229 research outputs found
Thermal and hydrodynamic effects in the ordering of lamellar fluids
Phase separation in a complex fluid with lamellar order has been studied in
the case of cold thermal fronts propagating diffusively from external walls.
The velocity hydrodynamic modes are taken into account by coupling the
convection-diffusion equation for the order parameter to a generalised
Navier-Stokes equation. The dynamical equations are simulated by implementing a
hybrid method based on a lattice Boltzmann algorithm coupled to finite
difference schemes. Simulations show that the ordering process occurs with
morphologies depending on the speed of the thermal fronts or, equivalently, on
the value of the thermal conductivity {\xi}. At large value of {\xi}, as in
instantaneous quenching, the system is frozen in entangled configurations at
high viscosity while consists of grains with well ordered lamellae at low
viscosity. By decreasing the value of {\xi}, a regime with very ordered
lamellae parallel to the thermal fronts is found. At very low values of {\xi}
the preferred orientation is perpendicular to the walls in d = 2, while
perpendicular order is lost moving far from the walls in d = 3.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Phil. Trans. of Royal
Soc, Ser
Excimer laser coronary angioplasty in the Netherlands: preamble for a randomized study
The immediate outcome of ELCA by XeCl excimer laser radiation is described in 53 patients who were selected to undergo ELCA from December 1990 to September 1991 in two centers that are currently performing ELCA in the Netherlands. Immediate success rates on the basis of visual assessment of the angiogram were as follows. Laser success (> 20% reduction of diameter stenosis after ELCA alone) was observed in 77% of patients, procedural success (< 50% residual stenosis after ELCA with or without adjunctive balloon dilatation [PTCA]) in 91%, and clinical success (procedural success without clinical complications) in 83% of patients. Quantitative coronary angiography by automated contour detection was performed in 31 patients who underwent ELCA in the Thoraxcenter. The minimal luminal diameter (mean +/- SD) of the treated coronary segments increased from 0.77 +/- 0.41 mm to 1.24 +/- 0.25 mm after ELCA and further to 1.67 +/- 0.29 mm after adjunctive PTCA in 25 patients. The present experience is put in perspective of results initially reported by other centers and compared with data from multicenter registries of ELCA. Finally, a short description is given of the design of a prospective, randomized trial of ELCA versus conventional PTCA (AMRO trial)
Response of conductance and resistance coronary vessels to scalar concentrations of acetylcholine: Assessment with quantitative angiography and intracoronary Doppler echography in 29 patients with coronary artery disease
Abnormal vasoreactivity of the large conductance arteries has been observed in the presence of impaired endothelial function. More recently, experimental and clinical reports have shown that in early coronary atherosclerosis the impairment of the endothelium-mediated vasodilatation also involves the resistance arteries. The aim of this study is the correlation of endothelium-dependent vasodilatation of conductance and resistance vessels in coronary arteries without significant stenoses. In 29 patients (aged 57 +/- 9 years, 24 men and 5 women) undergoing coronary angioplasty, a Doppler guide wire and a perfusion catheter were introduced into the proximal segment of an artery with less than 30% diameter stenosis. Selective infusions of papaverine (bolus of 7 mg), acetylcholine (continuous infusion of 0.036, 0.36, and 3.6 micrograms/ml at a flow rate of 2 ml/min), and isosorbide dinitrate (bolus of 3 mg) were sequentially performed. Heart rate, aortic blood pressure, and blood flow velocity were continuously measured. Mean cross-sectional areas of a proximal and a distal arterial segment were measured in baseline conditions, at the end of each infusion of acetylcholine, and at the peak effect of isosorbide dinitrate with quantitative angiography (CAAS System; Pie Medical Data, Maastricht, The Netherlands). Coronary blood flow was calculated from the time-averaged flow velocity and the cross-sectional area at the site of the Doppler sample volume. Coronary flow resistance was calculated as mean aortic pressure divided by coronary flow. All of the concentrations of acetylcholine induced a significant vasoconstriction of the studied artery. At the maximal concentration of acetylcholine all but three patients (90%) showed a reduction of cross-sectional area (-24% +/- 20% and -22% +/- 20% for the proximal and distal segments, respectively, p < 0.00001). Flow velocity showed a significant increase only with the two highest concentrations of acetylcholine. The maximal concentration induce
Immediate and late outcome of excimer laser and balloon coronary angioplasty: A quantitative angiographic comparison based on matched lesions
