10 research outputs found

    A High Pressure Apparatus for Neutron Diffraction

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    A high pressure apparatus was developed for thermal neutron diffraction of time-of-flight method. The high pressure vessel was a piston-cylinder type, and Ti-Zr alloy was used as a material of the cylinder. The coherent scattering of neutron is suppressed in Ti-53wt% Zr alloy. The diffraction spectrum is formed of peaks from the specimen and a background, which corresponds to the energy distribution of the incident neutron. High pressure measurements were made in RbBr on the transformation between NaCl-type structure and CsCl-type to a pressure about 20 kb, and a good agreement was confirmed with former experiments

    三瀬所長還歴記念論文集(要報)

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    Universal Solution of Framed Structures.[MISE, Kozaburo] / On the Decay of Torsional Vibration of a Wire-and-Rotator.[SENDA, Kanae] / On the Tables for the Calculation of the Coefficient of Diffusion from the Surface Concentration.[MATANO, Chujiro] / On a Problem of Bending a Steel Beam by Three Rollers.[NEGORO, Shosaburo] / On the Propagation of Spherical Wave of Finite Amplitude.[KUNII, Shujiro] / Stresses in an Orthogonal Aeolotropic Infinite Plate with an Elliptic Hole under Uniform Tension.[HIGUCHI, Masakazu] / On the Slope-Deflection Formulae in Vector Forms for the Three Dimensional Structures.[SUHARA, Jiro] / On the Hardness of the Superlattice Phase in the Mg-Cd System.[SATO, Takao] / On the Approximate Computation of the Critical Load.[NAKAGAWA , Hajime] / On the Mechanism of Disruption.[FUTAGAMI, Tetsugoro

    AKATSUKI returns to Venus

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    Ticagrelor in patients with diabetes and stable coronary artery disease with a history of previous percutaneous coronary intervention (THEMIS-PCI) : a phase 3, placebo-controlled, randomised trial

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    Background: Patients with stable coronary artery disease and diabetes with previous percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), particularly those with previous stenting, are at high risk of ischaemic events. These patients are generally treated with aspirin. In this trial, we aimed to investigate if these patients would benefit from treatment with aspirin plus ticagrelor. Methods: The Effect of Ticagrelor on Health Outcomes in diabEtes Mellitus patients Intervention Study (THEMIS) was a phase 3 randomised, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial, done in 1315 sites in 42 countries. Patients were eligible if 50 years or older, with type 2 diabetes, receiving anti-hyperglycaemic drugs for at least 6 months, with stable coronary artery disease, and one of three other mutually non-exclusive criteria: a history of previous PCI or of coronary artery bypass grafting, or documentation of angiographic stenosis of 50% or more in at least one coronary artery. Eligible patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to either ticagrelor or placebo, by use of an interactive voice-response or web-response system. The THEMIS-PCI trial comprised a prespecified subgroup of patients with previous PCI. The primary efficacy outcome was a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke (measured in the intention-to-treat population). Findings: Between Feb 17, 2014, and May 24, 2016, 11 154 patients (58% of the overall THEMIS trial) with a history of previous PCI were enrolled in the THEMIS-PCI trial. Median follow-up was 3·3 years (IQR 2·8–3·8). In the previous PCI group, fewer patients receiving ticagrelor had a primary efficacy outcome event than in the placebo group (404 [7·3%] of 5558 vs 480 [8·6%] of 5596; HR 0·85 [95% CI 0·74–0·97], p=0·013). The same effect was not observed in patients without PCI (p=0·76, p interaction=0·16). The proportion of patients with cardiovascular death was similar in both treatment groups (174 [3·1%] with ticagrelor vs 183 (3·3%) with placebo; HR 0·96 [95% CI 0·78–1·18], p=0·68), as well as all-cause death (282 [5·1%] vs 323 [5·8%]; 0·88 [0·75–1·03], p=0·11). TIMI major bleeding occurred in 111 (2·0%) of 5536 patients receiving ticagrelor and 62 (1·1%) of 5564 patients receiving placebo (HR 2·03 [95% CI 1·48–2·76], p<0·0001), and fatal bleeding in 6 (0·1%) of 5536 patients with ticagrelor and 6 (0·1%) of 5564 with placebo (1·13 [0·36–3·50], p=0·83). Intracranial haemorrhage occurred in 33 (0·6%) and 31 (0·6%) patients (1·21 [0·74–1·97], p=0·45). Ticagrelor improved net clinical benefit: 519/5558 (9·3%) versus 617/5596 (11·0%), HR=0·85, 95% CI 0·75–0·95, p=0·005, in contrast to patients without PCI where it did not, p interaction=0·012. Benefit was present irrespective of time from most recent PCI. Interpretation: In patients with diabetes, stable coronary artery disease, and previous PCI, ticagrelor added to aspirin reduced cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, and stroke, although with increased major bleeding. In that large, easily identified population, ticagrelor provided a favourable net clinical benefit (more than in patients without history of PCI). This effect shows that long-term therapy with ticagrelor in addition to aspirin should be considered in patients with diabetes and a history of PCI who have tolerated antiplatelet therapy, have high ischaemic risk, and low bleeding risk
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