316 results on '"Kang, Soo"'
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2. A Pillar/Perfusion Plate Enhances Cell Growth, Reproducibility, Throughput, and User Friendliness in Dynamic 3D Cell Culture
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Lekkala, Vinod Kumar Reddy, Kang, Soo-Yeon, Liu, Jiafeng, Shrestha, Sunil, Acharya, Prabha, Joshi, Pranav, Zolfaghar, Mona, Lee, Minseong, Vanga, Manav Goud, Jamdagneya, Paarth, Pagnis, Sohan, Kundi, Arham, Kabbur, Samarth, Kim, Ung Tae, Yang, Yong, and Lee, Moo-Yeal
- Abstract
Static three-dimensional (3D) cell culture has been demonstrated in ultralow attachment well plates, hanging droplet plates, and microtiter well plates with hydrogels or magnetic nanoparticles. Although it is simple, reproducible, and relatively inexpensive, thus potentially used for high-throughput screening, statically cultured 3D cells often suffer from a necrotic core due to limited nutrient and oxygen diffusion and waste removal and have a limited in vivo-like tissue structure. Here, we overcome these challenges by developing a pillar/perfusion plate platform and demonstrating high-throughput, dynamic 3D cell culture. Cell spheroids were loaded on the pillar plate with hydrogel by simple sandwiching and encapsulation and cultured dynamically in the perfusion plate on a digital rocker. Unlike traditional microfluidic devices, fast flow velocity was maintained within perfusion wells and the pillar plate was separated from the perfusion plate for cell-based assays. It was compatible with common lab equipment and allowed cell culture, testing, staining, and imaging in situ. The pillar/perfusion plate enhanced cell growth by rapid diffusion, reproducibility, assay throughput, and user friendliness in a dynamic 3D cell culture.
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- 2024
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3. Quantitative Coronary Angiography vs Intravascular Ultrasonography to Guide Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation: A Randomized Clinical Trial
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Lee, Pil Hyung, Hong, Soon Jun, Kim, Hyun-Sook, Yoon, Young won, Lee, Jong-Young, Oh, Seung-Jin, Lee, Ji Sung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Kim, Young-Hak, Park, Seong-Wook, Lee, Seung-Whan, and Lee, Cheol Whan
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IMPORTANCE: Although intravascular ultrasonography (IVUS) guidance promotes favorable outcomes after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), many catheterization laboratories worldwide lack access. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether systematic implementation of quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) to assist angiography-guided PCI could be an alternative strategy to IVUS guidance during stent implantation. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This randomized, open-label, noninferiority clinical trial enrolled adults (aged ≥18 years) with chronic or acute coronary syndrome and angiographically confirmed native coronary artery stenosis requiring PCI. Patients were enrolled in 6 cardiac centers in Korea from February 23, 2017, to August 23, 2021, and follow-up occurred through August 25, 2022. All principal analyses were performed according to the intention-to-treat principle. INTERVENTIONS: After successful guidewire crossing of the first target lesion, patients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either QCA- or IVUS-guided PCI. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was target lesion failure at 12 months, defined as a composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target lesion revascularization. The trial was designed assuming an event rate of 8%, with the upper limit of the 1-sided 97.5% CI of the absolute difference in 12-month target lesion failure (QCA-guided PCI minus IVUS-guided PCI) to be less than 3.5 percentage points for noninferiority. RESULTS: The trial included 1528 patients who underwent PCI with QCA guidance (763; mean [SD] age, 64.1 [9.9] years; 574 males [75.2%]) or IVUS guidance (765; mean [SD] age, 64.6 [9.5] years; 622 males [81.3%]). The post-PCI mean (SD) minimum lumen diameter was similar between the QCA- and IVUS-guided PCI groups (2.57 [0.55] vs 2.60 [0.58] mm, P = .26). Target lesion failure at 12 months occurred in 29 of 763 patients (3.81%) in the QCA-guided PCI group and 29 of 765 patients (3.80%) in the IVUS-guided PCI group (absolute risk difference, 0.01 percentage points [95% CI, –1.91 to 1.93 percentage points]; hazard ratio, 1.00 [95% CI, 0.60-1.68]; P = .99). There was no difference in the rates of stent edge dissection (1.2% vs 0.7%, P = .25), coronary perforation (0.2% vs 0.4%, P = .41), or stent thrombosis (0.53% vs 0.66%, P = .74) between the QCA- and IVUS-guided PCI groups. The risk of the primary end point was consistent regardless of subgroup, with no significant interaction. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Findings of this randomized clinical trial indicate that QCA and IVUS guidance during PCI showed similar rates of target lesion failure at 12 months. However, due to the lower-than-expected rates of target lesion failure in this trial, the findings should be interpreted with caution. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02978456
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- 2024
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4. Ten-year prognostic value of coronary CT angiography in asymptomatic patients with type 2 diabetes.
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Hyun, Junho, Lee, Pil Hyung, Lee, Junghoon, Yang, Yujin, Kim, Ju Hyeon, Kim, Tae oh, Kang, Soo-Jin, Kim, Jun Ki, Lee, Ji Sung, and Lee, Seung-Whan
- Abstract
Copyright of Revista Española de Cardiología (18855857) is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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5. Green CSR Communication to Internal Audiences: The Persuasive Power of Normative Appeals to Employees’ Green Behaviors
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Kang, Eun Yeon and Kang, Soo Yeon
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AbstractGiven the increasing attention being paid to companies’ microlevel green efforts, this study aims to provide insights into green corporate social responsibility (CSR) communication targeting internal audiences (i.e., employees). Building on the social identity theory and group engagement model, this research examines the persuasive power of two types of social norms—descriptive and injunctive—in green CSR messages. Also, it investigates the underlying mechanism of individuals’ green behavioral decision making at work. Across two studies, results demonstrate that a descriptive norm message is more effective than a standard or injunctive norm message to enhance employees’ intentions to adopt green actions, engage in the company’s green programs, and help their colleagues to perform green behaviors. Additionally, a descriptive norm message advances three antecedents of motivation—expectancy, instrumentality, and valence—which in turn positively influence green behavioral decisions. This research contributes to developing the literature stream of green message framing by targeting a specific internal audience group and provides empirical implications for practitioners.
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- 2023
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6. Dual antiplatelet therapy after percutaneous coronary intervention for left main coronary artery disease.
