50 research outputs found

    Chinese-Style Decentralization and Health System Reform

    Get PDF
    Medicine, General & InternalSCI(E)7EDITORIAL MATERIAL11null

    Measurement variability of liver metastases from neuroendocrine tumors on different magnetic resonance imaging sequences

    No full text
    International audiencePURPOSE: To assess dimension measurement variability of liver metastases from neuroendocrine tumors (LMNET) on different magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences.MATERIAL AND METHODS: In this institutional review board-approved retrospective study from January 2011 to December 2012, all liver MRI examinations performed at our department in patients with at least one measurable LMNET according to response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST1.1) were included. Up to two lesions were selected on T2-weighted MR images. Three reviewers independently measured long axes of 135 hepatic metastases in 30 patients (16 men, 14 women, mean age 61±11.4 (SD) years; range 28-78 years), during two separate reading sessions, on T2-weighted, diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI) (b; 50, 400, 800 s/mm2) and arterial, portal and late phases after intravenous administration of a gadolinium chelate. Intraclass-correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman plots were used to assess intra-and interobserver variability.RESULTS: Intra- and interobserver agreements ranged between 0.87-0.98, and 0.88-0.97, respectively. Intersequence agreements ranged between 0.92 [95%CI: 0.82-0.98] and 0.98 [95%CI: 0.93-0.99]. 95% limits of agreement for measurements were -10.2%,+8.9% for DWI (b=50s/mm2) versus -21.9%,+24.2% and -15.8,+17.2% for arterial and portal phases, respectively.CONCLUSION: An increase<9% in measurement and a decrease of -10% on DWI should not be considered as true changes, with 95% confidence, versus 24% and -22% on arterial and 17%, -16% on portal phases, respectively. DWI might thus be the most reliable MR sequence for monitoring size variations of LMNETs

    Poly(2‐vinylpyridine) as an Additive for Enhancing N‐Type Organic Thin‐Film Transistor Stability

    No full text
    Abstract N‐type organic semiconductors are particularly susceptible to degradation by ambient air. One such solution to this issue is to include additives in the inks these semiconductors would be cast from that would enhance device stability after film deposition. This method would reduce the number of processing steps needed to fabricate devices compared to other stabilization methods, such as encapsulation. In this study, the stabilization of n‐type performance of the semiconductor poly{[N,N′‐bis(2‐octyldodecyl)‐naphthalene‐1,4,5,8‐bis(dicarboximide)‐2,6‐diyl]‐alt‐5,5′‐(2,29‐bisthiophene)} (P(NDI2OD‐T2)) when it is blended with an increasing proportion by weight of poly(2‐vinylpyridine) (P2VP) is reported. The simple synthesis of P2VP also makes it an ideal candidate material for large‐scale applications. Concentrations as low as 0.1% P2VP incorporated into the P(NDI2OD‐T2) blends provided an immediate stabilization effect, and at 10% and 50%, longer‐term stability after one week is observed
    corecore