest, F Sinnaeve, J L Andrade, K Staszko, R Dos Santos Monteiro, M H Miglioranza, D L Shuha, M Alcantara, V Cravo, L Fazzio, A Felix, M Iso, C Musa, A P Siciliano, F Villaca Filho, A Rodrigues, F Vilela, J Braga, R Silva, D Rodrigues, L Silva, S Morhy, C Fischer, M Vieira, T Afonso, J Abreu, S N Falcao, V A Moises, A Gouvea, F J Mancuso, A C Souza, C Y Silva, G João, C S Abboud, R Bellio de Mattos Barretto, A Ramos, R Arnoni, J E Assef, D J Della Togna, D Le Bihan, L Miglioli, A P Romero Oliveira, R Tadeu Magro Kroll, D Cortez, C L Gelape, M D C Peirira Nunes, T C De Abreu Ferrari, K Hay, V Le, M Page, F Poulin, C Sauve, K Serri, C Mercure, J Beaudoin, P Pibarot, I A Sebag, L G Rudski, G Ricafort, B Barsic, V Krajinovic, M Vargovic, D Lovric, V Reskovic-Luksic, J Vincelj, S Jaksic Jurinjak, V Yiannikourides, M Ioannides, C Pofaides, V Masoura, J Pudich, A Linhart, M Siranec, J Marek, K Blechova, M Kamenik, R Pelouch, Z Coufal, M Mikulica, M Griva, E Jancova, M Mikulcova, M Taborsky, J Precek, M Jecmenova, J Latal, J Widimsky, T Butta, S Machacek, R Vancata, J Spinar, M Holicka, F Pow Chon Long, N Anzules, A Bajana Carpio, G Largacha, E Penaherrera, D Moreira, E Mahfouz, E Elsafty, A Soliman, Y Zayed, J Aboulenein, M Abdel-Hay, A Almaghraby, M Abdelnaby, M Ahmed, B Hammad, Y Saleh, H Zahran, O Elgebaly, A Saad, M Ali, A Zeid, R El Sharkawy, A Al Kholy, R Doss, D Osama, H Rizk, A Elmogy, M Mishriky, P Assayag, S El Hatimi, S Hubert, J-P Casalta, F Gouriet, F Arregle, S Cammilleri, L Tessonnier, A Riberi, E Botelho-Nevers, A Gagneux-Brunon, R Pierrard, C Tulane, S Campisi, J-F Fuzellier, M Detoc, T Mehalla, D Boutoille, A S Lecompte, M Lefebvre, S Pattier, O Al Habash, N Asseray-Madani, C Biron, J Brochard, J Caillon, C Cueff, T Le Tourneau, R Lecomte, M M Magali Michel, J Orain, S Delarue, M Le Bras, J-F Faucher, V Aboyans, A Beeharry, H Durox, M Lacoste, J Magne, D Mohty, A David, V Pradel, V Sierra, A Neykova, B Bettayeb, S Elkentaoui, B Tzvetkov, G Landry, C Strady, K Ainine, S Baumard, C Brasselet, C Tassigny, V Valente-Pires, M Lefranc, B Hoen, B Lefevre, E Curlier, C Callier, N Fourcade, Y Jobic, S Ansard, R Le Berre, F Le Ven, M-C Pouliquen, G Prat, P Le Roux, F Bouchart, A Savoure, C Alarcon, C Chapuzet, I Gueit, C Tribouilloy, Y Bohbot, F Peugnet, M Gun, X Duval, X Lescure, E Ilic-Habensus, N Sadoul, C Selton-Suty, F Alla, F Goehringer, O Huttin, E Chevalier, R Garcia, V Le Marcis, P Tattevin, E Flecher, M Revest, C Chirouze, K Bouiller, L Hustache-Mathieu, T Klopfenstein, J Moreau, D Fournier, A-S Brunel, P Lim, L Oliver, J Ternacle, A Moussafeur, P Chavanet, L Piroth, A Salmon-Rousseau, M Buisson, S Mahy, C Martins, S Gohier, O Axler, F Baumann, S Lebras, C Piper, D Guckel, J Börgermann, D Horstkotte, E Winkelmann, B Brockmeier, D Grey, G Nickenig, R Schueler, C Öztürk, E Stöhr, C Hamm, T Walther, R Brandt, A-C Frühauf, C T Hartung, C Hellner, C Wild, M Becker, S Hamada, W Kaestner, K Stangl, F Knebel, G Baldenhofer, A Brecht, H Dreger, C Isner, F Pfafflin, M Stegemann, R Zahn, B Fraiture, C Kilkowski, A-K Karcher, S Klinger, H Tolksdorf, D Tousoulis, C Aggeli, S Sideris, E Venieri, G Sarri, D Tsiapras, I Armenis, A Koutsiari, G Floros, C Grassos, S Dragasis, L Rallidis, C Varlamos, L Michalis, K Naka, A Bechlioulis, A Kotsia, L Lakkas, K Pappas, C Papadopoulos, S Kiokas, A Lioni, S Misailidou, J Barbetseas, M Bonou, C Kapelios, I Tomprou, K Zerva, A Manolis, E Hamodraka, D Athanasiou, G Haralambidis, H Samaras, L Poulimenos, A Nagy, A Bartykowszki, E Gara, K Mungulmare, R Kasliwal, M Bansal, S Ranjan, A Bhan, M Kyavar, M Maleki, F Noohi Bezanjani, A Alizadehasl, S Boudagh, A Ghavidel, P Moradnejad, H R Pasha, B Ghadrdoost, D Gilon, J Strahilevitz, M Wanounou, S Israel, C d'Agostino, P Colonna, L De Michele, F Fumarola, M Stante, N Marchionni, V Scheggi, B Alterini, S Del Pace, P Stefano, C Sparano, N Ruozi, R Tenaglia, D Muraru, U Limbruno, A Cresti, P Baratta, M Solari, C Giannattasio, A Moreo, B De Chiara, B Lopez Montero, F Musca, C A Orcese, F Panzeri, F Spano, C F Russo, O Alfieri, M De Bonis, S Chiappetta, B Del Forno, M Ripa, P Scarpellini, C Tassan Din, B Castiglioni, R Pasciuta, S Carletti, D Ferrara, M Guffanti, G Iaci, E Lapenna, T Nisi, C Oltolini, E Busnardo, U Pajoro, E Agricola, R Meneghin, D Schiavi, F Piscione, R Citro, R M Benvenga, L Greco, L Soriente, I Radano, C Prota, M Bellino, D Di Vece, F Santini, A Salsano, G M Olivieri, F Turrini, R Messora, S Tondi, A Olaru, V Agnoletto, L