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Cho, Sungsoo, Kang, Do-Yoon, Kim, Jung-Sun, Park, Duk-Woo, Kim, In-Soo, Kang, Tae Soo, Ahn, Jung-Min, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Lee, Seung-Jun, Hong, Sung-Jin, Ahn, Chul-Min, Kim, Byeong-Keuk, Ko, Young-Guk, Choi, Donghoon, and Jang, Yangsoo
- Abstract
Copyright of Revista Española de Cardiología (18855857) is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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7. Valor pronóstico a 10 años de la angiografía coronaria por TAC en pacientes asintomáticos con diabetes tipo 2
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Hyun, Junho, Lee, Pil Hyung, Lee, Junghoon, Yang, Yujin, Kim, Ju Hyeon, Kim, Tae oh, Kang, Soo-Jin, Kim, Jun Ki, Lee, Ji Sung, and Lee, Seung-Whan
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La escala UKPDS (acrónimo inglés de «Estudio Prospectivo de Diabetes del Reino Unido») tiene un valor limitado para la predicción de eventos de enfermedad arterial coronaria (EAC). El estudio pretende investigar el valor añadido de la angiografía coronaria por tomografía computarizada (ACTC) sobre la escala de riesgo UKPDS para la predicción a 10 años de eventos cardiacos adversos en pacientes asintomáticos con diabetes tipo 2.
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- 2023
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8. Identification of Fusarium Basal Rot Pathogens of Onion and Evaluation of Fungicides against the Pathogens
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Shin, Jong-Hwan, Lee, Ha-Kyoung, Back, Chang-Gi, Kang, Soo-hyun, Han, Ji-won, Lee, Seong-Chan, and Han, You-Kyoung
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AbstractOnion (Allium cepaL.) is an economically important vegetable crop worldwide. However, various fungal diseases, including Fusarium basal rot (FBR), neck rot, and white rot, reduce onion production or bulb storage life. FBR caused by Fusariumspecies is among the most destructive onion diseases. In this study, we identified Fusariumspecies associated with FBR in Jeolla and Gyeongsang Provinces in South Korea and evaluated fungicides against the pathogens. Our morphological and molecular analyses showed that FBR in onions is associated with Fusarium commune, Fusarium oxysporum, and Fusarium proliferatum. We selected seven fungicides (fludioxonil, hexaconazole, mandestrobin, penthiopyrad, prochloraz-manganese, pydiflumetofen, and tebuconazole) and evaluated their inhibitory effects on mycelial growth of the pathogens at three different concentrations (0.01, 0.1, and 1 mg/mL). We found that prochloraz-manganese was highly effective, inhibiting 100% of the mycelial growth of the pathogens at all concentrations, followed by tebuconazole. Fludioxonil showed < 50% inhibition at 1 mg/mL for the tested isolates.
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- 2023
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9. Tratamiento antiagregante plaquetario doble tras la intervención coronaria percutánea del tronco coronario izquierdo
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Cho, Sungsoo, Kang, Do-Yoon, Kim, Jung-Sun, Park, Duk-Woo, Kim, In-Soo, Kang, Tae Soo, Ahn, Jung-Min, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Lee, Seung-Jun, Hong, Sung-Jin, Ahn, Chul-Min, Kim, Byeong-Keuk, Ko, Young-Guk, Choi, Donghoon, Jang, Yangsoo, Hong, Myeong-Ki, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
Son escasos los datos sobre la duración y el impacto pronóstico del tratamiento antiagregante plaquetario doble (TAPD) tras una intervención coronaria percutánea (ICP) del tronco coronario izquierdo (TCI) con stentsfarmacoactivos de segunda generación. El objetivo de este estudio es investigar los patrones de prescripción y el efecto pronóstico a largo plazo de la duración del TAPD en pacientes sometidos a ICP del TCI con stentsfarmacoactivos segunda generación.
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- 2023
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10. Correction: Hepatitis B surface antigen reverse seroconversion after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation according to the baseline serological marker levels and vaccination status: a single‑center database analysis
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Kang, Soo Young, Ko, Heejoo, Lee, Raeseok, Park, Sung‑Soo, and Han, Seunghoon
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- 2024
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11. Hepatitis B surface antigen reverse seroconversion after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation according to the baseline serological marker levels and vaccination status: a single-center database analysis
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Kang, Soo Young, Ko, Heejoo, Lee, Raeseok, Park, Sung-Soo, and Han, Seunghoon
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Purpose: Hepatitis B is a major prognostic factor after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Currently, no consensus exists regarding the management of various scenarios that can lead to reverse seroconversion of the hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg-RS). This study focused on HBsAg-RS, which serves as an indicator of active hepatitis, and aimed to obtain exploratory information on the associated patient and treatment factors. Methods: This single-center retrospective study utilized clinical data extracted from the electronic medical records of Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, Korea. Patients who underwent HSCT between January 2013 and December 2018 and tested negative for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) before undergoing HSCT were included. The associations between HBsAg-RS and demographic information, baseline hepatitis B serological markers, and vaccination status were statistically analyzed. Results: This study included 1,344 patients, of whom 83.3% tested positive for the hepatitis B surface antibody (HBsAb) during HSCT. HBsAg-RS occurred in 2.2% of HBsAb-negative patients and 3.0% of HBsAb-positive patients, indicating no significant difference in reactivation rates according to HBsAb status. However, positivity for hepatitis B core antibody (HBcAb) was significantly associated with hepatitis B reactivation (HBsAg-RS rate: 8.0%). The vaccination rates were highest in patients who were negative for both HBsAb and HBcAb and had a transient protective effect. Conclusion: The sufficient patient population enabled the identification of an association between baseline HBcAb positivity and the development of HBsAg-RS. Further prospective studies are warranted to determine optimal vaccination strategies for preventing HBsAg-RS.
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- 2024
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12. Trends and Factors Associated With Extremity Fractures and Post-Acute Care Utilization of Nevada Older Adults: Insights of Age-Friendly State Planning in U.S.
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Kang, Soo Hwan, Shen, Jay J., Kim, Yonsu, Ioanitoaia-Chaudhry, Iulia, Lee, Se Won, Chung, Tae Ha, Choe, Ian, Jeong, Connor, Kwon, Songe, Lim, Daniel, Hwang, Yena, Frimer, Leora, and Yoo, Ji Won
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Along with the trend of a steady utilization decline in the U.S. nursing home beds, post-acute care (PAC) utilization at the skilled nursing facilities has declined. This study was a cross-sectional, retrospective review of hospital discharge-based claim data. We evaluate the factors associated with utilizing post-acute care at rehabilitation facilities among those with extremity fractures in the state of Nevada. All Nevada hospital discharges of aged ≥65 years with extremity fractures between 2018 and 2021 were divided to post-acute care locations by (1) rehabilitation facilities (skilled nursing facility and inpatient rehabilitation facility) and (2) homes (with and without services). PAC utilization at facilities declined from 55.1% in 2018 to 49.7% in 2021 (P< .001). In response, PAC utilization at homes continuously upwards, particularly, homes with services from 18.8% in 2018 to 24.5% in 2021 (P< .001). Older age, female, lower extremity fractures, comorbidities, and Medicare beneficiaries were associated with higher probabilities of utilizing post-acute rehabilitation facilities. Racial minorities, COVID-19 pandemic, upper extremities, Medicaid beneficiaries, rural hospitals, and prolonged hospital length of stay were associated with lower probabilities of PAC utilization at facilities. Caregiver burdens and workforce training is urgently warranted to respond to this utilization shift. Effective geriatrics workforce training might advance care efficiency of older adults with extremity fractures and guide to the insights of establishing the age-friendly state of Nevada in response to this utilization shift trends.
