A new method for internal calibration of left ventricular cineangiography

1977 ◽  
Vol 232 (4) ◽  
pp. H434-H436
Author(s):  
M. M. Laks ◽  
D. Garner ◽  
J. Beazell ◽  
J. Piscatelli

Previous methods of internal calibration for cineangiography have made use of reference objects such as catheters or wires of known length or diameter. Such devices have either insufficient X-ray resolution, or require a specific orientation within the ventricle which is difficult to confirm. External calibration methods, while eliminating these errors, can only estimate actual position of the left ventricle. The use of a Swan-Ganz balloon catheter as a calibration object diminishes these problems. When positioned within the left ventrical and filled with a radiopaque medium, the balloon is of sufficient size and density to avoid errors induced by previously employed objects. The inflated balloon geometry is simple and reproducible. The use of this internal calibration catheter markedly diminishes major sources of errors in the determination of ventriculograms for both dogs and humans.

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (12) ◽  
pp. 2920-2927
Author(s):  
Jorge Machado ◽  
Patrícia Miguel Carvalho ◽  
Ana Félix ◽  
Delfin Doutel ◽  
José Paulo Santos ◽  
...  

In this work, we aim at achieving the most accurate quantitative determination of elements in human tissues by means of X-ray fluorescence spectrometry using the external calibration approach.


Author(s):  
Yajing Li ◽  
Yintao Wang ◽  
Junyu Fan ◽  
Ran Si ◽  
Jiguang Li ◽  
...  

Abstract The 4s24p 2P3/2 – 2P1/2 magnetic dipole transition in Ga-like ions is interested in developing of high precise highly charged ion clock [Phys. Rev. A, 99, 02213(2019)]. In this work, we present direct observations of the transition in Mo11+ and Ru13+ ions at an electron beam ion trap. Internal and external calibration methods are used for determining the wavelength of the Mo11+ and Ru13+ lines, respectively. Both measurements reach precision levels of a few ppm. Compared with the available values, the current results significantly improve the experimental uncertainty.


2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
pp. 1661-1673 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Daly ◽  
Anna Fenelon

Conventional methods for the determination of major nutrients and trace elements in grass rely on acid digestion followed by analysis using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), which can be both time consuming and costly. Energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) spectrometry offers a rapid alternative that can determine multiple elements in a single scan. Copper, Mn, Zn, and S in grass samples were determined using EDXRF with a number of different calibration approaches using both empirical standards and the theoretical relationships between concentrations and intensities. Using an existing archive of 467 grass samples of known concentrations, a suite of 30 samples was selected as empirical grass standards to build a calibration set between sample concentrations and EDXRF intensities. The theoretical or standardless approach used the fundamental parameters method to determine element concentrations. To validate the two calibration methods, 59 samples were randomly selected from the same archive and database and analyzed by EDXRF. The measurements of Cu, Mn, Zn, and S were compared with the ICP-OES values using agreement statistics. An excellent correlation was observed between the concentrations determined by EDXRF and ICP-OES ( R > 0.90) regardless of the calibration approach. However, agreement and closeness to the true value varied and were assessed using agreement statistics. Across all elements, the empirically calibrated samples were in excellent agreement with the values determined by ICP-OES. The theoretical calibrations provided excellent agreement for Mn and Zn, but a degree of fixed and proportional bias was observed in the Cu and S values. Fixed bias was corrected by subtracting the computed bias from the EDXRF concentrations and improved the overall agreement. Similarly, proportional bias was corrected using the linear regression model to predict the corrected EDXRF values. This improved the overall agreement with the ICP-OES values for both Cu and S using corrected fundamental parameters calibrations. This study provides a practical basis for the use of EDXRF to determine Cu, Mn, Zn, and S in grass samples to monitor forage quality in grazed systems without the need for sample digestion. The observed fixed and proportional bias in the theoretical calibrations can be corrected provided that a good correlation exists between EDXRF and conventional methods.


2013 ◽  
Vol 752 ◽  
pp. 37-41
Author(s):  
Dániel Koncz-Horváth ◽  
Zoltán Gácsi

This paper reports the results of ED-XRF method for the determination of low-level contaminated solders. The method was calibrated for the analysis of part-per-million (ppm) levels of Pb and major levels of other elements. In this work, two types of Sn-Ag based solder alloys are used; the ternary Sn-3.0wt%Ag-0.5wt%Cu (SAC305) and the 6-part Sn-3.5wt%Ag-3.2wt%Bi-1.6wt%Sb-0.5wt%Cu-0.15wt%Ni were examined. Empirical calibration and fundamental parameter calibration were used to analyze samples. The results of this study demonstrate the differences between the applied calibration methods for detection of Pb. Screening analysis of bulk samples from variant production lines were also discussed.


Circulation ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 130 (suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Hegedüs ◽  
Shiliang Li ◽  
Sevil Korkmaz ◽  
Tamás Radovits ◽  
Samer Alsaid ◽  
...  

