Publications by authors named "D J Diver"

There has been increased awareness in the understanding and recognition of spontaneous coronary artery disease. Diagnosing this condition is of paramount importance as the treatment strategy differs greatly from traditional acute coronary syndrome patient. We review here the current state of management of spontaneous coronary artery disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with stenting is the current best practice for treating acute coronary syndrome (ACS), followed by dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT).
  • While the effectiveness of DAPT is established, determining the optimal duration is complex due to new stents, potent antiplatelet drugs, and the increasing age and comorbidities of patients.
  • Major guidelines suggest that the duration of DAPT should be personalized based on individual risks for ischemic events and bleeding, promoting shared decision making between doctors and patients.
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We demonstrate an entirely new method of nanoparticle chemical synthesis based on liquid droplet irradiation with ultralow (<0.1 eV) energy electrons. While nanoparticle formation via high energy radiolysis or transmission electron microscopy-based electron bombardment is well-understood, we have developed a source of electrons with energies close to thermal which leads to a number of important and unique benefits.

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Damped Bernstein modes in a weakly relativistic pair plasma.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

September 2005

Relativistic Bernstein modes are not totally undamped, but have a small, negative definite imaginary frequency component that peaks where the frequency is closest to the rest cyclotron harmonic.

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A two-dimensional particle code that simulates electrical breakdown of gases by modeling avalanche evolution from the initial ion-electron pair up to the development of a streamer is presented. Trajectories of individual particles are followed, the self-field is included consistently and collision processes are accurately modeled using experimentally determined cross sections. It is emphasized that the tadpolelike structure of well-formed streamer heads is present throughout the avalanche phase, and that the transition to the self-similar evolution characteristic of the streamer phase merely reflects the continued development of this structure.

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