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1.
Zhonghua Xin Xue Guan Bing Za Zhi ; 44(3): 238-43, 2016 Mar.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26988679

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of transcatheter intervention of paravalvular leakage (PVL) after mitral valve replacement. METHODS: Present respective study included 15 patients (8 males and mean age (53.5±11.7) years) with mitral PVL who underwent interventional therapy in our hospital from April 2014 to May 2015. There were 9 cases with NYHA heart function Ⅲ, 6 cases with NYHA heart function Ⅳ. Left ventricular ejection fraction was (46.8±8.2)%, and mitral regurgitation volume was 12.0 (10.0, 15.0)ml before the intervention. Transcatheter intervention was carried out in the catheterization laboratory or the hybrid operation room with initial local anesthesia. By puncturing femoral artery and implantation of different congenital heart disease devices, the mitral PVL were occluded interventionally. To some complicated cases, the occluder was implanted by puncturing apex and atrial septum. Follow-up evaluation included peri-operational mortality, complications and postoperative residual shunt. RESULTS: The median time between transcatheter intervention and previous operation was 5.0 (0.6, 7.0) years. One patient did not tolerate the operation and occlude was not implanted in this patient. The success rate of transcatheter intervention was 93.3% (14/15). The average operation time was (126.7±56.4)min, and X ray exposure time was (21.0±10.0)min, and median hospitalization time was 7.0 (6.0, 10.0)d. The main post-operative complications included 1 case of hemoptysis, 1 case of acute renal failure, 1 case of hematuria and 4 cases of blood transfusion. The median follow-up time was 7.0 (4.0, 12.0) months. During the follow-up, there was no death and no serious complications. One month after the procedure, left ventricular ejection fraction significantly increased to(52.1±4.3)%, and median mitral regurgitation significantly reduced to 0.5 (0, 2.0)ml (all P<0.05). CONCLUSION: The interventional therapy for PVL after mitral valve replacement is safe and effective, and further studies are warranted to observe the long-term effect of this procedure.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis , Mitral Valve , Female , Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mitral Valve Insufficiency , Postoperative Complications
2.
Plant Dis ; 97(3): 422, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30722386

ABSTRACT

An anthracnose disease was observed on stems of high-bush blueberry plants (Vaccinium corymbosum L.) in Liaoning Province, China in 2012. The typical symptoms consist of sudden wilting and dieback of stems during the growing season. Dark brown lesions originate from infected buds and kill portions of the stems. Lesions have grayish white centers, with the necrotic areas becoming 6 to 8 cm in length. Disinfected stem pieces were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 28°C for 5 to 7 days, after which the emerging colonies were transferred to fresh PDA. All isolates initially produced white growth, but turned pink after 7 days before becoming blackish green. The average colony diameter was 65.5 to 75.0 mm after 7 days. Conidia were aseptate, hyaline, fusiform to ellipsoid, 8.5 to 16.5 × 2.5 to 4.0 µm in size and single celled with two to seven oil globules. Setae were not found on the acervuli. These characteristics matched published descriptions of Colletotrichum acutatum (1) (teleomorph Glomerella acutata). Pathogenicity test was confirmed in 15 2-year-old healthy potted plants of cv. Berkeley. Stems of 10 plants were punctured with flamed needles and sprayed with 5 ml of conidial suspension (106 conidia per ml in sterile distilled water) of isolate LNSW1. Five control plants were inoculated with sterile distilled water. Seven days after inoculation, eight of the 10 blueberry plants exhibited stem lesions, leaf chlorosis, followed by branch dieback 15 days post-inoculation. The symptoms were similar to those observed on diseased plants in the field, and no lesions were observed on control plants. The pathogen was reisolated from the margin of lesions and identified by colony growth characteristics on PDA. PCR amplification of one isolate (LNSW1) was carried out by utilizing the universal rDNA-ITS primer pair ITS1/ITS4. The sequence (557 bp) of isolate LNSW1 (GenBank Accession No. JX392857) showed 99% identity to G. acutata (AB443950) and C. acutatum (AJ749672) in a BLAST search. An approximately 490-bp fragment was amplified from LNSW1 by the species-specific primer pair CaInt2/ITS4 (2). The pathogen was identified as G. acutata (asexual stage: C. acutatum J.H. Simmonds) on the basis of morphological characters, rDNA-ITS sequence analysis, and a PCR product with species-specific primers. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. acutatum in high-bush blueberry plants in China. References: (1) C. Lei et al. Fungal Diversity 12:183, 2009. (2) S. Sreenivasaprasad et al. Plant Pathol. 45:650, 1996.

