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1.
Eur Phys J C Part Fields ; 84(5): 518, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38784120

ABSTRACT

Noble element time projection chambers are a leading technology for rare event detection in physics, such as for dark matter and neutrinoless double beta decay searches. Time projection chambers typically assign event position in the drift direction using the relative timing of prompt scintillation and delayed charge collection signals, allowing for reconstruction of an absolute position in the drift direction. In this paper, alternate methods for assigning event drift distance via quantification of electron diffusion in a pure high pressure xenon gas time projection chamber are explored. Data from the NEXT-White detector demonstrate the ability to achieve good position assignment accuracy for both high- and low-energy events. Using point-like energy deposits from 83mKr calibration electron captures (E∼45 keV), the position of origin of low-energy events is determined to 2 cm precision with bias <1mm. A convolutional neural network approach is then used to quantify diffusion for longer tracks (E≥1.5 MeV), from radiogenic electrons, yielding a precision of 3 cm on the event barycenter. The precision achieved with these methods indicates the feasibility energy calibrations of better than 1% FWHM at Qßß in pure xenon, as well as the potential for event fiducialization in large future detectors using an alternate method that does not rely on primary scintillation.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 120(13): 132504, 2018 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29694208

ABSTRACT

A new method to tag the barium daughter in the double-beta decay of ^{136}Xe is reported. Using the technique of single molecule fluorescent imaging (SMFI), individual barium dication (Ba^{++}) resolution at a transparent scanning surface is demonstrated. A single-step photobleach confirms the single ion interpretation. Individual ions are localized with superresolution (∼2 nm), and detected with a statistical significance of 12.9σ over backgrounds. This lays the foundation for a new and potentially background-free neutrinoless double-beta decay technology, based on SMFI coupled to high pressure xenon gas time projection chambers.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 133(12): 124316, 2010 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20886941

ABSTRACT

A new experimental technique for measuring the mobilities of positive ions in their parent gases is presented. The technique was applied to the rare gases, Ar, Kr, and Xe, and, for pressures typically below 10 Torr, two different types of positive ions were observed. The reduced mobilities of these ions in their parent gases were measured as a function of E/N, the ratio of the electric field strength to the gas number density, at a temperature of 300±1 K. The results were compared with others available in the literature and the two ions were identified as being the atomic and the dimer rare gas ions. The results are in good agreement with those from other authors. Space charge and impurities effects are discussed.

4.
Brain Res Bull ; 81(6): 595-9, 2010 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20100550

ABSTRACT

The elevated plus-maze is an animal model used to study anxiety. In a second session, rats show a reduction in the exploratory behavior even when the two sessions are separated by intervals as large as 7 days. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the reduction in the exploratory behavior is maintained after intervals larger than 7 days. Additionally, we aimed at investigating eventual correlations between behaviors in the plus-maze and activation of limbic structures as measured by Fos protein expression after the second session. Rats were tested for 5 min in the elevated plus-maze and re-tested 3, 9 or 33 days later. Other groups were tested only once. The rat brains were processed for immunohistochemical detection of Fos protein. The results show a decrease in the open arms exploration in the second trial with intervals of 3, 9 and 33 days. The expression of Fos protein in the piriform cortex, septal nucleus and paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus in the groups tested with intervals of 9 and 33 days were statistically different from the other groups. The alterations observed in exploratory behavior in the second session in the plus-maze did not correlate with Fos expression. In conclusion, although the specific test conditions were sufficient to evoke behavioral alterations in exploration in the elevated plus-maze, they were enough to induce significant Fos protein expression in piriform cortex, septal nucleus and thalamic and hypothalamic paraventricular nuclei but not in other areas such as dorsomedial nucleus of the hypothalamus and amygdala nuclei, known to be also active participants in circuits controlling fear and anxiety.


Subject(s)
Exploratory Behavior/physiology , Limbic System/metabolism , Maze Learning/physiology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Cell Count , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Motor Activity/physiology , Neurons/metabolism , Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus/metabolism , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Septal Nuclei/metabolism , Time Factors
6.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav ; 63(1): 63-9, 1999 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10340525

