Two-dimensional echocardiography has a high specificity for the detection of intracardiac thrombi, but technically difficult studies are often encountered. Ultrafast cardiac computed tomography may be useful in such cases. Using transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiography and ultrafast cardiac computed tomography, we studied 36 patients with cerebral ischemia; one patient had the studies performed on two occasions, making a total of 37 sets of studies. Technical difficulties occurred in 12 echocardiographic (32%) and two ultrafast cardiac computed tomographic (5%) studies. The two techniques agreed in 29 sets of studies (78%). Among the eight discrepant sets of studies, two-dimensional echocardiography was positive for a left ventricular thrombus while ultrafast cardiac computed tomography was negative in three and equivocal in one and echocardiography was equivocal while ultrafast cardiac computed tomography was negative in two and positive in one. In the latter case, a left ventricular thrombus was confirmed at autopsy. In the other discrepant set of studies echocardiography was negative while ultrafast cardiac computed tomography revealed a left atrial and appendage thrombus. Because of its ease of performance and safety, two-dimensional echocardiography is the appropriate initial screening test for left ventricular thrombus. Ultrafast cardiac computed tomography can provide additional information in patients with technically difficult or equivocal two-dimensional echocardiographic studies or patients with cardiac disorders predisposing to atrial thrombi formation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.str.21.7.1033 | DOI Listing |
Int J Biol Macromol
January 2025
College of Marine Life Science, Ocean University of China, 5# Yushan Road, Qingdao 266003, Shandong Province, China; Sanya Oceanographic Institute, Ocean University of China, Floor 7, Building 1, Yonyou Industrial Park, Yazhou Bay Science & Technology City, Sanya, Hainan Province, China. Electronic address:
Rapid control of hemorrhage is vital in first-aid and surgery. As representative of emergency hemostatic materials, inorganic porous materials achieve rapid hemostasis through concentrating protein coagulation factors by water adsorption to accelerate the coagulation reaction process, however their efficacy is often limited by the insufficient contact of material with blood and the lack of blood clot strength. Herein, we report an ultrafast dispersing and in situ gelation sponge (SG/DB) based on anchoring interface effect for hemorrhage control using freeze drying method after mixing fish scale gel (SG) and tert-butyl alcohol (TBA) pre-crystallized diatom biosilica (DB).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Methods Programs Biomed
December 2024
Lab. of Biomedical Diagnostics, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
Background And Objective: The integration of ultrafast Doppler imaging with singular value decomposition clutter filtering has demonstrated notable enhancements in flow measurement and Doppler sensitivity, surpassing conventional Doppler techniques. However, in the context of transthoracic coronary flow imaging, additional challenges arise due to factors such as the utilization of unfocused diverging waves, constraints in spatial and temporal resolution for achieving deep penetration, and rapid tissue motion. These challenges pose difficulties for ultrafast Doppler imaging and singular value decomposition in determining optimal tissue-blood (TB) and blood-noise (BN) thresholds, thereby limiting their ability to deliver high-contrast Doppler images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
December 2024
Tsinghua Shenzhen International Graduate School, Tsinghua University, Shenzhen 518055, P. R. China.
On-body batteries with hydrogel electrolytes are a pivotal enabling technology to drive bioelectronics for healthcare and sports, yet they are prone to failure due to dynamic interfacial interference, accompanied by e-waste production. Here, dynamic imine chemistry is proposed to design on-electrode paintable biogel electrolytes that feature temperature-controlled reversible phase transition (gelling within 1.5 min) and ultrafast self-healing capability (6 s), establishing a dynamically self-adaptive interface on cyclically deforming electrodes for shielding on-body Zn-ion batteries from interfacial interference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
January 2025
College of Chemistry and Environmental Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, Guangdong, 518000, China.
Uncontrolled hemorrhage, especially in non-compressible and deep wounds, remains a critical issue in emergency and surgical care. Existing hemostatic powders often lack rapid gelation, mechanical robustness, and adequate adherence, increasing the risk of rebleeding under high-pressure blood flow. To address these limitations, PQPP, a novel self-gelling hemostatic material composed of polyacrylamide/quaternized chitosan coacervates and polydopamine nanoparticles is developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInverse design of optical components based on adjoint sensitivity analysis has the potential to address the most challenging photonic engineering problems. However, existing inverse design tools based on finite-difference-time-domain (FDTD) models are poorly suited for optimizing waveguide modes for adiabatic transformation or perturbative coupling, which lies at the heart of many important photonic devices. Among these, dispersion engineering of optical waveguides is especially challenging in ultrafast and nonlinear optical applications involving broad optical bandwidths and frequency-dependent anisotropic dielectric material response.
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