3.
Plant Dis ; 97(6): 845, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30722632

ABSTRACT

Blueberry (Vaccinium spp.) is becoming increasingly popular in China as a nutritional berry crop. With the expansion of blueberry production, many diseases have become widespread in different regions of China. In August of 2012, stem and leaf spots symptomatic of anthracnose were sporadically observed on highbush blueberries in a field located in Liaoning, China, where approximately 15% of plants were diseased. Symptoms first appeared as yellow to reddish, irregularly-shaped lesions on leaves and stems. The lesions then expanded, becoming dark brown in the center and surrounded by a reddish halo. Leaf and stem tissues (5 × 5 mm) were cut from the lesion margins and surface-disinfected in 70% ethanol for 30 s, followed by three rinses with sterile water before placing on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Plates were incubated at 28°C. Colonies were initially white, becoming grayish-white to gray with yellow spore masses. Conidia were one-celled, hyaline, and cylindrical with rounded ends, measuring 15.0 to 25.0 × 4.0 to 7.5 µm. No teleomorph was observed. The fungus was tentatively identified as Colletotrichum gloeosporioides (PenZ.) PenZ & Sacc. (teleomorph Glomerella cingulata (Stoneman) Spauld. & H. Schrenk) based on morphological characteristics of the colony and conidia (1). Genomic DNA was extracted from isolate XCG1 and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of the ribosomal DNA (ITS1-5.8S-ITS2) was amplified with primer pairs ITS1 and ITS4. BLAST searches showed 99% identity with C. gloeosporioides isolates in GenBank (Accession No. AF272779). The sequence of isolate XCG1 (C. gloeosporioides) was deposited into GenBank (JX878503). Pathogenicity tests were conducted on 2-year-old potted blueberries, cv. Berkeley. Stems and leaves of 10 potted blueberry plants were wounded with a sterilized needle and sprayed with a suspension of 105 conidia per ml of sterilized water. Five healthy potted plants were inoculated with sterilized water as control. Dark brown lesions surrounded by reddish halos developed on all inoculated leaves and stems after 7 days, and the pathogen was reisolated from lesions of 50% of inoculated plants as described above. The colony and conidial morphology were identical to the original isolate XCG1. No symptoms developed on the control plants. The causal agent of anthracnose on blueberry was identified as C. gloeosporioides on the basis of morphological and molecular characteristics, and its pathogenicity was confirmed with Koch's postulates. Worldwide, it has been reported that blueberry anthracnose might be caused by C. acutatum and C. gloeosporioides (2). However, we did not isolate C. acutatum during this study. To our knowledge, this is the first report of stem and leaf anthracnose of blueberry caused by C. gloeosporioides in China. References: (1) J. M. E. Mourde. No 315. CMI Descriptions of Pathogenic Fungi and Bacteria. Kew, Surrey, UK, 1971. (2) N. Verma, et al. Plant Pathol. 55:442, 2006.

4.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 3(12): 724-6, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19057591

ABSTRACT

Most solids expand when they are heated, but a property known as negative thermal expansion has been observed in a number of materials, including the oxide ZrW2O8 (ref. 1) and the framework material ZnxCd1-x(CN)2 (refs 2,3). This unusual behaviour can be understood in terms of low-energy phonons, while the colossal values of both positive and negative thermal expansion recently observed in another framework material, Ag3[Co(CN)6], have been explained in terms of the geometric flexibility of its metal-cyanide-metal linkages. Thermal expansion can also be stopped in some magnetic transition metal alloys below their magnetic ordering temperature, a phenomenon known as the Invar effect, and the possibility of exploiting materials with tuneable positive or negative thermal expansion in industrial applications has led to intense interest in both the Invar effect and negative thermal expansion. Here we report the results of thermal expansion experiments on three magnetic nanocrystals-CuO, MnF2 and NiO-and find evidence for negative thermal expansion in both CuO and MnF2 below their magnetic ordering temperatures, but not in NiO. Larger particles of CuO and MnF2 also show prominent magnetostriction (that is, they change shape in response to an applied magnetic field), which results in significantly reduced thermal expansion below their magnetic ordering temperatures; this behaviour is not observed in NiO. We propose that the negative thermal expansion effect in CuO (which is four times larger than that observed in ZrW2O8) and MnF2 is a general property of nanoparticles in which there is strong coupling between magnetism and the crystal lattice.


Subject(s)
Magnetics , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Copper/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Nickel/chemistry , Temperature , Thermodynamics , Tungsten Compounds/chemistry , Zirconium/chemistry
5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 97(24): 247204, 2006 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17280315

ABSTRACT

Order or disorder often exists in a uniform spin system consisting of one kind of magnetic ion. Nevertheless, they rarely coexist in normal conditions. Our thermodynamic and microscopic magnetic studies of Co2(OH)3Cl, a distorted tetrahedral lattice compound with uniform Co2+ spin, demonstrate that the spins located on one corner of the tetrahedron are periodically ordered, but those on the other three are disordered below a ferromagnetic transition at TC=10.5 K. The partial order resembles that of the field-induced "kagomé-ice" state in spin ice pyrochlore compounds. Evidence suggests that a distortion in the tetrahedron is responsible for this partial ferromagnetic order in a zero field.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 95(5): 057201, 2005 Jul 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16090912

ABSTRACT

Muon spin rotation experiments are carried out on clinoatacamite, Cu2Cl(OH)3, which is a new geometrically frustrated system featuring a three-dimensional network of corner-sharing tetrahedral 3d Cu2+ spins. A long-range antiferromagnetic order occurs below 18.1 K with a surprisingly small entropy release of about 0.05Rln2/Cu. Below 6.5 K, the static long-range order transforms abruptly into a metastable state with nearly complete depolarization of muon spins which suggests strong fluctuation. The system then enters a state in which partial long-range order and spin fluctuation coexist down to the lowest experimentally attainable temperature of 20 mK. This work presents a novel system for studying geometric frustration.

7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18244261

ABSTRACT

The electrical power generation characteristics of Mn-doped PZT ceramics responding to slow mechanical stress as well as to impact stress have been investigated. Although both the slow and impact stresses induce a reversible electrical response, the generation properties are distinctly different. Slow stress releases two output current peaks with opposite directions, responding to the increasing and decreasing part of the stress, respectively. However, impact stress produces a nearly one-directional signal. The output charge and energy by slow stress are found to be two orders of magnitude higher than that produced by impact stress. This work shows that the energy conversion efficiency of piezoelectric ceramics strongly depends on the method of stress application.

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