ABSTRACT

The elevated T-maze, an ethologically based test, has been used to investigate the effects of anxiolytic drugs on memory and the relationships between neural systems involved in such modulation. This test allows the measurement in the same rat of two kinds of aversively motivated behaviors--inhibitory avoidance and one-way escape. The apparatus consists of three arms of equal dimensions, elevated 50 cm from the floor. One arm is enclosed by walls and stands perpendicular to the two open arms. Placing the rat at the end of the enclosed arm and recording the time to withdraw from this arm during three consecutive trials assesses inhibitory avoidance. Soon afterwards, the rat is placed at the end of one of the open arms and the time to leave this arm recorded as escape response. Three days later memory is assessed by reexposing the rats to the maze. One critical question raised by these studies is whether the anterograde amnesia induced by anxiolytic drugs could be due to insufficient learning during training or to amnesia. The present work investigated whether the introduction of a multitrial training-to-criterion procedure could overcome this question. For this purpose, rats were tested as many times as needed to stay in the enclosed arm continuously for 300 s (avoidance learning to criterion). Results from Experiment 1 showed that rats trained to a learning criterion shows significantly better retention performance. Experiment 2 evaluated the effects of pretraining diazepam (DZP) treatment on this training-to-criterion protocol. The results indicate that DZP did not affect acquisition performance but induced a dose-dependent impairment of the inhibitory avoidance in the memory test. One-way escape (latency to enter the enclosed compartment from the open arms) was not affected by DZP. These results rule out the possibility that the impairment of inhibitory avoidance memory in the elevated T-maze could be due to lack of learning during training, and support the hypothesis that the disruptive effects of DZP are on processes involved in long-term storage of information.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning/physiology , Emotions , Escape Reaction , Maze Learning/physiology , Memory/physiology , Amnesia/chemically induced , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Anti-Anxiety Agents/pharmacology , Diazepam/pharmacology , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar
7.
Circulation ; 70(4): 538-46, 1984 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6541102

ABSTRACT

We analyzed long-term follow-up data accumulated during an 8 year study of survivors of prehospital cardiac arrest. All patients included in this study were primary entrants via community-based rescue systems; patients who were tertiary referrals (survivors of cardiac arrest from other hospitals) were not included in this analysis. In the group of 61 patients entering our study between 1975 and 1980, with a follow-up to 1983, there have been a total of 24 deaths (39%). Sixteen of the 24 deaths were the result of recurrent cardiac arrest; eight were nonsudden cardiac deaths or noncardiac deaths. The mean duration from entry to death in the nonsurvivors was 27.5 +/- 19.7 months, and the time from the index event to last follow-up in the long-term survivors was 59.9 +/- 19.4 months. Life table analysis demonstrated a 10% rate of recurrence of cardiac arrest in the first year, with a 5% per year rate in each of the subsequent 3 years. Left ventricular ejection fractions at entry were not significantly different between survivors (mean = 45.3 +/- 13.6%) and nonsurvivors (mean = 37.6 +/- 12.6%), and the severity of ejection fraction abnormality at entry did not correlate with time to death in the nonsurvivors. However, ejection fraction was significantly lower in patients who died from causes other than recurrent cardiac arrest than in those who died of cardiac arrest (24.5 +/- 9.1% vs 42.7 +/- 9.2%; p less than .002).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Heart Arrest/mortality , Anti-Arrhythmia Agents/therapeutic use , Cardiac Output/drug effects , Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic/complications , Coronary Disease/complications , Death, Sudden/etiology , Electrocardiography , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Arrest/therapy , Heart Valve Diseases/complications , Heart Ventricles/drug effects , Hospitalization , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Recurrence , Resuscitation/methods , Tachycardia/mortality , Ventricular Fibrillation/mortality
9.
Circulation ; 64(2): 280-90, 1981 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7249296

ABSTRACT

We compared the relationship between plasma levels of procainamide and suppression or prevention of various forms of ventricular arrhythmias in 18 patients, six of whom had premature ventricular complexes (PVCs) during acute myocardial infarction (AMI), six of whom had PVCs in the setting of stable chronic ischemic heart disease (CIHD), and six of whom had recurrent symptomatic ventricular tachycardia (VT) with chronic PVCs between episodes of VT. The mean plasma level of procainamide required for 85% suppression of PVCs in the AMI patients was 5.0 +/- 0.5 micrograms/ml, while that required for the CIHD patients was 9.3 +/- 0.7 micrograms/ml (p less than 0.05). The mean plasma level required for prevention of spontaneous episodes of symptomatic sustained tachycardia in the VT group was 9.1 +/- 3.4 micrograms/ml, while the mean level required for 85% suppression of PVCs in the same patients was 14.9 +/- 3.8 micrograms/ml (p less than 0.01). In the VT group, PVC frequency was decreased by a mean of only 36% (range 11-63%) at plasma levels of procainamide sufficient to prevent spontaneous VT. The relationship between plasma levels of procainamide and PVC suppression appears to be different in AMI and CIHD patients; furthermore, a high degree of PVC suppression is not a necessary endpoint of antiarrhythmic therapy when attempting to protect patients against recurrent symptomatic VT.


Subject(s)
Electrocardiography , Procainamide/blood , Tachycardia/drug therapy , Acute Disease , Aged , Chronic Disease , Coronary Disease/drug therapy , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Heart Ventricles/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/drug therapy , Procainamide/therapeutic use , Recurrence
11.
Chest ; 72(2): 235-8, 1977 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-884989

ABSTRACT

A 47-year-old man experienced ventricular fibrillation three times during a 3 1/2-year period. Each episode was preceded by an auditory aura, and no ventricular irritability was identified between episodes. The results of coronary arteriographic, hemodynamic, and intracardiac electrophysiologic studies were all normal. Hypokalemia and abnormal oxyhemoglobin dissociation were present. The possible relationships of these unusual features to the patient's disturbances in rhythm are discussed.