Objectives.This study sought to compare acute lumen changes and late lumen narrowing during and after excimer laser-assisted balloon angioplasty, measured by quantitative coronary angiography, with the immediate and long-term outcome of balloon angioplasty alone.Background.Although excimer laser coronary angioplasty is used as an adjunct or alternative to balloon angioplasty, limited comparative data exist regarding the immediate and long-term efficacy of excimer laser-assisted balloon angioplasty versus balloon angioplasty alone.Methods.A series of 53 lesions in 47 consecutive patients successfully treated with excimer laser-assisted balloon angioplasty were individually matched after completion of 6-month follow-up angiography with 53 successfully treated balloon angioplasty lesions according to vessel location, preprocedural minimal lumen diameter and reference diameter. Immediate and long-term angiographic results were assessed by an automated lumen contour detection algorithm.Results.Before intervention in the laser and balloon angioplasty groups, respectively, minimal lumen diameter (mean ± SD) was 0.73 ± 0.47 and 0.74 ± 0.46 mm, and reference diameter was 2.71 ± 0.42 and 2.72 ± 0.41 mm. Laser angioplasty was followed by adjunctive balloon dilation in 50 lesions. Mean balloon diameter at maximal inflation was similar in both treatment groups (2.61 ± 0.32 and 2.65 ± 0.38 mm, respectively), resulting in similar minimal lumen diameters after intervention of 1.77 ± 0.41 and 1.78 ± 0.34 mm, respectively. At follow-up angiography, minimal lumen diameter after excimer laser-assisted balloon angioplasty was 1.17 ± 0.63 mm, and that after balloon angioplasty alone was 1.46 ± 0.67 mm (p = 0.02). The angiographic restenosis rates at follow-up using the 50% diameter stenosis cutoff criterion were 57% and 34%, respectively (p = 0.02).Conclusions.Quantitative angiographic analysis of a matched group of 106 successfully treated coronary lesions showed a similar immediate outcome but reduced long-term efficacy of excimer laser-assisted balloon angioplasty compared with that after balloon angioplasty alone
Cauchy boundaries in linearized gravitational theory
We investigate the numerical stability of Cauchy evolution of linearized
gravitational theory in a 3-dimensional bounded domain. Criteria of robust
stability are proposed, developed into a testbed and used to study various
evolution-boundary algorithms. We construct a standard explicit finite
difference code which solves the unconstrained linearized Einstein equations in
the 3+1 formulation and measure its stability properties under Dirichlet,
Neumann and Sommerfeld boundary conditions. We demonstrate the robust stability
of a specific evolution-boundary algorithm under random constraint violating
initial data and random boundary data.Comment: 23 pages including 3 figures and 2 tables, revte
From colored glass condensate to gluon plasma: equilibration in high energy heavy ion collisions
The initial distribution of gluons at the very early times after a high
energy heavy ion collision is described by the bulk scale of gluon
saturation in the nuclear wavefunction. The subsequent evolution of the system
towards kinetic equilibrium is described by a non-linear Landau equation for
the single particle distributions \cite{Mueller1,Mueller2}. In this paper, we
solve this equation numerically for the idealized initial conditions proposed
by Mueller, and study the evolution of the system to equilibrium. We discuss
the sensitivity of our results on the dynamical screening of collinear
divergences. In a particular model of dynamical screening, the convergence to
the hydrodynamic limit is seen to be rapid relative to hydrodynamic time
scales. The equilibration time, the initial temperature, and the chemical
potential are shown to have a strong functional dependence on the initial gluon
saturation scale .Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
Randomised trial of excimer laser angioplasty versus balloon angioplasty for treatment of obstructive coronary artery disease
BACKGROUND: Excimer laser coronary angioplasty is reported to give excellent procedural results for treatment of complex coronary lesions, but this method has not been compared with balloon angioplasty in a randomised trial. METHODS: Patients (n = 308) with stable angina and coronary lesions longer than 10 mm on visual assessment were included. 151 patients (158 lesions) were assigned randomly to laser angioplasty and 157 (167 lesions) to balloon angioplasty. The primary clinical endpoints were death, myocardial infarction, coronary bypass surgery, or repeat coronary angioplasty of the randomised segment during 6 months of follow-up. The primary angiographic endpoint was the minimal lumen diameter at follow-up in relation to the baseline value (net gain), as determined by quantitative coronary angiography. FINDINGS: Laser angioplasty was followed by balloon angioplasty in 98% of procedures. The angiographic success rate was 80% in patients treated with laser angioplasty compared with 79% in patients treated with balloon angioplasty. There were no deaths. Myocardial infarction, coronary bypass surgery, and repeat angioplasty occurred in 4.6%, 10.6%, and 21.2%, respectively, of the patients in the laser angioplasty group compared with 5.7%, 10.8%, and 18.5% of the balloon angioplasty group. Net mean (SD) gain in minimal lumen diameter was 0.40 (0.69) mm in patients treated with laser angioplasty and 0.48 (0.66) mm in those treated with balloon angioplasty (p = 0.34). The restenosis rate (> 50% diameter stenosis) was 51.6% in the laser angioplasty group versus 41.3% in the balloon angioplasty group (p = 0.13). INTERPRETATION: Excimer laser angioplasty followed by balloon angioplasty provides no benefit additional to balloon angioplasty alone with respect to the initial and long-term clinical and angiographic outcome in the treatment of obstructive coronary artery diseas
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