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- 2024
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13. Deep Learning-Enhanced Parallel Imaging and Simultaneous Multislice Acceleration Reconstruction in Knee MRI
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Kim, MinWoo, Lee, Sang-Min, Park, Chankue, Lee, Dongeon, Kim, Kang Soo, Jeong, Hee Seok, Kim, Shinyoung, Choi, Min-Hyeok, and Nickel, Dominik
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- 2022
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14. Conceptual designs and characteristic of the fuel handling and transfer system for 150 MWe PGSFR and 1400 MWe SFR burner reactor
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Kim, Kang-Soo, Kim, Jong-Bum, and Park, Chang-Gyu
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KAERI (Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute) developed the conceptual design of PGSFR (Prototype Gen-IV Sodium Cooled Fast Reactor) and Burner Reactor. Since the reactor characteristics of the PGSFR and Burner Reactor are different, the shape, size and the arrangement of the main components in the reactors must be different. Therefore, the conceptual design for the fuel handling and transfer systems needs to be performed coinciding with the structure of the reactor. Especially, because a redan structure dividing hot and cold pool is installed in the reactor vessel, the conceptual design of the fuel handling and transfer system largely changes depending on the location of the redan structure. Various elements of the conceptual design and an integral arrangement for the fuel handling and transfer system were arranged according to the characteristics, sizes and shapes of the reactors. In this paper, the conceptual designs of the fuel handling and transfer system for PGSFR and Burner Reactor are described. Especially, an A-frame method is selected as the fuel handling and transfer system for the Burner Reactor, considering the layout of the internal structure. The tilt angle, diameter and length of A-frame is determined and the strength evaluation of the A-frame is performed.
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- 2022
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15. The Moderating Role of Cannabis Usage and Voting Intention on Oregon Residents' Support for Cannabis Tourism.
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McGrady, Pavlina and Kang, Soo
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VOTING ,TOURISM ,INTENTION ,LEGALIZATION - Abstract
Changes in perceptions and laws on recreational cannabis use have shifted significantly in recent years. Yet research in this field is still scarce. This study explores residents' perceptions on impact and support for cannabis tourism using cannabis user status and voting intention as moderators. Results from a quantitative survey distributed to Oregon residents (n = 700) reveal overall positive perceptions on cannabis legalization and cannabis tourism. More specifically, perceived positive impact had more influence on support for cannabis tourism among nonusers than users, while users' support appeared to be steady regardless of their perceived level of positive impact. The study findings also showed a significant relationship between voting intention and support for cannabis tourism but an insignificant interaction between voting intention and impact factors, indicating that voting intention may be treated as a separate construct affecting residents' support, rather than a moderator between impact factors and support level. Considering the continued evolvement in the legal and economic landscapes of cannabis tourism, policymakers and industry professionals should engage in continual conversations on how to plan and manage this new tourism segment for community and state development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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16. Intraosseous Lipoma of the Carpus
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Park, Il-Jung, Lee, Jiwon, Lee, Heejeong, and Kang, Soo-Hwan
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Intraosseous lipoma is a very rare benign lipoma, accounting for less than 0.1% of primary bone tumors. Incidentally found in most cases, it frequently involves the metaphysis of the long bones of the lower extremity or calcaneus but rarely occurs in the upper extremity. Intraosseous lipoma of the carpal bones, especially, has yet to be reported, except for 3 cases of scaphoid and capitate involvement. Herein, we report 2 cases of intraosseous lipoma in the capitate and hamate bones with a literature review. Two patients complained of wrist discomfort despite conservative treatment and were diagnosed by computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and surgical biopsy. They were treated with intralesional curettage and autologous bone graft, and their symptoms improved and showed no evidence of recurrence, both clinically and radiologically.
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- 2022
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17. High-Performance Flexible InAs Thin-Film Photodetector Arrays with Heteroepitaxial Growth Using an Abruptly Graded InxAl1–xAs Buffer.
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Woo, Seungwan, Ryu, Geunhwan, Kang, Soo Seok, Kim, Tae Soo, Hong, Namgi, Han, Jae-Hoon, Chu, Rafael Jumar, Lee, In-Hwan, Jung, Daehwan, and Choi, Won Jun
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- 2021
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18. A Pillar and Perfusion Plate Platform for Robust Human Organoid Culture and Analysis
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Kang, Soo‐Yeon, Kimura, Masaki, Shrestha, Sunil, Lewis, Phillip, Lee, Sangjoon, Cai, Yuqi, Joshi, Pranav, Acharya, Prabha, Liu, Jiafeng, Yang, Yong, Sanchez, J. Guillermo, Ayyagari, Sriramya, Alsberg, Eben, Wells, James M., Takebe, Takanori, and Lee, Moo‐Yeal
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Human organoids have the potential to revolutionize in vitro disease modeling by providing multicellular architecture and function that are similar to those in vivo. This innovative and evolving technology, however, still suffers from assay throughput and reproducibility to enable high‐throughput screening (HTS) of compounds due to cumbersome organoid differentiation processes and difficulty in scale‐up and quality control. Using organoids for HTS is further challenged by the lack of easy‐to‐use fluidic systems that are compatible with relatively large organoids. Here, these challenges are overcome by engineering “microarray three‐dimensional (3D) bioprinting” technology and associated pillar and perfusion plates for human organoid culture and analysis. High‐precision, high‐throughput stem cell printing, and encapsulation techniques are demonstrated on a pillar plate, which is coupled with a complementary deep well plate and a perfusion well plate for static and dynamic organoid culture. Bioprinted cells and spheroids in hydrogels are differentiated into liver and intestine organoids for in situ functional assays. The pillar/perfusion plates are compatible with standard 384‐well plates and HTS equipment, and thus may be easily adopted in current drug discovery efforts. A pillar/perfusion plate is developed to generate human organoids robustly by printing progenitor cells in hydrogels on pillars using a 3D bioprinter or transferring single spheroids to pillars via a sandwiching and inverting method. Organoid differentiation is performed in static and dynamic conditions by sandwiching the pillar plate onto a deep well plate or a perfusion well plate.
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- 2024
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19. Association of Lipoprotein(a) With Recurrent Ischemic Events Following Percutaneous Coronary Intervention.
