1,789 research outputs found
Treatment of Advanced Emphysema with Emphysematous Lung Sealant (AeriSeal (R))
Background: This report summarizes initial tests of an emphysematous lung synthetic polymer sealant (ELS) designed to reduce lung volume in patients with advanced emphysema. Objectives: The primary study objective was to define a therapeutic strategy to optimize treatment safety and effectiveness. Methods: ELS therapy was administered bronchoscopically to 25 patients with heterogeneous emphysema in an open-label, noncontrolled study at 6 centers in Germany. Treatment was performed initially at 2-4 subsegments. After 12 weeks, patients were eligible for repeat therapy to a total of 6 sites. Safety and efficacy were assessed after 6 months. Responses were evaluated in terms of changes from baseline in lung physiology, functional capacity, and health-related quality of life. Follow-up is available for 21 of 25 patients. Results: Treatment was well tolerated. There were no treatment-related deaths (i.e. within 90 days of treatment), and an acceptable short-and long-term safety profile. Physiological and clinical benefits were observed at 24 weeks. Efficacy responses were better among Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stage III patients {[}n = 14; change in residual volume/total lung capacity (Delta RV/TLC) = -7.4 +/- 10.3%; Delta forced expiratory volume in 1 s (Delta FEV(1)) = +15.9 +/- 22.6%; change in forced vital capacity (Delta FVC) = +24.1 +/- 22.7%; change in carbon monoxide lung diffusion capacity (Delta DLCO) = +19.3 +/- 34.8%; change in 6-min walk test (Delta 6MWD) = +28.7 +/- 59.6 m; change in Medical Research Council Dyspnea (Delta MRCD) score = -1.0 +/- 1.04 units; change in St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (Delta SGRQ) score = -9.9 +/- 15.3 units] than for GOLD stage IV patients (n = 7; Delta RV/TLC = -0.5 +/- 6.4%; Delta FEV 1 = +2.3 +/- 12.3%; Delta FVC = +2.6 +/- 21.1%; Delta DLCO = -2.8 +/- 17.2%; Delta 6MWD = +28.3 +/- 58.4 m; Delta MRCD = 0.3 +/- 0.81 units; Delta SGRQ = -6.7 +/- 7.0 units). Conclusions: ELS therapy shows promise for treating patients with advanced heterogeneous emphysema. Additional studies to assess responses in a larger cohort with a longer follow-up are warranted. Copyright (C) 2011 S. Karger AG, Base
The ZEUS Forward Plug Calorimeter with Lead-Scintillator Plates and WLS Fiber Readout
A Forward Plug Calorimeter (FPC) for the ZEUS detector at HERA has been built
as a shashlik lead-scintillator calorimeter with wave length shifter fiber
readout. Before installation it was tested and calibrated using the X5 test
beam facility of the SPS accelerator at CERN. Electron, muon and pion beams in
the momentum range of 10 to 100 GeV/c were used. Results of these measurements
are presented as well as a calibration monitoring system based on a Co
source.Comment: 38 pages (Latex); 26 figures (ps
Large scale cosmic-ray anisotropy with KASCADE
The results of an analysis of the large scale anisotropy of cosmic rays in
the PeV range are presented. The Rayleigh formalism is applied to the right
ascension distribution of extensive air showers measured by the KASCADE
experiment.The data set contains about 10^8 extensive air showers in the energy
range from 0.7 to 6 PeV. No hints for anisotropy are visible in the right
ascension distributions in this energy range. This accounts for all showers as
well as for subsets containing showers induced by predominantly light
respectively heavy primary particles. Upper flux limits for Rayleigh amplitudes
are determined to be between 10^-3 at 0.7 PeV and 10^-2 at 6 PeV primary
energy.Comment: accepted by The Astrophysical Journa
Alternatives to Extension’s Future
Emphasis should be on meeting the needs of people wherever they live
Development of measurement techniques for comparative sociological analysis of rural communities
Human Resources
In resource development, it is more important to develop human resources than natural resources, according to the author. He contends that to fully develop these human resources, low-income people must develop a desire to better themselves. But how can we motivate the unmotivated? The author suggests involving the poor in group participation at the neighborhood level. Recognizing the fact that often the poor drop out of a group before they can be helped, he explores the reasons people join groups and the effect of the environment on desires and interests. Implications are given for working with the poor in neighborhood activities and organizations
Development of a Research Roadmap Related to Safe and Reliable Transportation of Ethanol in Pipelines
Scope
Phase 1 Results Suggested Projects for Near Future
Phase 1 Results Other Recommendations
Phase 2 Results Roadmap of All Future Projects
Phase 2 Results Roadmap of All Future Projects (cont.)