Subject(s)
Tinnitus/etiology , Unconsciousness/etiology , Ventricular Fibrillation/complications , Diphosphoglyceric Acids/analysis , Electrocardiography , Erythrocytes/analysis , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Oxyhemoglobins/analysis , Pacemaker, Artificial , Ventricular Fibrillation/diagnosis , Ventricular Fibrillation/therapy
12.
Circulation ; 55(6): 892-5, 1977 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-870247

ABSTRACT

Two exercise tests were performed with an intervening rest period of 45 minutes in a group of 13 subjects with previously identified exercise-induced ventricular arrhythmias and no resting arrhythmias. Both normal subjects and patients with heart disease were included in the group. The level of stresss was equal in both tests as judged by similar rate-pressure products at peak exercise. There was a significant decrease (P less than 0.05) in the number of VPCs induced by exercise during and after the second test. When the number of VPCs on test I and test II in the same patients were compared, a regression line fitted the data well (r = 0.92). Analysis of the recovery periods revealed significant (P less than 0.01) decreases in systolic blood pressure at one and three minutes post exercise, comparing the second to the first test. The underlying mechanism may be decreased myocardial oxygen demand during the second test as the lowered rate-pressure products during recovery (P less than 0.01) reflect. The results of this study indicate that tests of effectiveness of an antiarrhythmic drug should not be based solely on a decrease in the amount of severity of ventricular irritability between two successive exercise tests, one immediately before and the other following administration of the drug.


Subject(s)
Arrhythmias, Cardiac/physiopathology , Heart Ventricles/physiopathology , Physical Exertion , Adult , Aged , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/etiology , Blood Pressure , Exercise Test , Female , Heart Rate , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
13.
Am J Cardiol ; 36(7): 889-93, 1975 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1081832

ABSTRACT

Sixty-one patients were selected from 100 consecutive patients under-going aortocoronary artery bypass. The number of vessels diseased as defined by coronary arteriography and the number of bypass grafts were recorded. Review of the preoperative electrocardiograms showed an infarct pattern in 26 of the 61 patients and analysis of the postoperative electrocardiograms revealed loss of abnormal Q waves in 3 of the 26. The pre- and postoperative clinical course of these three patients is analyzed and the extent of their coronary artery disease and number of bypass grafts compared with those of the 23 patients who had persistence of the infarction pattern and the 17 patients who manifested new Q waves. Possible explanations for the disappearance of abnormal Q waves are discussed.


Subject(s)
Coronary Artery Bypass , Coronary Disease/physiopathology , Heart Conduction System/physiopathology , Aged , Electrocardiography , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
15.
Am J Cardiol ; 35(6): 912-7, 1975 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1130292

ABSTRACT

A case is presented of bacterial endocarditis with a ruptured sinus of Valsalva and formation of an aorticocardiac fistula from the right coronary sinus into the right atrium and right ventricle. The pathologic, clinical and surgical aspects of bacterial endocarditis complicated by a ruptured sinus of Valsalva and an aorticocardiac fistula are analyzed. This complication of bacterial endocarditis is still uncommon, but alertness to its diagnosis makes possible early and successful surgical treatment.


Subject(s)
Aortic Rupture/etiology , Endocarditis, Bacterial/complications , Fistula/etiology , Adult , Aortic Rupture/surgery , Cardiac Catheterization , Fistula/surgery , Humans , Male
16.
Am J Cardiol ; 35(5): 691-5, 1975 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1124724

ABSTRACT

Transient abnormal Q waves were seen in two patients with Prinzmetal's angina during episodes of chest pain. The Q waves appeared recurrently while the patients had chest pain and disappeared when it subsided, indicating that Q waves suggestive of myocardial infarction can be seen with severe myocardial ischemia without actual necrosis. We describe these two patients, the various conditions in which transient abnormal Q waves have been reported and the theories offered to explain this electrophysiologic finding.


Subject(s)
Angina Pectoris/physiopathology , Heart Conduction System/physiopathology , Myocardial Infarction/diagnosis , Electrocardiography , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/physiopathology
17.
Am J Cardiol ; 35(2): 309-14, 1975 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1119392

ABSTRACT

Three patients, 24, 24 and 25 years of age, with systemic lupus erythematosus had signs of myocardial infarction. Two had serial electrocardiographic changes indicative of infarction without any cardiac symptoms. The third patient had clinical evidence of an acute massive myocardial infarction, which was proved at autopsy to be due to coronary atherosclerosis. This case is presented in detail and the association between systemic lupus erythematosus and myocardial infarction is reviewed. It is postulated that the relation between lupus erythematosus and coronary atherosclerosis is more than coincidental.


Subject(s)
Arteriosclerosis/complications , Coronary Disease/complications , Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic/complications , Myocardial Infarction/etiology , Adult , Age Factors , Arteriosclerosis/etiology , Autopsy , Coronary Disease/etiology , Electrocardiography , Female , Humans , Male , Myocardial Infarction/diagnosis , Myocardial Infarction/pathology
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