Grassi, C Leonardi, S Sansoni, S Del Ponte, G M Actis Dato, A De Martino, N Ohte, S Kikuchi, K Wakami, K Aonuma, Y Seo, T Ishizu, T Machino-Ohtsuka, M Yamamoto, N Iida, H Nakajima, Y Nakagawa, C Izumi, M Amano, M Miyake, K Takahashi, I Shiojima, Y Miyasaka, H Maeba, Y Suwa, N Taniguchi, S Tsujimoto, T Kitai, M Ota, S Yuda, S Sasaki, N Hagiwara, K Yamazaki, K Ashihara, K Arai, C Saitou, S Saitou, G Suzuki, Y Shibata, N Watanabe, S Nishino, K Ashikaga, N Kuriyama, K Mahara, T Okubo, H Fujimaki, H Shitan, H Yamamoto, K Abe, M Terada, S Takanashi, M Sata, H Yamada, K Kusunose, Y Saijo, H Seno, O Yuichiro, T Onishi, F Sera, S Nakatani, H Mizuno, K Sengoku, S W Park, K Eun Kyoung, L Ga Yeon, J-W Hwang, C Jin-Oh, S-J Park, L Sang-Chol, C Sung-A, S Y Jang, R Heo, S Lee, J-M Song, E Jung, J Plisiene, A Dambrauskaite, G Gruodyte, R Jonkaitiene, V Mizariene, J Atkocaityte, R Zvirblyte, R Sow, A Codreanu, T Staub, C Michaux, E C L De la Vega, L Jacobs-Orazi, C Mallia Azzopardi, R G Xuereb, T Piscopo, J Farrugia, M Fenech, E Pllaha, C Vella, D Borg, R Casha, L Grib, E Raevschi, A Grejdieru, D Kravcenco, E Prisacari, E Samohvalov, S Samohvalov, N Sceglova, E Panfile, L Cardaniuc, V Corcea, A Feodorovici, V Gaina, L Girbu, P Jimbei, G Balan, I Cardaniuc, I Benesco, V Marian, N Sumarga, B Bozovic, N Bulatovic, P Lakovic, L Music, R Budde, A Wahadat, T Gamela, T Meijers, J P Van Melle, V M Deursen, H J Crijns, S C Bekkers, E C Cheriex, M Gilbers, B L Kietselaer, C Knackstedt, R Lorusso, S Schalla, S A Streukens, S Chamuleau, M-J Cramer, A Teske, T Van der Spoel, A Wind, J Lokhorst, O Liesbek, H Van Heusden, W Tanis, I Van der Bilt, J Vriend, H De Lange-van Bruggen, E Karijodikoro, R Riezebos, E van Dongen, J Schoep, V Stolk, J T Offstad, J O Beitnes, T Helle-Valle, H Skulstad, R Skardal, N Qamar, S Furnaz, B Ahmed, M H Butt, M F Khanzada, T Saghir, A Wahid, T Hryniewiecki, P Szymanski, K Marzec, M Misztal-Ogonowska, W Kosmala, M Przewlocka-Kosmala, A Rojek, K Woznicka, J Zachwyc, A Lisowska, M Kaminska, J D Kasprzak, E Kowalczyk, D F Strzecka, P Wejner-Mik, M Trabulo, P Freitas, S Ranchordas, G Rodrigues, P Pinto, C Queiros, J Azevedo, L Marques, D Seabra, L Branco, M Cruz, A Galrinho, R Moreira, P Rio, A T Timoteo, M Selas, V Carmelo, B Duque Neves, H Pereira, A Guerra, A Marques, I Pintassilgo, M C Tomescu, N-M Trofenciuc, M Andor, A Bordejevic, H S Branea, F Caruntu, L A Velcean, A Mavrea, M F Onel, T Parvanescu, D Pop, A L Pop-Moldovan, M I Puticiu, L Cirin, I M Citu, C A Cotoraci, D Darabantiu, R Farcas, I Marincu, A Ionac, D Cozma, C Mornos, F Goanta, I Popescu, R Beyer, R Mada, R Rancea, R Tomoaia, H Rosianu, C Stanescu, Z Kobalava, J Karaulova, E Kotova, A Milto, A Pisaryuk, N Povalyaev, M Sorokina, J Alrahimi, A Elshiekh, A Jamiel, A Ahmed, N Attia, B Putnikovic, A Dimic, B Ivanovic, S Matic, D Trifunovic, J Petrovic, D Kosevic, I Stojanovic, I Petrovic, P Dabic, P Milojevic, I Srdanovic, S Susak, L Velicki, A Vulin, M Kovacevic, A Redzek, M Stefanovic, T C Yeo, W Kf Kong, K K Poh, I Vilacosta, C Ferrera, C Olmos, M Abd El-Nasser, F Calvo Iglesias, E Blanco-Gonzalez, M Bravo Amaro, E Lopez-Rodriguez, J Lugo Adan, A N Germinas, P Pazos-Lopez, M Pereira Loureiro, M T Perez, S Raposeiras-Roubin, S Rasheed Yas, M-M Suarez-Varela, F Vasallo Vidal, D Garcia-Dorado, N Fernandez-Hidalgo, T Gonzalez-Alujas, J Lozano, O Maisterra, N Pizzi, R Rios, A Bayes-Genis, L Pedro Botet, N Vallejo, C Llibre, L Mateu, R Nunez, D Quesada, E Berastegui, D Bosch Portell, J Aboal Vinas, X Albert Bertran, R Brugada Tarradellas, P Loma-Osorio Ricon, C Tiron de Llano, M A Arnau, A Bel, M Blanes, A Osa, M Anguita, F Carrasco, J C Castillo, J L Zamorano, J L Moya Mur, M Alvaro, C Fernandez-Golfin, J M Monteagudo, E Navas Elorza, M C Farinas Alvarez, J Aguero Balbin, J Zarauza, J F Gutierrez-Diez, C Arminanzas, F Arnaiz de Las Revillas, A Arnaiz Garcia, M Cobo Belaustegui, M Fernandez Sampedro, M Gutierrez Cuadra, L Garcia Cuello, C Gonzalez Rico, R Rodriguez-Alvarez, J Goikoetxea, M Montejo, J M Miro, M Almela, J Ambrosioni, A Moreno, E Quintana, E Sandoval, A Tellez, J M Tolosana, B Vidal, C Falces, D Fuster, C Garcia-de-la-Maria, M Hernandez-Meneses, J Llopis, F Marco, I Ruiz-Zamora, A Bardaji Ruiz, E Sanz Girgas, G Garcia-Pardo, M Guillen Marzo, A Rodriguez Oviedo, A Villares Jimenez, L Abid, R Hammami, S Kammoun, M S Mourali, F Mghaieth Zghal, M Ben Hlima, S Boudiche, S Ouali, L Zakhama, S Antit, I Slama, O Gulel, M Sahin, E Karacaglar, S Kucukoglu, O