Introduction: Cardiac transplantation is the most effective treatment of end-stage heart failure. Brain dead (BD) donors are currently the only reliable source for cardiac grafts. However, hemodynamic instability and cardiac dysfunction have been demonstrated in BD donors and this could therefore also affect posttransplant graft function. Hypothesis: Based upon the protective effect of Prolyl-Hydroxylase (PHD)-Hypoxia Inducible Factor (HIF)-1 pathway against ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI), we tested the hypothesis that treatment of BD donor rats with the PHD inhibitor dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG) results in a better graft heart condition in recipients after heterotopic transplantation. Methods: Lewis rats were injected with one shot DMOG (30 mg/kg i.v.) (n=7) or equal volume of physiological saline (n=7) and maintained BD for 5h by a subdurally placed and inflated balloon catheter. Controls were sham-operated (n=11). Then, hearts were explanted, stored in cold preservation solution, heterotopically transplanted and after 1.5h reperfusion left-ventricular (LV) graft function was evaluated in vivo . Myocardial histological and molecular biological analyses were performed. Results: BD was associated with decreased LV function. DMOG treatment of BD animals resulted in better load-independent contractility and end-diastolic stiffness parameters (ESPVR E' max (mmHg/μl): BD+DMOG: 3.7±0.6 vs BD: 3.1±0.5; EDPVR (mmHg/μl): BD+DMOG: 0.13±0.03 vs BD: 0.31±0.06 p<0.05). Following transplantation, DMOG treatment of BD donors significantly improved altered LV systolic and diastolic function (at 80μL volume dP/dt max (mmHg/s): BD+DMOG: 2284±213 vs BD: 1854±124 p<0.05; dP/dt min (mmHg/s): BD+DMOG: 1586±183 vs BD: 1154±74, p<0.05; Tau-W (ms): BD+DMOG: 33±4 vs BD: 43±9 p<0.05). Significantly lower myocardial inflammatory cell infiltration, necrosis, and DNA-strand breakage were evident in DMOG treated BD group compared to BD group. Conclusions: Pre-treatment of BD heart donors with DMOG resulted in a significantly better LV graft function after transplantation. These results support the view that preconditioning of BD donors through the activation of HIF-1 pathway has a protective role against myocardial IRI after transplantation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 (A) ◽  
pp. 363-373
Author(s):  
Jacques Renault ◽  
Chris McKee ◽  
James Barker

AbstractTrace analysis of quartz at the <0.1 wt% level can be routinely accomplished by x-ray diffraction using rotating pressed-powder briquettes and a peak deconvolution strategy due to Wiedemann, et al. (1937a, b) which permits reproducible determination of background and enhances peak resolution without changing the integrated intensity.Four calibration methods were tested: (1) calibration with perlites microscopically analyzed by Hamilton and Peletls (1988), (2) with artificial mixtures of quartz and glass, (3) with chemical analysis and massbalance calculation of quartz in glass mixtures, and (4) with a new method of additions for XRD.Methods (2) and (4) gave the best results. Method (2) has a precision of 16.9 pet at the 0.1 wt% level and a LLD of 0.05 wt% at 3σ. Method (4) is particularly attractive because large spikes can be used which minimize homogenization errors and permit preparation of standards which have properties very similar to run-of-the-mill samples; the problem of non-zero intercepts is avoided.


Author(s):  
H.J. Dudek

The chemical inhomogenities in modern materials such as fibers, phases and inclusions, often have diameters in the region of one micrometer. Using electron microbeam analysis for the determination of the element concentrations one has to know the smallest possible diameter of such regions for a given accuracy of the quantitative analysis.In th is paper the correction procedure for the quantitative electron microbeam analysis is extended to a spacial problem to determine the smallest possible measurements of a cylindrical particle P of high D (depth resolution) and diameter L (lateral resolution) embeded in a matrix M and which has to be analysed quantitative with the accuracy q. The mathematical accounts lead to the following form of the characteristic x-ray intens ity of the element i of a particle P embeded in the matrix M in relation to the intensity of a standard S


Author(s):  
R. J. Narconis ◽  
G. L. Johnson

Analysis of the constituents of renal and biliary calculi may be of help in the management of patients with calculous disease. Several methods of analysis are available for identifying these constituents. Most common are chemical methods, optical crystallography, x-ray diffraction, and infrared spectroscopy. The application of a SEM with x-ray analysis capabilities should be considered as an additional alternative.A scanning electron microscope equipped with an x-ray “mapping” attachment offers an additional dimension in its ability to locate elemental constituents geographically, and thus, provide a clue in determination of possible metabolic etiology in calculus formation. The ability of this method to give an undisturbed view of adjacent layers of elements in their natural state is of advantage in determining the sequence of formation of subsequent layers of chemical constituents.


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