259 research outputs found

    Relationship between notch strengthening threshold and mechanical property for ductile cast iron

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    In this study, dynamic tensile tests were conducted at the various strain rates and temperatures for traditional ductile cast iron. Then, the notch strength σ B noth and the static tensile strength at room temperature σ B, RT smooth were discussed in terms of the strain rate- temperature parameter R, which is known to be useful for evaluating the combined influence of strain rate and temperature. This study focuses on the notch strengthening threshold R gE R th where σ B noth is larger than σ B, RT smooth and therefore notched components can be used safely. In other words, if R gE R th, σ B, RT smooth can be used to evaluate notched components in mechanical design to prevent the instantaneous fracture. In this study, it was found that the R th value can be predicted from the static tensile property and Brinell hardness. Since the traditional ductile cast iron considered in this paper has a broad range of mechanical properties, the present approach and discussion can be applied to evaluate other materials under various temperature and strain rate.2018 International Conference on Material Strength and Applied Mechanics (MSAM 2018), 10–13 April 2018, Kitakyushu City, Japa

    Involvement of APC and K-ras mutation in non-polypoid colorectal tumorigenesis

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    The aim of this study was to clarify the role of APC and K- ras mutations in non-polypoid colorectal tumorigenesis. DNA from 63 adenomas (31 polypoid, 17 superficial elevated, 15 superficial depressed), 66 submucosally invasive carcinomas (47 polypoid, 19 non-polypoid) and 34 advanced carcinomas were examined for K- ras codon 12 point mutations and APC mutations in the mutation cluster region. K- ras mutation: the frequency in superficial depressed adenomas was lower than that in polypoid adenomas (0% vs 31%: P = 0.018). The frequency in non-polypoid carcinomas was lower than that in polypoid carcinomas (11% vs 56%: P = 0.0008), and was relatively low compared with that in polypoid adenomas (11% vs 31%). APC mutation: the frequency in superficial depressed adenomas was lower than that in polypoid adenomas (7% vs 43%: P = 0.016), and that in polypoid carcinomas was similar to that in non-polypoid carcinomas. Polypoid adenomas, polypoid carcinomas and advanced carcinomas had almost the same frequency. There may be some pathway other than the conventional adenoma-carcinoma sequence in development of non-polypoid carcinomas. The precursors of most non-polypoid carcinomas are considered to be de novo or superficial depressed adenomas. In this non-polypoid pathway, APC mutation seems to be requisite but K- ras mutation not. It is possible that new APC mutations are acquired after the development of superficial depressed adenomas. © Copyright 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    Influence of Strain Rate for Notch- Bend strength on ductile Cast Iron

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    In this study, the notch-bend strength (σb,max) which is useful to structural design was considered for High Si Solid Solution Strengthened Ferritic Ductile Cast Iron. Then, the application of the high Si ductile cast iron to wide industrial fields was discussed at room temperature. Dynamic three-point bending tests were conducted on Charpy V-notch specimens in the range of stroke speed, 10-3~102 mm/s, at 22°C. Even though the absorbed energy of fracture process was in the lower shelf region, the notch-bend strength (b,max) did notdecrease with increasing the strain rate. These results indicate b,max is insensitive to the strain rate. Therefore, the authors think that the high Si ductile cast iron has wide industrial application potentiality at room temperature.Proceedings of 5th International Conference on Fracture Fatigue and Wear, FFW 2016, 24-26 August 2016, Kitakyushu, Japa

    Circulating Cell-Free DNA in Dogs with Mammary Tumors: Short and Long Fragments and Integrity Index