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Yoon, Yong-Hoon, Ahn, Jung-Min, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Park, Duk-Woo, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Han, Ki Hoon, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, and Park, Seung-Jung
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This study evaluated the association between elevated levels of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] and risk of recurrent ischemic events in patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Elevated levels of Lp(a) have been identified as an independent, possibly causal, risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in a general population study. A prospective single-center registry was used to identify 12,064 patients with baseline Lp(a) measurements who underwent PCI between 2003 and 2013. The primary outcomes were a composite of cardiovascular death, spontaneous myocardial infarction, and ischemic stroke. From the registry, 3,747 (31.1%) patients had high Lp(a) (>30 mg/dL) and 8,317 (68.9%) patients had low Lp(a) (≤30 mg/dL). During a median follow-up of 7.4 years, primary outcomes occurred in 1,490 patients, and the incidence rates of primary outcomes were 2.0 per 100 person-years in the high-Lp(a) group and 1.6 per 100 person-years in the low-Lp(a) group (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR]: 1.17; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.05-1.30; P = 0.004). Increased risk of recurrent ischemic cardiovascular events in the high-Lp(a) group was consistent in various subgroups including patients receiving statin treatment at discharge (aHR: 1.18; 95% CI: 1.03-1.34; P = 0.011). In addition, the risk of repeated revascularization was significantly higher in the high-Lp(a) group (aHR: 1.13; 95% CI: 1.02-1.25; P = 0.022). Elevated levels of Lp(a) were significantly associated with the recurrent ischemic events in patients who underwent PCI. This study provides a rationale for outcome trials to test Lp(a)-lowering therapy for secondary prevention in patients undergoing PCI. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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20. Prediction of Coronary Stent Underexpansion by Pre-Procedural Intravascular Ultrasound–Based Deep Learning.
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Min, Hyun-Seok, Ryu, Dongmin, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, June-Goo, Yoo, Ji Hyeong, Cho, Hyungjoo, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Pil Hyung, Ahn, Jung-Min, Park, Duk-Woo, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, and Park, Seung-Jung
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The aim of this study was to develop pre-procedural intravascular ultrasound (IVUS)–based models for predicting the occurrence of stent underexpansion. Although post-stenting IVUS has been used to optimize percutaneous coronary intervention, there are no pre-procedural guidelines to estimate the degree of stent expansion and provide preemptive management before stent deployment. A total of 618 coronary lesions in 618 patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention were randomized into training and test sets in a 5:1 ratio. Following the coregistration of pre- and post-stenting IVUS images, the pre-procedural images and clinical information (stent diameter, length, and inflation pressure; balloon diameter; and maximal balloon pressure) were used to develop a regression model using a convolutional neural network to predict post-stenting stent area. To separate the frames with from those without the occurrence of underexpansion (stent area <5.5 mm
2 ), binary classification models (XGBoost) were developed. Overall, the frequency of stent underexpansion was 15% (5,209 of 34,736 frames). At the frame level, stent areas predicted by the pre-procedural IVUS-based regression model significantly correlated with those measured on post-stenting IVUS (r = 0.802). To predict stent underexpansion, maximal accuracy of 94% (area under the curve = 0.94) was achieved when the convolutional neural network– and mask image–derived features were used for the classification model. At the lesion level, there were significant correlations between predicted and measured minimal stent area (r = 0.832) and between predicted and measured total stent volume (r = 0.958). Deep-learning algorithms accurately predicted incomplete stent expansion. A data-driven approach may assist clinicians in making treatment decisions to avoid stent underexpansion as a preventable cause of stent failure. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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21. Postoperative continuous positive airway pressure to prevent pneumonia, re-intubation, and death after major abdominal surgery (PRISM): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial
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Pearse, Rupert, Ranieri, Marco, Abbott, Tom, Pakats, Mari-Liis, Piervincenzi, Edoardo, Patel, Akshaykumar, Kahan, Brennan, Rhodes, Andrew, Dias, Priyanthi, Hewson, Russell, Jammer, Ib, Chew, Michelle, Aldecoa, Cesar, Rodseth, Reitze, Biccard, Bruce, Stephens, Tim, Payne, Sara, Hepworth, David, Pischke, Soeren, Asvall, Joerund, Hausken, John, Jhanji, Shaman, Rooms, Martin, Flint, Neil, Hales, Dawn, Szakmany, Tamas, Leitch, Andrew, Spadaro, Savino, Chiumello, Davide, Johnston, Paul, Yeung, Joyce, Tellan, Guglielmo, Veenith, Tonny, Macmillan, Josep, Terragni, Pierpaolo, Sander, Caroline, Kasipandian, Vidya, Ahmad, Tahania, Lee, Aaron, Tammaro, Marcello, McAuley, Danny, Skene, Simon, Vohra, Ravinder, Wilson, Matt, Edwards, Mark, Griffiths, Ewen, Pritchard, Naomi, Filippini, Claudia, Aasmundstad, Tor, Aksnes, Einar, Alpers, Lise-Merete, Barratt-Due, Andreas, Dahl, Anita, Feldt, Linda, Figari, Elisa, Flåten, Eva, Granheim, Karen, Hagring, Minna, Haugaa, Håkon, Kjoesen, Gisle, Klaevahaugen, Inge, Lenz, Harald, Myhre, Marianne, Orrem, Hilde, Stitt, Emily, Toennessen, Tor