300 research outputs found
Establishment of a Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Registry in Vietnam: Rationale and Methodology
Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s).
Background: In lower- and middle-income countries across Asia there has been a rapid expansion and uptake of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, there has been limited routine collection of related data, particularly around quality, safety and cost. The aim of this study was to assess the viability of implementing routine collection of PCI data in a registry at a leading hospital in Hanoi, Vietnam.
Method: A Vietnamese data collection form and collection strategy were developed in collaboration with the Vietnam National Heart Institute. Information on patient characteristics, treatments, and outcomes was collected through direct interviews using a standardised form and medical record abstraction, while PCI data was read and coded into paper forms by interventional cardiologists. Viability of the registry was determined by four main factors: 1) being able to collect a representative sample; 2) quality of data obtained; 3) costs and time taken for data collection by hospital staff; and 4) level of support from key stakeholders in the institute.
Results: Between September 2017 and May 2018, 1,022 patients undergoing PCI were recruited from a total of 1,041 procedures conducted during that time frame. The estimated mean time to collect information from patients before discharge was 60 minutes. Of the collected data fields, 98% were successfully completed. Most hospital staff surveyed indicated support for the continuation of the activity following the implementation of the pilot study.
Conclusions: The proposed methodology for establishing a PCI registry in a large hospital in Vietnam produced high quality data and was considered worthwhile by hospital staff. The model has the potential opportunity for replication in other cardiac catheterisation sites, leading to a national PCI registry in Vietnam
Point-contact Andreev reflection spectroscopy of heavy-fermion-metal/superconductor junctions
Our previous point-contact Andreev reflection studies of the heavy-fermion
superconductor CeCoIn using Au tips have shown two clear features: reduced
Andreev signal and asymmetric background conductance [1]. To explore their
physical origins, we have extended our measurements to point-contact junctions
between single crystalline heavy-fermion metals and superconducting Nb tips.
Differential conductance spectra are taken on junctions with three
heavy-fermion metals, CeCoIn, CeRhIn, and YbAl, each with different
electron mass. In contrast with Au/CeCoIn junctions, Andreev signal is not
reduced and no dependence on effective mass is observed. A possible explanation
based on a two-fluid picture for heavy fermions is proposed. [1] W. K. Park et
al., Phys. Rev. B 72 052509 (2005); W. K. Park et al., Proc. SPIE-Int. Soc.
Opt. Eng. 5932 59321Q (2005); W. K. Park et al., Physica C (in press)
(cond-mat/0606535).Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, submitted to the SCES conference, Houston, Texas,
USA, May 13-18, 200
Probing The Electronic Structure Of Pure And Doped Cem In5 (m=co,rh,ir) Crystals With Nuclear Quadrupolar Resonance
We report calculations of the electric-field gradients (EFGs) in pure and doped CeM In5 (M=Co, Rh, and Ir) compounds and compare with experiment. The degree to which the Ce4f electron is localized is treated within various models: the local-density approximation, generalized gradient approximation (GGA), GGA+U, and 4f -core approaches. We find that there is a correlation between the observed EFG and whether the 4f electron participates in the band formation or not. We also find that the EFG evolves linearly with Sn doping in CeRhIn5, suggesting the electronic structure is modified by doping. In contrast, the observed EFG in CeCoIn5 doped with Cd changes little with doping. These results indicate that nuclear quadrupolar resonance is a sensitive probe of electronic structure. © 2008 The American Physical Society.7724Slichter, C.P., (1990) Principles of Magnetic Resonance, , 3rd ed. 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Exclusive 16O(γ,π-p) reaction in the Δ resonance region
We report the first exclusive (γ,π-p) measurements on a complex nucleus. The 16O(γ,π-p) reaction was measured at pion laboratory angles of 64° and 120°. Coincident protons were detected over the quasifree angular correlation range using a vertical array of seven plastic scintillator detectors spanning ±33° about the scattering plane. The cross sections are compared to factorized distorted-wave impulse approximation calculations; these provide a good description of the backward angle data, but are in serious disagreement with the forward angle data
Is the Luttinger liquid a new state of matter?