Cetinarslan, U Y Sinan, U Canpolat, B Mutlu, H Atas, R Dervishova, C Ileri, J Alhashmi, J Tahir, P Zarger, F Baslib, S Woldman, L Menezes, C Primus, R Uppal, I Bvekerwa, B Chandrasekaran, A Kopanska, J Chambers, J Hancock, J Klein, R Rajani, M P Ursi, S Cannata, R Dworakowski, A Fife, J Breeze, M Browne-Morgan, M Gunning, S Streather, F M Asch, M Zemedkun, B Alyavi, J Uzokov, G., Habib, P. A., Erba, B., Iung, E., Donal, B., Cosyn, C., Laroche, B. A., Popescu, B., Prendergast, P., Torno, A., Sadeghpour, L., Oliver, J. -J., Vaskelyte, R., Sow, O., Axler, A. P., Maggioni, P, Lancellotti, P Gale, C, Beleslin, B, Budaj, A, Chioncel, O, Dagres, N, Danchin, N, Emberson, J, Erlinge, D, Glikson, M, Gray, A, Kayikcioglu, M, P Maggioni, A, K Nagy, V, Nedoshivin, A, Petronio, A-S, Roos-Hesselink, J, Wallentin, L, Zeymer, U, Habib, G, Lancellotti, P, Cosyns, B, Donal, E, Erba, P, Iung, B, A Popescu, B, Prendergast, B, Tornos, P, Andarala, M, Berle, C, Brunel-Lebecq, A, Fiorucci, E, Laroche, C, Missiamenou, V, Taylor, C, N Ali Tatar-Chentir, N, Al-Mallah, M, Astrom Aneq, M, Athanassopoulos, G, P Badano, L, Benyoussef, S, Calderon Aranda, E, M Cardim, N, Chan, K-L, Cruz, I, Edvardsen, T, Goliasch, G, Hagendorff, A, Hristova, K, Kamp, O, Kang, D-H, Kong, W, Matskeplishvili, S, Meshaal, M, Mirocevic, M, N Neskovic, A, Pazdernik, M, Plonska-Gosciniak, E, Raissouni, M, Ronderos, R, E Sade, L, Sadeghpour, A, Sambola, A, Sengupta, S, Separovic-Hanzevacki, J, Takeuchi, M, Tucay, E, C Tude Rodrigues, A, Varga, A, Vaskelyte, J, Yamagata, K, Yiangou, K, Zaky, H, Granada, I, Mahia, M, Ressi, S, Nacinovich, F, Iribarren, A, Fernandez Oses, P, Avegliano, G, Filipini, E, Obregon, R, Bangher, M, Dho, J, Cartasegna, L, L Plastino, M, Novas, V, Shigel, C, Reyes, G, De Santos, M, Gastaldello, N, Granillo Fernandez, M, Potito, M, Streitenberger, G, Velazco, P, H Casabé, J, Cortes, C, Guevara, E, Salmo, F, Seijo, M, Weidinger, F, Heger, M, Brooks, R, Stöllberger, C, Ho, C-Y, Perschy, L, Puskas, L, Binder, C, Rosenhek, R, Schneider, M, Winter, M-P, Hoffer, E, Melissopoulou, M, Lecoq, E, Legrand, D, Jacquet, S, Massoz, M, Pierard, L, Marchetta, S, Dulgheru, R, D Emal, C, Oury, C, Droogmans, S, Kerkhove, D, Plein, D, Soens, L, Weytjens, C, Motoc, A, Roosens, B, Lemoine, I, Rodrigus, I, Paelinck, B, Amsel, B, Unger, P, Konopnicki, D, Beauloye, C, Pasquet, A, L Vanoverschelde, J, Pierard, S, Vancraeynest, D, Sinnaeve, F, L Andrade, J, Staszko, K, Dos Santos Monteiro, R, H Miglioranza, M, L Shuha, D, Alcantara, M, Cravo, V, Fazzio, L, Felix, A, Iso, M, Musa, C, P Siciliano, A, Villaca Filho, F, Rodrigues, A, Vilela, F, Braga, J, Silva, R, Rodrigues, D, Silva, L, Morhy, S, Fischer, C, Vieira, M, Afonso, T, Abreu, J, N Falcao, S, A Moises, V, Gouvea, A, J Mancuso, F, C Souza, A, Y Silva, C, João, G, S Abboud, C, Bellio de Mattos Barretto, R, Ramos, A, Arnoni, R, E Assef, J, J Della Togna, D, Le Bihan, D, Miglioli, L, P Romero Oliveira, A, Tadeu Magro Kroll, R, Cortez, D, L Gelape, C, C Peirira Nunes, M D, C De Abreu Ferrari, T, Hay, K, Le, V, Page, M, Poulin, F, Sauve, C, Serri, K, Mercure, C, Beaudoin, J, Pibarot, P, A Sebag, I, G Rudski, L, Ricafort, G, Barsic, B, Krajinovic, V, Vargovic, M, Lovric, D, Reskovic-Luksic, V, Vincelj, J, Jaksic Jurinjak, S, Yiannikourides, V, Ioannides, M, Pofaides, C, Masoura, V, Pudich, J, Linhart, A, Siranec, M, Marek, J, Blechova, K, Kamenik, M, Pelouch, R, Coufal, Z, Mikulica, M, Griva, M, Jancova, E, Mikulcova, M, Taborsky, M, Precek, J, Jecmenova, M, Latal, J, Widimsky, J, Butta, T, Machacek, S, Vancata, R, Spinar, J, Holicka, M, Pow Chon Long, F, Anzules, N, Bajana Carpio, A, Largacha, G, Penaherrera, E, Moreira, D, Mahfouz, E, Elsafty, E, Soliman, A, Zayed, Y, Aboulenein, J, Abdel-Hay, M, Almaghraby, A, Abdelnaby, M, Ahmed, M, Hammad, B, Saleh, Y, Zahran, H, Elgebaly, O, Saad, A, Ali, M, Zeid, A, El Sharkawy, R, Al Kholy, A, Doss, R, Osama, D, Rizk, H, Elmogy, A, Mishriky, M, Assayag, P, El Hatimi, S, Hubert, S, Casalta, J-P, Gouriet, F, Arregle, F, Cammilleri, S, Tessonnier, L, Riberi, A, Botelho-Nevers, E, Gagneux-Brunon, A, Pierrard, R, Tulane, C, Campisi, S, Fuzellier, J-F, Detoc, M, Mehalla, T, Boutoille, D, S Lecompte, A, Lefebvre, M, Pattier, S, Al Habash, O, Asseray-Madani, N, Biron, C, Brochard, J, Caillon, J, Cueff, C, Le Tourneau, T, Lecomte, R, M Magali Michel, M, Orain, J, Delarue, S, Le