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    Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) has been considered an interesting diagnostic/prognostic plasma biomarker in tumor-bearing subjects. In cancer patients, cfDNA can hypothetically derive from tumor necrosis/apoptosis, lysed circulating cells, and some yet unrevealed mechanisms of active release. This study aimed to preliminarily analyze cfDNA in dogs with canine mammary tumors (CMTs). Forty-four neoplastic, 17 non-neoplastic disease-bearing, and 15 healthy dogs were recruited. Necrosis and apoptosis were also assessed as potential source of cfDNA on 78 CMTs diagnosed from the 44 dogs. The cfDNA fragments and integrity index significantly differentiated neoplastic versus non-neoplastic dogs (P<0.05), and allowed the distinction between benign and malignant lesions (P<0.05). Even if without statistical significance, the amount of cfDNA was also affected by tumor necrosis and correlated with tumor size and apoptotic markers expression. A significant (P<0.01) increase of Bcl-2 in malignant tumors was observed, and in metastatic CMTs the evasion of apoptosis was also suggested. This study, therefore, provides evidence that cfDNA could be a diagnostic marker in dogs carrying mammary nodules suggesting that its potential application in early diagnostic procedures should be further investigated

    Pulmonary Macrophages Attenuate Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction via beta(3)AR/iNOS Pathway in Rats Exposed to Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia

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    Chronic intermittent hypoxia (IH) induces activation of the sympathoadrenal system, which plays a pivotal role in attenuating hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) via central beta(1)-adrenergic receptors (AR) (brain) and peripheral beta(2)AR (pulmonary arteries). Prolonged hypercatecholemia has been shown to upregulate beta(3)AR. However, the relationship between IH and beta(3)AR in the modification of HPV is unknown. It has been observed that chronic stimulation of beta(3)AR upregulates inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in cardiomyocytes and that IH exposure causes expression of iNOS in RAW264.7 macrophages. iNOS has been shown to have the ability to dilate pulmonary vessels. Hence, we hypothesized that chronic IH activates beta(3)AR/iNOS signaling in pulmonary macrophages, leading to the promotion of NO secretion and attenuated HPV. Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to IH (3-min periods of 4-21% O-2) for 8 h/d for 6 weeks. The urinary catecholamine concentrations of IH rats were high compared with those of controls, indicating activation of the sympathoadrenal system following chronic IH. Interestingly, chronic IH induced the migration of circulating monocytes into the lungs and the predominant increase in the number of proinflammatory pulmonary macrophages. In these macrophages, both beta(3)AR and iNOS were upregulated and stimulation of the beta(3)AR/iNOS pathway in vitro caused them to promote NO secretion. Furthermore, in vivo synchrotron radiation microangiography showed that HPV was significantly attenuated in IH rats and the attenuated HPV was fully restored by blockade of beta(3)AR/iNOS pathway or depletion of pulmonary macrophages. These results suggest that circulating monocyte-derived pulmonary macrophages attenuate HPV via activation of beta(3)AR/iNOS signaling in chronic IH

    A Kinematic Approach for Efficient and Robust Simulation of the Cardiac Beating Motion

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    Computer simulation techniques for cardiac beating motions potentially have many applications and a broad audience. However, most existing methods require enormous computational costs and often show unstable behavior for extreme parameter sets, which interrupts smooth simulation study and make it difficult to apply them to interactive applications. To address this issue, we present an efficient and robust framework for simulating the cardiac beating motion. The global cardiac motion is generated by the accumulation of local myocardial fiber contractions. We compute such local-to-global deformations using a kinematic approach; we divide a heart mesh model into overlapping local regions, contract them independently according to fiber orientation, and compute a global shape that satisfies contracted shapes of all local regions as much as possible. A comparison between our method and a physics-based method showed that our method can generate motion very close to that of a physics-based simulation. Our kinematic method has high controllability; the simulated ventricle-wall-contraction speed can be easily adjusted to that of a real heart by controlling local contraction timing. We demonstrate that our method achieves a highly realistic beating motion of a whole heart in real time on a consumer-level computer. Our method provides an important step to bridge a gap between cardiac simulations and interactive applications

    A genetic algorithm for the one-dimensional cutting stock problem with setups

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    This paper investigates the one-dimensional cutting stock problem considering two conflicting objective functions: minimization of both the number of objects and the number of different cutting patterns used. A new heuristic method based on the concepts of genetic algorithms is proposed to solve the problem. This heuristic is empirically analyzed by solving randomly generated instances and also practical instances from a chemical-fiber company. The computational results show that the method is efficient and obtains positive results when compared to other methods from the literature. © 2014 Brazilian Operations Research Society
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