We are demonstrating that the Luttinger model with short range interaction
can be treated as a type of Fermi liquid. In line with the main dogma of
Landau's theory one can define a fermion excitation renormalized by interaction
and show that in terms of these fermions any excited state of the system is
described by free particles. The fermions are a mixture of renormalized right
and left electrons. The electric charge and chirality of the Landau
quasi-particle is discussed.Comment: paper 10 pages. This version of the paper will be published in
Foundations of Physic
Spin-dependent transport in a Luttinger liquid
We develop a detailed theory for spin transport in a one-dimensional quantum
wire described by Luttinger liquid theory. A hydrodynamic description for the
quantum wire is supplemented by boundary conditions taking into account the
exchange coupling between the magnetization of ferromagnetic reservoirs and the
boundary magnetization in the wire. Spin-charge separation is shown to imply
drastic and qualitative consequences for spin-dependent transport. In
particular, the spin accumulation effect is quenched except for fine-tuned
parameter regimes. We propose several feasible setups involving an external
magnetic field to detect this phenomenon in transport experiments on
single-wall carbon nanotubes. In addition, electron-electron backscattering
processes, which do not have an important effect on thermodynamic properties or
charge transport, are shown to modify spin-dependent transport through long
quantum wires in a crucial way.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figure
Proton propagation in nuclei studied in the (e,e’p) reaction
Proton propagation in nuclei was studied using the (e,e’p) reaction in the quasifree region. The coincidence (e,e’p) cross sections were measured at an electron angle of 50.4° and proton angles of 50.1°, 58.2°, 67.9°, and 72.9° for 12C, 27Al, 58Ni, and 181Ta targets at a beam energy of 779.5 MeV. The average outgoing proton energy was 180 MeV. The ratio of the (e,e’p) yield to the simultaneously measured (e,e’) yield was compared to that calculated in the plane-wave impulse approximation and an experimental transmission defined. These experimental transmissions are considerably larger (a factor of ∼2 for 181Ta) than those one would calculate from the free N-N cross sections folded into the nuclear density distribution. A new calculation that includes medium effects (N-N correlations, density dependence of the N-N cross sections and Pauli suppression) accounts for this increase
Tensor polarization in elastic electron-deuteron scattering in the momentum transfer range 3.8≤Q≤4.6 fm-1
The tensor polarization of the recoil deuteron in elastic electron-deuteron scattering has been measured at the Bates Linear Accelerator Center at three values of four-momentum transfer Q=3.78, 4.22, and 4.62 fm-1, corresponding to incident electron energies of 653, 755, and 853 MeV. The scattered electrons and the recoil deuterons were detected in coincidence. The recoil deuterons were transported to a liquid hydrogen target to undergo a second scattering. The angular distribution of the d→-p scattering was measured using a polarimeter. The polarimeter was calibrated in an auxiliary experiment using a polarized deuteron beam at the Laboratoire National Saturne. A Monte Carlo procedure was used to generate interpolated calibration data because the energy spread in the deuteron energies in the Bates experiment spanned the range of deuteron energies in the calibration experiment. The extracted values of t20 are compared to predictions of different theoretical models of the electromagnetic form factors of the deuteron: nonrelativistic and relativistic nucleon-meson dynamics, Skyrme model, quark models, and perturbative quantum chromodynamics. Along with the world data the structure functions A(Q) and B(Q) are used to separate the charge monopole and charge quadrupole form factors of the deuteron. A node in the charge monopole form factor is observed at Q=4.39±0.16 fm-1
Measurement of tensor polarization in elastic electron-deuteron scattering in the momentum-transfer range 3.8≤q≤4.6 fm-1
The tensor polarization t20 of the recoil deuteron in elastic e-d scattering has been measured for three values of four-momentum transfer, q=3.78, 4.22, and 4.62 fm-1. The data have been used to locate the first node in the charge monopole form factor of the deuteron at q=4.39±0.16 fm-1. The results for t20 are in reasonable agreement with expectations based on the nucleon-meson description of nuclear dynamic
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