Recommended Project 1: Safety of Transporting Blends Containing More than 10 Percent Ethanol
Recommended Project 3: Technical and Economic Feasibility of Preventing SCC Through Control of Oxygen
Recommended Project 4: Feasibility of Preventing SCC by Using Inhibitors
Recommended Project 5: Compatibility of Non-ferrous Metals with Ethanol
Recommended Project 6: Phenomenological Understanding of Ethanol SCC
Other Recommended Actions
Full Project Pla
Acceleration of heavy and light particles in turbulence: comparison between experiments and direct numerical simulations
We compare experimental data and numerical simulations for the dynamics of
inertial particles with finite density in turbulence. In the experiment,
bubbles and solid particles are optically tracked in a turbulent flow of water
using an Extended Laser Doppler Velocimetry technique. The probability density
functions (PDF) of particle accelerations and their auto-correlation in time
are computed. Numerical results are obtained from a direct numerical simulation
in which a suspension of passive pointwise particles is tracked, with the same
finite density and the same response time as in the experiment. We observe a
good agreement for both the variance of acceleration and the autocorrelation
timescale of the dynamics; small discrepancies on the shape of the acceleration
PDF are observed. We discuss the effects induced by the finite size of the
particles, not taken into account in the present numerical simulations.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Acceleration of generalized hypergeometric functions through precise remainder asymptotics
We express the asymptotics of the remainders of the partial sums {s_n} of the
generalized hypergeometric function q+1_F_q through an inverse power series z^n
n^l \sum_k c_k/n^k, where the exponent l and the asymptotic coefficients {c_k}
may be recursively computed to any desired order from the hypergeometric
parameters and argument. From this we derive a new series acceleration
technique that can be applied to any such function, even with complex
parameters and at the branch point z=1. For moderate parameters (up to
approximately ten) a C implementation at fixed precision is very effective at
computing these functions; for larger parameters an implementation in higher
than machine precision would be needed. Even for larger parameters, however,
our C implementation is able to correctly determine whether or not it has
converged; and when it converges, its estimate of its error is accurate.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX2e. Fixed sign error in Eq. (2.28), added
several references, added comparison to other methods, and added discussion
of recursion stabilit
Turbulent thermal diffusion in a multi-fan turbulence generator with the imposed mean temperature gradient
We studied experimentally the effect of turbulent thermal diffusion in a
multi-fan turbulence generator which produces a nearly homogeneous and
isotropic flow with a small mean velocity. Using Particle Image Velocimetry and
Image Processing techniques we showed that in a turbulent flow with an imposed
mean vertical temperature gradient (stably stratified flow) particles
accumulate in the regions with the mean temperature minimum. These experiments
detected the effect of turbulent thermal diffusion in a multi-fan turbulence
generator for relatively high Reynolds numbers. The experimental results are in
compliance with the results of the previous experimental studies of turbulent
thermal diffusion in oscillating grids turbulence (Buchholz et al. 2004;
Eidelman et al. 2004). We demonstrated that turbulent thermal diffusion is an
universal phenomenon. It occurs independently of the method of turbulence
generation, and the qualitative behavior of particle spatial distribution in
these very different turbulent flows is similar. Competition between turbulent
fluxes caused by turbulent thermal diffusion and turbulent diffusion determines
the formation of particle inhomogeneities.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure, REVTEX4, Experiments in Fluids, in pres
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