Bras, M, Faucher, J-F, Aboyans, V, Beeharry, A, Durox, H, Lacoste, M, Magne, J, Mohty, D, David, A, Pradel, V, Sierra, V, Neykova, A, Bettayeb, B, Elkentaoui, S, Tzvetkov, B, Landry, G, Strady, C, Ainine, K, Baumard, S, Brasselet, C, Tassigny, C, Valente-Pires, V, Lefranc, M, Hoen, B, Lefevre, B, Curlier, E, Callier, C, Fourcade, N, Jobic, Y, Ansard, S, Le Berre, R, Le Ven, F, Pouliquen, M-C, Prat, G, Le Roux, P, Bouchart, F, Savoure, A, Alarcon, C, Chapuzet, C, Gueit, I, Tribouilloy, C, Bohbot, Y, Peugnet, F, Gun, M, Duval, X, Lescure, X, Ilic-Habensus, E, Sadoul, N, Selton-Suty, C, Alla, F, Goehringer, F, Huttin, O, Chevalier, E, Garcia, R, Le Marcis, V, Tattevin, P, Flecher, E, Revest, M, Chirouze, C, Bouiller, K, Hustache-Mathieu, L, Klopfenstein, T, Moreau, J, Fournier, D, Brunel, A-S, Lim, P, Oliver, L, Ternacle, J, Moussafeur, A, Chavanet, P, Piroth, L, Salmon-Rousseau, A, Buisson, M, Mahy, S, Martins, C, Gohier, S, Axler, O, Baumann, F, Lebras, S, Piper, C, Guckel, D, Börgermann, J, Horstkotte, D, Winkelmann, E, Brockmeier, B, Grey, D, Nickenig, G, Schueler, R, Öztürk, C, Stöhr, E, Hamm, C, Walther, T, Brandt, R, Frühauf, A-C, T Hartung, C, Hellner, C, Wild, C, Becker, M, Hamada, S, Kaestner, W, Stangl, K, Knebel, F, Baldenhofer, G, Brecht, A, Dreger, H, Isner, C, Pfafflin, F, Stegemann, M, Zahn, R, Fraiture, B, Kilkowski, C, Karcher, A-K, Klinger, S, Tolksdorf, H, Tousoulis, D, Aggeli, C, Sideris, S, Venieri, E, Sarri, G, Tsiapras, D, Armenis, I, Koutsiari, A, Floros, G, Grassos, C, Dragasis, S, Rallidis, L, Varlamos, C, Michalis, L, Naka, K, Bechlioulis, A, Kotsia, A, Lakkas, L, Pappas, K, Papadopoulos, C, Kiokas, S, Lioni, A, Misailidou, S, Barbetseas, J, Bonou, M, Kapelios, C, Tomprou, I, Zerva, K, Manolis, A, Hamodraka, E, Athanasiou, D, Haralambidis, G, Samaras, H, Poulimenos, L, Nagy, A, Bartykowszki, A, Gara, E, Mungulmare, K, Kasliwal, R, Bansal, M, Ranjan, S, Bhan, A, Kyavar, M, Maleki, M, Noohi Bezanjani, F, Alizadehasl, A, Boudagh, S, Ghavidel, A, Moradnejad, P, R Pasha, H, Ghadrdoost, B, Gilon, D, Strahilevitz, J, Wanounou, M, Israel, S, D'Agostino, C, Colonna, P, De Michele, L, Fumarola, F, Stante, M, Marchionni, N, Scheggi, V, Alterini, B, Del Pace, S, Stefano, P, Sparano, C, Ruozi, N, Tenaglia, R, Muraru, D, Limbruno, U, Cresti, A, Baratta, P, Solari, M, Giannattasio, C, Moreo, A, De Chiara, B, Lopez Montero, B, Musca, F, A Orcese, C, Panzeri, F, Spano, F, F Russo, C, Alfieri, O, DE BONIS, Michele, Chiappetta, S, Del Forno, B, Ripa, M, Scarpellini, P, Tassan Din, C, Castiglioni, B, Pasciuta, R, Carletti, S, Ferrara, D, Guffanti, M, Iaci, G, Lapenna, E, Nisi, T, Oltolini, C, Busnardo, E, Pajoro, U, Agricola, E, Meneghin, R, Schiavi, D, Piscione, F, Citro, R, M Benvenga, R, Greco, L, Soriente, L, Radano, I, Prota, C, Bellino, M, Di Vece, D, Santini, F, Salsano, A, M Olivieri, G, Turrini, F, Messora, R, Tondi, S, Olaru, A, Agnoletto, V, Grassi, L, Leonardi, C, Sansoni, S, Del Ponte, S, M Actis Dato, G, De Martino, A, Ohte, N, Kikuchi, S, Wakami, K, Aonuma, K, Seo, Y, Ishizu, T, Machino-Ohtsuka, T, Yamamoto, M, Iida, N, Nakajima, H, Nakagawa, Y, Izumi, C, Amano, M, Miyake, M, Takahashi, K, Shiojima, I, Miyasaka, Y, Maeba, H, Suwa, Y, Taniguchi, N, Tsujimoto, S, Kitai, T, Ota, M, Yuda, S, Sasaki, S, Hagiwara, N, Yamazaki, K, Ashihara, K, Arai, K, Saitou, C, Saitou, S, Suzuki, G, Shibata, Y, Watanabe, N, Nishino, S, Ashikaga, K, Kuriyama, N, Mahara, K, Okubo, T, Fujimaki, H, Shitan, H, Yamamoto, H, Abe, K, Terada, M, Takanashi, S, Sata, M, Yamada, H, Kusunose, K, Saijo, Y, Seno, H, Yuichiro, O, Onishi, T, Sera, F, Nakatani, S, Mizuno, H, Sengoku, K, W Park, S, Eun Kyoung, K, Ga Yeon, L, Hwang, J-W, Jin-Oh, C, Park, S-J, Sang-Chol, L, Sung-A, C, Y Jang, S, Heo, R, Lee, S, Song, J-M, Jung, E, Plisiene, J, Dambrauskaite, A, Gruodyte, G, Jonkaitiene, R, Mizariene, V, Atkocaityte, J, Zvirblyte, R, Sow, R, Codreanu, A, Staub, T, Michaux, C, L De la Vega, E C, Jacobs-Orazi, L, Mallia Azzopardi, C, G Xuereb, R, Piscopo, T, Farrugia, J, Fenech, M, Pllaha, E, Vella, C, Borg, D, Casha, R, Grib, L, Raevschi, E, Grejdieru, A, Kravcenco, D, Prisacari, E, Samohvalov, E, Samohvalov, S, Sceglova, N, Panfile, E, Cardaniuc, L, Corcea, V, Feodorovici, A, Gaina, V, Girbu, L, Jimbei, P, Balan, G, Cardaniuc, I, Benesco, I, Marian, V, Sumarga, N, Bozovic, B, Bulatovic, N, Lakovic, P, Music, L, Budde, R, Wahadat, A, Gamela, T, Meijers, T, P Van Melle, J, M Deursen, V, J Crijns, H, C Bekkers, S, C Cheriex, E, Gilbers, M, L Kietselaer, B, Knackstedt, C, Lorusso, R, Schalla, S, A Streukens, S, Chamuleau, S, Cramer, M-J, Teske, A, Van der