Inge, Al-Kadhimi, Samuel, Anker, Robert, Balint, Mihaela, Barraclough, Lauren, Black, Ethel, Clayton, Matt, Conneely, Leonora, Edwards, Zara, Eeles, Alex, Evans, Matthew, Gerstman, Michelle, Greenshields, Nicole, Harvey, Eleanor, Hegarty, Aoife, Hester, Natalie, Hutchinson, Jenna, Kasivisvanathan, Ramanathan, Lawrence, Helen, Marsh, Veronica, Matthews, Laura, Mazzola, Francesca, McCanny, Jamie, Morrison, Ben, O'Mahony, Michelle, Pang, Ching Ling, Parkinson, David, Pirie, Katrina, Rao Baikady, Ravishankar, Shovel, Louisa, Smith, Lorna, Tatham, Kate, Thomas, Peter, Uren, Sophie, Walker, Susanna, Wills, Alasdair, Andreou, Prematie, Howson, Alex, Kaur, Jasmin, Lewszuk, Adam, Molina, Esther, Ramsamy, Nirmalabaye, Roberts, Emma, Amaral, Vanessa, Begum, Salma, Bekele, Soliana, Cashmore, Richard, Correia, Carmen, Dunkley, Steven, Fernandez, Maria, Fowler, Alexander, Garcia, Amaia, Della Giovampaola, Maria, Greaves, Kathryn, Griffiths, Bethan, Haines, Ryan, Haslop, Richard, Hu, Ying, Hui, Sarah, Januszewska, Marta, Manon, Vasi, Martin, Tim, May, Shaun, Minicozzi, Annamaria, Niebrzegowska, Edyta, Oliveira, Monica, Pates, Katherine, Santos, Filipa, Shahid, Tasnin, Simili, Paolo, Somerville, Alastair, Subhedar, Emily, Uddin, Ruzena, Walker, Sophie, Wan, Yize, Whalley, Jan, Zolfaghari, Parjam, Gunter, Una, Hodkinson, Gemma, Howe, Gwenllian, Baratozzi, Valentina, Casotto, Giulia, Darai, Giulia, Ferrari, Erica, Mistraletti, Giovanni, Palmaverdi, Valentina, Furlani, Stefano, Priani, Paolo, Ragazzi, Riccardo, Salmaso, Marco, Verri, Marco, Volta, Carlo, Nutt, Chris, McKay, Emma, O'Neill, Orla, Patel, Jaimin, Atterbury, Katie, Ballinger, Sarah, Carling, Natalie, Ellis, Kaytie, Gresty, Jo, Melody, Teresa, Monk, Jade, Norman, Chloe, Reeves, Eleanor, Sampson, Julia, Sutton, Peter, Thomas, Marie, Bamford, Amy, Bergin, Colin, Carrera, Ronald, Cooper, Lauren, Despy, Liesl, Ellis, Karen, Fellows, Emma, Goundry, Stephanie, Harkett, Samantha, Ip, Peter, Mason, Tracy, McGhee, Christopher, McLaughlin, Aisling, Neal, Aoife, Pope, Martin, Porter, Stephanie, Smith, Hazel, Snelson, Catherine, Spruce, Elaine, Vigo, Ylenia, Whitehouse, Arlo, Whitehouse, Tony, Donatiello, Maria, Gazzanelli, Sergio, Mezzapesa, Mario, Savino, Martina, Settesoldi, Giacomo, Kunst, Gudrun, Birch, Sian, Greig, Louise, Noble, Harriet, Pappa, Evita, Penhaligon, Bethany, Cossu, Andrea, Floris, Leda, Piredda, Davide, Racca, Alberto, Brattstrom, Olof, Heggelund, Bente, Flodberg, Magnus, Månsson, Sandra, Ahmed, Mamoona, Allen, Jonathan, Bell, Paula, Genetu, Roman, Glennon, Julia, Hanley, Janice, Jenner, Katy, Jogi, Summayyah, Mahjoob, Parisa, McGovern, Clare, Murphy, Anthony, Nazari, Roonak, Routledge, Jacki, Uttamlal, Trishna, Ward, Sinead, Iotti, Giorgio, Picchioni, Raffaella, Poma, Silvia, Navalesi, Paolo, Bruni, Andrea, De Leonardis, Brunella, Garofalo, Eugenio, Patel, Panna, McArthur, Carol, Burns, Karen, Peters, Steven, Foti, Giuseppe, Calcinati, Serena, Grassi, Alice, Villa, Silvia, Berridge, John, Kanakaraj, Muthuraj, Cahill, Hazel, Forshaw, Greg, Gibson, Andy, Grainger, Lia, Howard, Kate, James, Katherine, Murphy, Zoe, Sweeting, Helen, Tait, Rebecca, Wilcock, Danielle, Yates, David, Cope, Sean, Allan, Ashley, Betts, Rebecca, Cornell, Sarah, Sheriff, Julie, Woods, Lindsey, Grasselli, Giacomo, Brioni, Matteo, Castagna, Luigi, von Rahden, Richard, Farina, Zane, Green, Samantha, Gumede, Simphiwe, Rajah, Chantal, Ramkillawan, Arisha, Moug, Susan, Alcorn, David, Dalton, Carol, Dickinson, Natalie, Edwards, Jennifer, Henderson, Steven, McIlveen, Erin, Ramsaran, Richard, Bell, Joanne, Fleming, Lorna, Monks, Kathleen, Parker, Jane, Stamper, Sean, Stokes-Denson, Jo, Elías, Elisa, Guerra, Yessica, Rico-Feijoo, Jesus, Kidel, Carlos, Filipe, Helder, Asis, Gretchelle, Gleeson, Yvonne, Harvey, Alice, Jackson, Christine, McNeil, Margaret, Mingo, Sara, Pakou, Glykeria, Pinto, Manuel, Wright, Stephen, Babio-Galan, Maite, Buckley, David, Calder, Verity, Chishti, Ahmad, Cosgrove, Joseph, Cullen, Katherine, Dunn, Leigh, Faulds, Matthew, Fortune, Jonathan, Gardner, Matthew, Harrison, Abigail, Hays, Carole, Jones, Gerry, Macfie, Caroline, Mccullagh, Iain, Nesbitt, Ian, O'Neil, Suzanne, Phoenix, Catherine, Rangaswamy, Girish, Samson, Craig, Scott, Carmen, Shrestha, Tara, Singh, Rita, Soulsby, Graham, Walton, Jon, Zwiggelaar, Kimberley, Lynch, Ceri, Clarke, Heidi, Deacon, Bethan, Ivatt, Helen, Jones, Leanne, Latif, Ahmed, Oram, Shaun, Perman, Chris, Roche, Lisa, Duys, Rowan, Flint, Margot, Bhagwan, Kamal, Coetzee, Ettienne, Joubert, Ivan, Montoya-Pelaez, Felipe, Navsaria, Pradeep, Picken, Guy, Porrill, Owen, Strathie, Grant, Zungu, Thembinkosi, Aluri, Sireesha, Chau, Simon, Cooper, Deborah, Cunningham, Mishell, Daniels, Allison, Hope, Susan, Nicholson, Alice, Walker, Laura, Giarratano, Antonino, Accurso, Giuseppe, Raineri, Santi, Tricoli, Giuseppe, Innes, Richard, Doble, Patricia, Hutter, Joanne, Pawley, Corinne, Tait, Moira, Hamilton, Mark, Andrade, Edward, Barnes, Veronica, Dalton, Claire, Delgado, Carlos, Farnell-Ward, Sarah, Farrah, Helen, Gray, Geraldine, Hegarty, Aoife, Howlett, Luisa, Joseph, Gipsy, Krupa, Monika, Leaver, Susannah, Macedo, Joao, Maher, Karen, Mellinghoff, Johannes, Oguntimehin, Rachel, Pereira, Joel, Robinson, Frances, Ryan, Christine, Shah, Nirav, Shirley, Paula, Torborg, Alexandra, Biyase, Thuli, Drummond, Leanne, Kusel, Belinda, Mbuyisa, Mbalenhle, Solala, Sivuyisiwe, Taylor, Jenna, Ezihe-Ejiofor, Adanma, Aduse-Poku, Maame, Colville, Gary, Davies, Louise, Kang, Soo, Phillips, Alex, Kirk-Bayley, Justin, Kelliher, Leigh, Carvelli, Paula, Daysal, Gokce, Dickinson, Matthew, Doyle, Nancileigh, Hughes, Christina, Montague, Laura, Potter, Elizabeth, Salberg, Armorel, Sibug, Sheena, Sivarajan, Sinduja, Thomson, Milo, Wakeford, Nichola, Rocco, Monica, Alampi, Daniela, Conway, Daniel, Clark, Richard, Maria, Jashmin, Pomeroy, Fiona, Quraishi, Tanviha, Williams, Abigail, Chukkambotla, Srikanth, Aherne, Caroline, Harrison-Briggs, Donna, Fitchett, Jill, Duberley, Stephen, Zanoni, Andrea, Cardinale, Daniela, Righi, Claudia, Blunt, Mark, Fuller, Tracy, Hodgson, Ruth, Rosbergen, Melissa, Brennan, Andrew, Akeroyd, Louise, Boardman, Victoria, Bull, Christopher, Carrick, Mike, Chadderton, Ian, Cooper, Sarah, Goellner, Sarah, Graham, Laura, Ilyas, Carl, King, James, Laklouk, Muhammad, Lawton, Tom, Macrow, Christopher, Munro, Michael, Neep, Adam, Northey, Martin, Peacock, Victoria, Pye, Kate, Radley, Lydia, Sira, James, Smithson, Beth, Syddall, Stuart, Tooth, David, White, Thomas, Hoel, Sindre, Aakre, Elin, Bakke, Monica, Hoivik, Tone, Makowski, Arystarch, Alcock, Harry, Cardoso, Sean, Coetzee, Samantha, Everett, Mary, Ibrahim, Mohamed, Kouridaki, Christina, Ogbeide, Vongayi, Bertellini, Elisabetta, Bertolotti, Valentina, Buono, Antonio, Fanigliulo, Maria, Kumar, Ram, Richards, Nicole, Allana, Alisha, Bacciarelli, Samantha, Barker, Helen, De Bois, Jessica, Bradley, Isabel, Crooks, Jennifer, Daum, Peter, Feben, Alex, Gannon, Lizzie, Kipling, Sarah, Peetamsingh, Andrew, Quamina, Charlotte, Sethi, Sahiba, Sivadhas, Harry, Sollesta, Kathryn, Swain, Andrew, Tan, Evalyn, Willis, Joan, Zou, Maggie, Cranshaw, Julius, Barratt, Nina, Bowman, Katie, Branney, Debbie, Letts, Maria, Pitts, Sally, Day, Christopher, Benyon, Sarah, Eddy, Sara, Green, Adam, Grice, Anna, Kelly, Sinéad, Mackle, Daisy, Mariano, Victor, Park, Linda, Sibley, Pauline, Spencer, William, Bignami, Elena, Bellini, Valentina, Forfori, Francesco, Curci, Maria, Leo, Alessandra, Jackson, Matthew, Awolesi, Jennifer, Hodgkinson, Sheila, Kent, Alissa, Leonard, Dee, Stapleton, Claire, Tibke, Clare, Alexander-Sefre, Farhad, Campey, Lorraine, Hall, Kathryn, Spimpolo, Jennifer, Nilsson, Malin, Didriksson, Helen, Hamilton, Emma, Carnahan, Mandy, Mowatt, Chris, Stickley, Jo, Corcione, Antonio, Rossi, Giuseppe, Fladby, Hege, Andersen, Nina, Bjoernå, Gunhild, Reite, Mads, Roertveit, Linda, Seidel, Philipp, Arnold, Glenn, Benavente, Melissa, Chattersingh, Anjalee, Chironga, Nyasha, Hornzee, Gillian, Kibaru, Joyce, Malik, Ihtisham, McLeavy, Laura, Pathmanathan, Byiravey, Prior, Florence, Strudwick, Rhea, Vezyrgiannis, Marios, Sinha, Aneeta, Babu, Sheeba, Batuwitage, Bisanth, Daly, Zoe, Ellinor, Katharine, Hawes, Elizabeth, Holmes, Ann, Hudson, Karen, Nightingale, Jeremy, Le Poidevin, Alison, Roberts, Lindsey, Kubisz-Pudelko, Agnieszka, Allison, Joanna, Pippard, Lucy, Hamlyn, Vincent, Organ, Angie, Ezihe-Ejiofor, Adanma, Prabhahar, Thaventhran, Bridger, Hayley, Dvorkin, Lee, Manhas, Vitul, Vincent, Rachel, Laha, Shondipon, Cromie, Terri-Louise, Doyle, Donna, Howarth, Rachel, Verlander, Mark, Watt, Ailsa, Williams, Alexandra, Antonelli, Massimo, Cutuli, Salvatore, Montini, Luca, Graterol, Juan, Adams, Benita, Bean, Sarah, Burt, Karen, Hammonds, Fiona, Jigajinni, Suyogi, Fulton, Laura, Kinghorn, Stephen, Mullenheim, Jost, Baillie, Kirsty, Cain, Martyn, Colling, Kerry, Hannaway, Carol, Corso, Ruggero, Calli, Morena, Ferrando, Carlos, Romero, Esther, Jorge-Monjas, Pablo, Soria-García, María, Gómez-Herreras, José, Rodríguez-Jiménez, Rita, and De Prada-Martín, Blanca
- Abstract
Respiratory complications are an important cause of postoperative morbidity. We aimed to investigate whether continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) administered immediately after major abdominal surgery could prevent postoperative morbidity.
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- 2021
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22. Sinking enhances the degradation of organic particles by marine bacteria
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Alcolombri, Uria, Peaudecerf, François J., Fernandez, Vicente I., Behrendt, Lars, Lee, Kang Soo, and Stocker, Roman
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The sinking of organic particles in the ocean and their degradation by marine microorganisms is one of the main drivers of the biological pump. Yet, the mechanisms determining the magnitude of the pump remain poorly understood, limiting our ability to predict this carbon flux in future ocean scenarios. Current ocean models assume that the biological pump is governed by the competition between sinking speed and degradation rate, with the two processes independent from one another. Contrary to this paradigm, we show that sinking itself is a primary determinant of the rate at which bacteria degrade particles. Heterotrophic bacterial degradation rates were obtained from a laboratory study on model surface-colonized particles at atmospheric pressure under a range of flow speeds to mimic different sinking velocities. We find that even modest sinking speeds of 8 m day−1enhance degradation rates more than 10-fold compared with degradation rates of non-sinking particles. We discovered that the molecular mechanism underlying this sinking-enhanced degradation is the flow-induced removal from the particles of the oligomeric breakdown products, which otherwise compete for enzymatic activity. This mechanism applies across several substrates and bacterial strains, suggesting its potentially broad occurrence under natural marine conditions. Integrating our findings into a mathematical model of particulate carbon flux, we propose that the coupling of sinking and degradation may contribute, in conjunction with other processes, to determining the magnitude of the vertical carbon flux in the ocean.
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- 2021
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23. Fate of lumen size in distal coronary segment following successful chronic total occlusion recanalization.
