24 research outputs found

    Evolution of Precipitate Microstructure During Creep of an AA7449 T7651 Aluminum Alloy.

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    International audienceCreep forming is a process where plastic deformation is applied at the material's aging temperature. It enables to obtain parts of complex shape with reduced internal stresses and finds applications, for instance, in the aerospace industry. In this article, we report in-situ small-angle X-ray scattering measurements during creep experiments carried out on an AA7449 Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy in the T7651 temper. In the range of temperatures of 413 K to 453 K (140 A degrees C to 180 A degrees C), we show that the initial microstructure is not stable with respect to the applied stress/strain. Accelerated precipitation coarsening is shown to occur, clearly related to the plastic deformation. This strain-induced microstructure evolution is shown to happen even at temperatures well below the aging temperature that has led to the initial temper

    Risk of recurrence after local resection of T1 rectal cancer: a meta-analysis with meta-regression

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    Background T1 rectal cancer (RC) patients are increasingly being treated by local resection alone but uniform surveillance strategies thereafter are lacking. To determine whether different local resection techniques influence the risk of recurrence and cancer-related mortality, a meta-analysis was performed.Methods A systematic search was conducted for T1RC patients treated with local surgical resection. The primary outcome was the risk of RC recurrence and RC-related mortality. Pooled estimates were calculated using mixed-effect logistic regression. We also systematically searched and evaluated endoscopically treated T1RC patients in a similar manner.Results In 2585 unique T1RC patients (86 studies) undergoing local surgical resection, the overall pooled cumulative incidence of recurrence was 9.1% (302 events, 95% CI 7.3-11.4%; I-2 = 68.3%). In meta-regression, the recurrence risk was associated with histological risk status (p < 0.005; low-risk 6.6%, 95% CI 4.4-9.7% vs. high-risk 28.2%, 95% CI 19-39.7%) and local surgical resection technique (p <0.005; TEM/TAMIS 7.7%, 95% CI 5.3-11.0% vs. other local surgical excisions 10.8%, 95% CI 6.7-16.8%). In 641 unique T1RC patients treated with flexible endoscopic excision (16 studies), the risk of recurrence (7.7%, 95% CI 5.2-11.2%), cancer-related mortality (2.3%, 95% CI 1.1-4.9), and cancer-related mortality among patients with recurrence (30.0%, 95% CI 14.7-49.4%) were comparable to outcomes after TEM/TAMIS (risk of recurrence 7.7%, 95% CI 5.3-11.0%, cancer-related mortality 2.8%, 95% CI 1.2-6.2% and among patients with recurrence 35.6%, 95% CI 21.9-51.2%).Conclusions Patients with T1 rectal cancer may have a significantly lower recurrence risk after TEM/TAMIS compared to other local surgical resection techniques. After TEM/TAMIS and endoscopic resection the recurrence risk, cancer-related mortality and cancer-related mortality among patients with recurrence were comparable. Recurrence was mainly dependent on histological risk status.[GRAPHICS]
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