Spoel, T, Wind, A, Lokhorst, J, Liesbek, O, Van Heusden, H, Tanis, W, Van der Bilt, I, Vriend, J, De Lange-van Bruggen, H, Karijodikoro, E, Riezebos, R, van Dongen, E, Schoep, J, Stolk, V, T Offstad, J, O Beitnes, J, Helle-Valle, T, Skulstad, H, Skardal, R, Qamar, N, Furnaz, S, Ahmed, B, H Butt, M, F Khanzada, M, Saghir, T, Wahid, A, Hryniewiecki, T, Szymanski, P, Marzec, K, Misztal-Ogonowska, M, Kosmala, W, Przewlocka-Kosmala, M, Rojek, A, Woznicka, K, Zachwyc, J, Lisowska, A, Kaminska, M, D Kasprzak, J, Kowalczyk, E, F Strzecka, D, Wejner-Mik, P, Trabulo, M, Freitas, P, Ranchordas, S, Rodrigues, G, Pinto, P, Queiros, C, Azevedo, J, Marques, L, Seabra, D, Branco, L, Cruz, M, Galrinho, A, Moreira, R, Rio, P, T Timoteo, A, Selas, M, Carmelo, V, Duque Neves, B, Pereira, H, Guerra, A, Marques, A, Pintassilgo, I, C Tomescu, M, Trofenciuc, N-M, Andor, M, Bordejevic, A, S Branea, H, Caruntu, F, A Velcean, L, Mavrea, A, F Onel, M, Parvanescu, T, Pop, D, L Pop-Moldovan, A, I Puticiu, M, Cirin, L, M Citu, I, A Cotoraci, C, Darabantiu, D, Farcas, R, Marincu, I, Ionac, A, Cozma, D, Mornos, C, Goanta, F, Popescu, I, Beyer, R, Mada, R, Rancea, R, Tomoaia, R, Rosianu, H, Stanescu, C, Kobalava, Z, Karaulova, J, Kotova, E, Milto, A, Pisaryuk, A, Povalyaev, N, Sorokina, M, Alrahimi, J, Elshiekh, A, Jamiel, A, Ahmed, A, Attia, N, Putnikovic, B, Dimic, A, Ivanovic, B, Matic, S, Trifunovic, D, Petrovic, J, Kosevic, D, Stojanovic, I, Petrovic, I, Dabic, P, Milojevic, P, Srdanovic, I, Susak, S, Velicki, L, Vulin, A, Kovacevic, M, Redzek, A, Stefanovic, M, C Yeo, T, Kf Kong, W, K Poh, K, Vilacosta, I, Ferrera, C, Olmos, C, Abd El-Nasser, M, Calvo Iglesias, F, Blanco-Gonzalez, E, Bravo Amaro, M, Lopez-Rodriguez, E, Lugo Adan, J, N Germinas, A, Pazos-Lopez, P, Pereira Loureiro, M, T Perez, M, Raposeiras-Roubin, S, Rasheed Yas, S, Suarez-Varela, M-M, Vasallo Vidal, F, Garcia-Dorado, D, Fernandez-Hidalgo, N, Gonzalez-Alujas, T, Lozano, J, Maisterra, O, Pizzi, N, Rios, R, Bayes-Genis, A, Pedro Botet, L, Vallejo, N, Llibre, C, Mateu, L, Nunez, R, Quesada, D, Berastegui, E, Bosch Portell, D, Aboal Vinas, J, Albert Bertran, X, Brugada Tarradellas, R, Loma-Osorio Ricon, P, Tiron de Llano, C, A Arnau, M, Bel, A, Blanes, M, Osa, A, Anguita, M, Carrasco, F, C Castillo, J, L Zamorano, J, L Moya Mur, J, Alvaro, M, Fernandez-Golfin, C, M Monteagudo, J, Navas Elorza, E, C Farinas Alvarez, M, Aguero Balbin, J, Zarauza, J, F Gutierrez-Diez, J, Arminanzas, C, Arnaiz de Las Revillas, F, Arnaiz Garcia, A, Cobo Belaustegui, M, Fernandez Sampedro, M, Gutierrez Cuadra, M, Garcia Cuello, L, Gonzalez Rico, C, Rodriguez-Alvarez, R, Goikoetxea, J, Montejo, M, M Miro, J, Almela, M, Ambrosioni, J, Moreno, A, Quintana, E, Sandoval, E, Tellez, A, M Tolosana, J, Vidal, B, Falces, C, Fuster, D, Garcia-de-la-Maria, C, Hernandez-Meneses, M, Llopis, J, Marco, F, Ruiz-Zamora, I, Bardaji Ruiz, A, Sanz Girgas, E, Garcia-Pardo, G, Guillen Marzo, M, Rodriguez Oviedo, A, Villares Jimenez, A, Abid, L, Hammami, R, Kammoun, S, S Mourali, M, Mghaieth Zghal, F, Ben Hlima, M, Boudiche, S, Ouali, S, Zakhama, L, Antit, S, Slama, I, Gulel, O, Sahin, M, Karacaglar, E, Kucukoglu, S, Cetinarslan, O, Y Sinan, U, Canpolat, U, Mutlu, B, Atas, H, Dervishova, R, Ileri, C, Alhashmi, J, Tahir, J, Zarger, P, Baslib, F, Woldman, S, Menezes, L, Primus, C, Uppal, R, Bvekerwa, I, Chandrasekaran, B, Kopanska, A, Chambers, J, Hancock, J, Klein, J, Rajani, R, P Ursi, M, Cannata, S, Dworakowski, R, Fife, A, Breeze, J, Browne-Morgan, M, Gunning, M, Streather, S, M Asch, F, Zemedkun, M, Alyavi, B, Uzokov, J, Hôpital de la Timone [CHU - APHM] (TIMONE), Microbes évolution phylogénie et infections (MEPHI), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), University Medical Center Groningen [Groningen] (UMCG), Laboratoire Traitement du Signal et de l'Image (LTSI), Université de Rennes 1 (UR1), Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), CHU Pontchaillou [Rennes], Université de Médecine Carol Davila, Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital [London], CHU Henri Mondor, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Liège (CHU-Liège), AstraZeneca, Bayer, Edwards Lifesciences, Servier, Abbott Vascular Int., Amgen Cardiovascular, Pfizer Alliance, Daiichi Sankyo Europe GmbH, Alliance Daiichi Sankyo Europe GmbH, Gedeon Richter Plc., Menarini Int. Op., Vifor, Boehringer Ingelheim, Boston Scientific Corporation, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly and Company, UCL - SSS/IREC/CARD - Pôle de recherche cardiovasculaire, UCL - (SLuc) Service de pathologie cardiovasculaire, UCL - (SLuc) Service de pathologies cardiovasculaires intensives, UCL - (SLuc) Service de soins intensifs, Service de cardiologie, Université de la Méditerranée - Aix-Marseille 2-Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Marseille (APHM)- Hôpital de la Timone [CHU - APHM] (TIMONE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU), CIC - CHU Bichat, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Service de cardiologie et maladies vasculaires, Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Hôpital Pontchaillou-CHU Pontchaillou [Rennes], Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, University of Oxford [Oxford], Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Faculté de médecine (UPEC Médecine), Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Paris 12 (UPEC UP12), Université de Bordeaux (UB), Research Center [Associazione Nazionale Medici Cardiologi Ospedalieri] (ANMCO Research Center), Associazione Nazionale Medici Cardiologi Ospedalieri (ANMCO), Service de cardiologie [Liège], CHU de Liège-Domaine Universitaire du Sart Tilman, Paris-Centre de Recherche Cardiovasculaire (PARCC - UMR-S U970), Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou [APHP] (HEGP), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Ouest - Hôpitaux Universitaires Île de France Ouest (HUPO)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Ouest - Hôpitaux Universitaires Île de France Ouest (HUPO)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), University of Exeter, Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria, Pergamino, Argentina, Laboratory of In Vivo Cellular and Molecular Imaging, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Division of Engineering and Applied Science, California Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology (CALTECH), Departamento de Biologia de la Reproduccion, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa (UAMI), Universidade Federal de Itajubá, Departamento de Física [Coimbra] (DFC), Universidade de Coimbra [Coimbra], Section of Internal Medicine and Endocrine and Metabolic Sciences, Università degli Studi di Perugia (UNIPG), LIP-Coimbra & Department of Physics of the University of Coimbra, Service Hospitalier Frédéric Joliot (SHFJ), Direction de Recherche Fondamentale (CEA) (DRF (CEA)), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Quebec Heart Institute/Laval Hospital, Université Laval [Québec] (ULaval)-Quebec Heart Institute, Institut Lavoisier de Versailles (ILV), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut Hospitalier Universitaire Méditerranée Infection (IHU AMU), CHU Saint-Etienne, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint-Etienne (CHU de Saint-Etienne), Service des maladies infectieuses et tropicales [CHU Nantes], Centre hospitalier universitaire de Nantes (CHU Nantes), Service de bactériologie et hygiène hospitalière [Nantes], Université de Nantes (UN)-Centre hospitalier universitaire de Nantes (CHU Nantes), Institut du thorax, Université de Nantes (UN)-IFR26-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Service des Maladies infectieuses et tropicales [CHU Limoges], CHU Limoges, Hôpital Sainte-Marguerite [CHU - APHM] (Hôpitaux Sud ), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims (CHU Reims), Anesthésie et réanimation en chirurgie cardiaque [CHU Rouen], CHU Rouen, Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU), Normandie Université (NU), Service des maladies infectieuses et tropicales [Rouen], Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU)-Université de Rouen Normandie (UNIROUEN), Mécanismes physiologiques et conséquences des calcifications cardiovasculaires: rôle des remodelages cardiovasculaires et osseux, Université de Picardie Jules Verne (UPJV)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Department of Cardiology [Ospedali del Tigullio], Modèles et méthodes de l'évaluation thérapeutique des maladies chroniques (U738 / UMR_S738), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7), Institut Lorrain du Coeur et des Vaisseaux Louis Mathieu [Nancy], Maladies chroniques, santé perçue, et processus d'adaptation (APEMAC), Université de Lorraine (UL), Service des Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales [CHRU Nancy], Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Nancy (CHRU Nancy), Service de Cardiologie [CHRU Nancy], Service