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Kwon, Osung, Lee, Pil Hyung, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kweon, Jihoon, Lee, Jong-Young, Lee, Kyusup, Kang, Do-Yoon, Ahn, Jung-Min, Park, Duk-Woo, Kang, Soo-Jin, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
• After chronic total occlusion (CTO)-percutaneous coronary intervention, noticeable lumen enlargement of segments distal to CTO was observed. • Lumen enlarged regardless of in-stent narrowing and distal bed disease status. • Operators may select stent size based on the expected corresponding vessel size. • Unnecessary additional stents at the distal bed can be avoided. Restoration of anterograde blood flow leads to alterations in vascular wall stress that may influence lumen size distal to chronic total occlusion (CTO) lesions. We sought to assess changes in lumen diameter of segments distal to the stent segment of successfully recanalized CTO. We analyzed 507 consecutive CTO cases with stent implantation that underwent follow-up angiography at a single high-volume center (mean follow-up of 13.5 months). Segments ≤40 mm distal to the stent edge were analyzed using quantitative coronary angiography. At follow-up, lumen diameters significantly increased; diameter changes of 0.26 ± 0.47 (percent diameter change of 18.2%) at 5 mm distal, mean lumen diameter changes of 0.23 ± 0.35 (14.3%) and minimal lumen diameter changes of 0.22 ± 0.80 (24.7%) (all p < 0.001). Lumen enlargement was similar between visually shrunken and stenosed vessels (degree of stenosis ≥20% with luminal irregularities) distal to stents; 5 mm distal (0.32 ± 0.48 vs. 0.30 ± 0.48, p = 0.76), mean lumen diameter changes (0.26 ± 0.37mm vs. 0.26±0.33 mm, p = 0.94), minimal lumen diameter changes (0.28 ± 0.43 mm vs. 0.22 ± 1.30 mm, p = 0.48). There was no association between degree of in-stent narrowing and changes in distal lumen diameter (Spearman r = −0.02, p = 0.59). Multivariate logistic regression for the predictors of greater lumen enlargement indicated that patients with left ventricle dysfunction (ejection fraction ≤45%) had greater enlargement [odds ratio (OR): 2.53, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.23–5.23, p = 0.01]. Conversely, a low hematocrit (male <40%, and female <35%) was associated with attenuated lumen enlargement (OR: 0.68 95% CI: 0.47–0.98; p = 0.04). Lumen diameter distal to CTO lesions significantly increased following successful revascularization, regardless of diseased status of the distal bed or degree of in-stent narrowing. These findings implicate appropriate determination of stent size, stent coverage length, as well as management strategies of distal vessels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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24. Synthesis and unique characteristics of biobased high Tg copolyesters with improved performance properties for flexible electronics and packaging applications.
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Hussain, Fiaz, Jeong, Jaemin, Park, Sangwon, Kang, Soo-Jung, Khan, Waheed Qamar, and Kim, Jinhwan
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FLEXIBLE electronics ,FLEXIBLE packaging ,ELECTRONIC packaging ,GLYCOLS ,GLASS transition temperature ,THERMAL stability - Abstract
[Display omitted] The synthesis and characterization of two series of biobased novel poly(1,4-cyclohexylenedimethylene terephthalate-co-1,4-cyclohexylene dimethylene 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylate) copolyesters containing isosorbide (ISB) content (PCITN) ranging from 0 to 11 mol% relative to the total diol amount was carried out in this study. The Novel PCITN was containing 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid (NDA) content ranging from 0 to 100 mol% relative to the total diacid amount. The synthesized PCITN were thoroughly characterized for their actual chemical composition, molecular weight, thermal properties, thermal stability, dimensional stability, transmittance (%), and birefringence. All the copolyesters showed the characteristics of random copolyesters and their composition and thermal properties could be controlled by the molar feed ratio of diol and diacid moieties. Results indicate that ISB significantly improves the glass transition temperature (T g) of resultant copolyesters. It was also found that synthesized copolyesters have a high T g and wide processing window compared to conventional homopolyesters. Exceptional performance properties: such as high T g , T m , high thermal stability, dimensional stability, good moisture barrier, good transmittance, and low birefringence of fabricated PCI 6 TN 70 film, make it suitable for versatile industrial applications especially for biomedical, packaging, and optical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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25. Comprehensive Investigation of the Behavior of Polyurethane Foams Based on Conventional Polyol and Oligo-Ester-Ether-Diol from Waste Poly(ethylene terephthalate): Fireproof Performances, Thermal Stabilities, and Physicomechanical Properties.
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Pham, Chi T., Nguyen, Binh T., Nguyen, Hien T.T., Kang, Soo-Jung, Kim, Jinhwan, Lee, Pyoung-Chan, and Hoang, DongQuy
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- 2020
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26. Support for Cannabis Tourism: A Tale of Two States.
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Kang, Soo and McGrady, Pavlina
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MARIJUANA ,TOURISM ,TOURISM marketing ,LANDSCAPES ,MARIJUANA legalization ,ECONOMIC opportunities - Abstract
The cannabis tourism market has seen tremendous growth in recent years. However, research activities by academic scholars and industry professionals have barely scratched the surface to explore this emerging tourism segment. This study addresses the gap by comparing resident perceptions on cannabis tourism in two states, Colorado and Oregon. A quantitative survey was distributed to Colorado (n = 254) and Oregon (n = 165) residents. Results of the study revealed that the respondents in each state appear to have different views on perceived impact from, benefit of, and support level for cannabis tourism. Overall, Colorado residents' attachment was higher than Oregon respondents. Additionally, Colorado residents showed that if they had a higher place identity, they were less likely to perceive negative impacts. In a similar context, the study results also confirmed that there was a stronger causal relationship between respondents' perceived impact and support for cannabis tourism among Colorado respondents than Oregon respondents, indicating that Colorado residents' support for cannabis tourism was more significantly influenced by their perceived positive and negative impact levels than Oregon respondent. Considering the continued evolvement in the legal and economic landscapes of cannabis tourism, policy makers and industry professionals should engage in continual conversations on how to plan and manage this new tourism segment for community and state development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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27. Comparison of optical coherence tomography-guided versus intravascular ultrasound-guided percutaneous coronary intervention: Rationale and design of a randomized, controlled OCTIVUS trial.
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Kang, Do-Yoon, Ahn, Jung-Min, Park, Hanbit, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Park, Seong-Wook, Kim, Sang-Wook, Hur, Seung-Ho, Cho, Yun-Kyeong, Lee, Cheol Hyun, Hong, Soon Jun, Hong, Young Joon, Yoon, Young Won, Kim, Soo-Joong, Bae, Jang-Ho, Oh, Jun-Hyok, Park, Duk-Woo, and Park, Seung-Jung
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Background: The clinical value of intracoronary imaging for percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) guidance is well acknowledged. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) are the most commonly used intravascular imaging to guide and optimize PCI in day-to-day practice. However, the comparative effectiveness of IVUS-guided versus OCT-guided PCI with respect to clinical end points remains unknown.Methods and Design: The OCTIVUS study is a prospective, multicenter, open-label, parallel-arm, randomized trial comparing the effectiveness of 2 imaging-guided strategies in patients with stable angina or acute coronary syndromes undergoing PCI in Korea. A total of 2,000 patients are randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either an OCT-guided PCI strategy or an IVUS-guided PCI strategy. The trial uses a pragmatic comparative effectiveness design with inclusion criteria designed to capture a broad range of real-world patients with diverse clinical and anatomical features. PCI optimization criteria are predefined using a common algorithm for online OCT or IVUS. The primary end point, which was tested for both noninferiority (margin, 3.1 percentage points for the risk difference) and superiority, is target-vessel failure (cardiac death, target-vessel myocardial infarction, or ischemia-driven target-vessel revascularization) at 1 year.Results: Up to the end of July 2020, approximately 1,200 "real-world" PCI patients have been randomly enrolled over 2 years. Enrollment is expected to be completed around the midterm of 2021, and primary results will be available by late 2022 or early 2023.Conclusion: This large-scale, multicenter, pragmatic-design clinical trial will provide valuable clinical evidence on the relative efficacy and safety of OCT-guided versus IVUS-guided PCI strategies in a broad population of patients undergoing PCI in the daily clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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28. Optimal Stenting Technique for Complex Coronary Lesions: Intracoronary Imaging-Guided Pre-Dilation, Stent Sizing, and Post-Dilation.