des maladies infectieuses et réanimation médicale, Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Université de Rennes (UNIV-RENNES)-Hôpital Pontchaillou, Service de chirurgie thoracique cardiaque et vasculaire [Rennes], Laboratoire Chrono-environnement - CNRS - UFC (UMR 6249) (LCE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC), service de maladies infectieuses CHU J Minjoz Besancon, Hôpital Jean Minjoz, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire [Besançon] (CHRU Besançon), Département d'infectiologie (CHU de Dijon), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon - Hôpital François Mitterrand (CHU Dijon), Virologie et pathogenèse virale (VPV), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon, Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA), Institute for Advanced Studies in Basic Sciences, affiliation inconnue, Dipartamento di Fisica 'E.R. Caianiello', Università degli Studi di Salerno (UNISA), The University of Tokyo, Northern Research Station, Forestry Commission, University of North Carolina [Chapel Hill] (UNC), University of North Carolina System (UNC), Instituto de Plasmas e Fusão Nuclear [Lisboa] (IPFN), Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade Técnica de Lisboa (IST), Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (CSIC), Faculté des Sciences Pharmaceutiques, EA 4529, Laboratoire de Biochimie, Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), Istituto di Virologia Vegetale, Università degli studi di Torino (UNITO), Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), Service de Chirurgie Cardiovasculaire, University Hospital of Cruces, Geneva University Hospital (HUG), Institut Jean Le Rond d'Alembert (DALEMBERT), Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Preventive Medicine Unit, University Hospital Joan XXIII, IISPV, Rovira and Virgili University, Popescu, B, Maggioni, A, Gale, C, Nagy, V, Petronio, A, Ali Tatar-Chentir, N, Badano, L, Cardim, N, Chan, K, Kang, D, Neskovic, A, Sade, L, Tude Rodrigues, A, Plastino, M, Casabe, J, Stollberger, C, Ho, C, Winter, M, Emal, C, Vanoverschelde, J, Andrade, J, Miglioranza, M, Shuha, D, Siciliano, A, Falcao, S, Moises, V, Mancuso, F, Souza, A, Silva, C, Joao, G, Abboud, C, Assef, J, Della Togna, D, Romero Oliveira, A, Gelape, C, Peirira Nunes, M, De Abreu Ferrari, T, Sebag, I, Rudski, L, Casalta, J, Fuzellier, J, Lecompte, A, Magali Michel, M, Faucher, J, Pouliquen, M, Brunel, A, Borgermann, J, Ozturk, C, Stohr, E, Fruhauf, A, Hartung, C, Karcher, A, Pasha, H, Orcese, C, Russo, C, De Bonis, M, Benvenga, R, Olivieri, G, Actis Dato, G, Park, S, Hwang, J, Jang, S, Song, J, De la Vega, E, Xuereb, R, Van Melle, J, Deursen, V, Crijns, H, Bekkers, S, Cheriex, E, Kietselaer, B, Streukens, S, Cramer, M, Offstad, J, Beitnes, J, Butt, M, Khanzada, M, Kasprzak, J, Strzecka, D, Timoteo, A, Tomescu, M, Trofenciuc, N, Branea, H, Velcean, L, Onel, M, Pop-Moldovan, A, Puticiu, M, Citu, I, Cotoraci, C, Yeo, T, Poh, K, Germinas, A, Perez, M, Suarez-Varela, M, Arnau, M, Castillo, J, Zamorano, J, Moya Mur, J, Monteagudo, J, Farinas Alvarez, M, Gutierrez-Diez, J, Miro, J, Tolosana, J, Mourali, M, Yasar, U, Ursi, M, Asch, F, Clinical sciences, Cardio-vascular diseases, Cardiology, Medical Imaging, Cardiovascular Centre (CVC), Service de médecine nucléaire [Marseille], Imagerie MOléculaire pour applications THéranostiques personnalisées (IMOTHEP), Institut FRESNEL (FRESNEL), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-École Centrale de Marseille (ECM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-École Centrale de Marseille (ECM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)- Hôpital de la Timone [CHU - APHM] (TIMONE), Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou [APHP] (HEGP), Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Ouest - Hôpitaux Universitaires Île de France Ouest (HUPO)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Ouest - Hôpitaux Universitaires Île de France Ouest (HUPO)-Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Université Paris-Saclay-Direction de Recherche Fondamentale (CEA) (DRF (CEA)), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC), MGSOG Scientific staff, MUMC+: MA Cardiologie (9), Cardiologie, RS: Carim - H01 Clinical atrial fibrillation, RS: CARIM - R2.01 - Clinical atrial fibrillation, RS: CARIM - R3.11 - Imaging, Promovendi CD, Fysiologie, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Artsass CTC (9), RS: CARIM - R1.06 - Genetic Epidemiology and Genomics of cardiovascular diseases, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Cardiologie (9), RS: Carim - H02 Cardiomyopathy, RS: CARIM - R2.02 - Cardiomyopathy, CTC, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec CTC (9), RS: Carim - V04 Surgical intervention, RS: CARIM - R2.12 - Surgical intervention, RS: FdR IC Aansprakelijkheid, Graduate School, ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias, Radiotherapy, CCA - Imaging and biomarkers, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, and ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes
- Subjects
Male ,SURGERY ,Embolism ,Infective endocarditi ,Infective endocarditis ,Registry ,Valve disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Africa, Northern ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Prospective cohort study ,Abscess ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,Staphylococcal Infections ,3. Good health ,Cardiac surgery ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Positron emission tomography ,Echocardiography ,Heart Valve Prosthesis ,[SDV.IB]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering ,Female ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Prosthesis-Related Infections ,DIAGNOSIS ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Internal medicine ,Streptococcal Infections ,medicine ,MANAGEMENT ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Aged ,business.industry ,EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY/COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY ,Endocarditis, Bacterial ,South America ,medicine.disease ,Heart failure ,Etiology ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,business ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,Enterococcus - Abstract
Aims The EURO-ENDO registry aimed to study the management and outcomes of patients with infective endocarditis (IE). Methods and results Prospective cohort of 3116 adult patients (2470 from Europe, 646 from non-ESC countries), admitted to 156 hospitals in 40 countries between January 2016 and March 2018 with a diagnosis of IE based on ESC 2015 diagnostic criteria. Clinical, biological, microbiological, and imaging [echocardiography, computed tomography (CT) scan, 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT)] data were collected. Infective endocarditis was native (NVE) in 1764 (56.6%) patients, prosthetic (PVIE) in 939 (30.1%), and device-related (CDRIE) in 308 (9.9%). Infective endocarditis was community-acquired in 2046 (65.66%) patients. Microorganisms involved were staphylococci in 1085 (44.1%) patients, oral streptococci in 304 (12.3%), enterococci in 390 (15.8%), and Streptococcus gallolyticus in 162 (6.6%). 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography was performed in 518 (16.6%) patients and presented with cardiac uptake (major criterion) in 222 (42.9%) patients, with a better sensitivity in PVIE (66.8%) than in NVE (28.0%) and CDRIE (16.3%). Embolic events occurred in 20.6% of patients, and were significantly associated with tricuspid or pulmonary IE, presence of a vegetation and Staphylococcus aureus IE. According to ESC guidelines, cardiac surgery was indicated in 2160 (69.3%) patients, but finally performed in only 1596 (73.9%) of them. In-hospital death occurred in 532 (17.1%) patients and was more frequent in PVIE. Independent predictors of mortality were Charlson index, creatinine > 2 mg/dL, congestive heart failure, vegetation length > 10 mm, cerebral complications, abscess, and failure to undertake surgery when indicated. Conclusion Infective endocarditis is still a life-threatening disease with frequent lethal outcome despite profound changes in its clinical, microbiological, imaging, and therapeutic profiles.
- Published
- 2019
50. Synchrotron radiation characterization of magnetron sputtered WC-Co thin films on mild steel substrate
- Author
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Arunothai Rattanachata, Resego Phiri, Esther T. Akinlabi, Oluseyi Philip Oladijo, and H Nakajima
- Subjects
Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,business.industry ,Metals and Alloys ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Synchrotron radiation ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Characterization (materials science) ,Biomaterials ,Cavity magnetron ,Optoelectronics ,Thin film ,business - Published
- 2020
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