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Park, Hanbit, Ahn, Jung-Min, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Jung-Bok, Park, Sangwoo, Ko, Euihong, Cho, Sang-Cheol, Lee, Pil Hyung, Park, Duk-Woo, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
This study compared the 3-year outcomes of intracoronary imaging–guided pre-dilation, stent sizing, and post-dilation (iPSP) for patients with complex coronary artery lesions. The long-term effects of the optimal drug-eluting stent implantation technique in complex coronary artery disease have not been evaluated. From the IRIS-DES (Interventional Cardiology Research In-cooperation Society-Drug-Eluting Stents) registry, the study evaluated 9,525 patients who underwent percutaneous coronary intervention for left main, bifurcation, long or diffuse (>30 mm), or angiographically severely calcified lesions. The primary outcome was a composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization. The inverse probability of treatment weighting method was used to adjust for confounding factors. At the index procedure, intravascular ultrasound assessment PSP were performed in 8,522 (89.5%) patients, 5,141 (54.0%) patients, and 5,531 (58.1%) patients, respectively; overall, 3,374 (35.4%) patients underwent stent implantation using all 3 parts of the iPSP strategy and were defined as the iPSP group. At 3 years, the adjusted rate of the primary outcome was significantly lower in iPSP group (5.6% vs 7.9%; adjusted hazard ratio: 0.71; 95% confidence interval: 0.63 to 0.81; p < 0.001). Among patients undergoing drug-eluting stent implantation in complex coronary artery stenosis, iPSP was associated with a lower risk of cardiac events at 3 years. Therefore, physicians should apply iPSP more actively for the treatment of complex coronary artery stenoses, even in the current era. (Evaluation of the First, Second, and New Drug-Eluting Stents in Routine Clinical Practice [IRIS-DES]; NCT01186133) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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29. Inhibitory effect and mechanism of action of blue light irradiation on adipogenesis.
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Yang, Seoyoun, Yu, Eunbi, Park, See-Hyoung, Oh, Sae Woong, Kwon, Kitae, Han, Su Bin, Kang, Soo Hyun, Lee, Jung Hyun, Ha, Heejun, Song, Minkyung, Cho, Jae Youl, and Lee, Jongsung
- Abstract
Blue light can reach the epidermis, dermis, and hypodermis of the skin and affect the physiology of each cell type. However, thus far, most studies have focused on the effects of blue light on the epidermis and dermis; no studies have been conducted on the effects of blue light on the hypodermis. In this study, we attempted to elucidate the effects of blue light on the hypodermis. Specifically, we investigated the effects of blue light on 3T3-L1 adipogenesis and its mechanism of action. In this study, we found that blue light reduced lipid accumulation and GPDH activity, indicating its antiadipogenic properties. Furthermore, blue light inhibited the mRNA and protein levels of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) and its target genes, such as Fasn and FABP4, and the luciferase activity of the PPRE promoter, suggesting that blue light downregulates the expression of adipogenic genes, leading to suppression of 3T3-L1 adipogenesis. Furthermore, blue light increased the phosphorylation of PPARγ, indicating its anti-adipogenic effect through PPARγ degradation. Blue light upregulates the expression and phosphorylation of transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1). Furthermore, blue light restored calcium influx, which was attenuated by adipogenesis. These data suggest that TRPV1 is involved in the anti-adipogenic effects of blue light. Blue light induced the phosphorylation of AMPK, ACC, and MAPKs, whereas capsazepine, an antagonist of TRPV1, attenuated the effects of blue light. Capsazepine treatment also reduced the blue light-induced anti-adipogenic effects. These results indicate that TRPV1 operates upstream of AMPK or MAPKs in the blue light-induced anti-adipogenesis process, which is mediated by activating the TRPV1-AMPK/MAPK signaling pathways. Meanwhile, inhibition of AMPK and MAPKs reduced the phosphorylation level of PPARγ, indicating that AMPK/MAPK signaling contributes to the phosphorylation of PPARγ. These results suggest the possibility of using blue light as an antiadipogenic agent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Compressed sensing time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography with high spatial resolution for evaluating intracranial aneurysms: comparison with digital subtraction angiography
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Kim, Donghyun, Heo, Young Jin, Jeong, Hae Woong, Baek, Jin Wook, Shin, Gi Won, Jin, Sung-Chul, Baek, Hye Jin, Ryu, Kyeong Hwa, Kim, Kang Soo, and Kim, InSeong
- Abstract
Background and purpose Compressed sensing is used for accelerated acquisitions with incoherently under-sampled k-space data, and intracranial time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography is suitable for compressed sensing. Compressed sensing time-of-flight is beneficial in decreasing acquisition time and increasing spatial resolution while maintaining acquisition time. In this retrospective study, we aimed to evaluate the image quality and diagnostic performance of compressed sensing time-of-flight with high spatial resolution and compare with parallel imaging time-of-flight using digital subtraction angiography as a reference.Material and methods In total, 39 patients with 46 intracranial aneurysms underwent parallel imaging and compressed sensing time-of-flight in the same imaging session and digital subtraction angiography before or after magnetic resonance angiography. The overall image quality, artefacts and diagnostic confidence were assessed by two observers. The contrast ratio, maximal aneurysm diameters and diagnostic performance were evaluated.Results Compressed sensing time-of-flight showed significantly better overall image quality, degree of artefacts and diagnostic confidence in both observers, with better inter-observer agreement. The contrast ratio was significantly higher for compressed sensing time-of-flight than for parallel imaging time-of-flight in both observers (source images, P <0.001; maximum intensity projection images, P< 0.05 for both observers); however, the measured maximal diameters of aneurysms were not significantly different. Compressed sensing time-of-flight showed higher sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and positive and negative predictive values for detecting aneurysms than parallel imaging time-of-flight in both observers, with better inter-observer agreement. Compressed sensing time-of-flight was preferred over parallel imaging time-of-flight by both observers; however, parallel imaging time-of-flight was preferred in cases of giant and large aneurysms.Conclusions Compressed sensing-time-of-flight provides better image quality and diagnostic performance than parallel imaging time-of-flight. However, neuroradiologists should be aware of under-sampling artefacts caused by compressed sensing.
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- 2021
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31. A cannabis festival in urban space: visitors' motivation and travel activity
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Kang, Soo K. and Lee, Jaeseok
- Abstract
Purpose: The present study aimed at classifying cannabis festival attendees based on their motivation and travel activities, profiling the resultant latent groups with demographic and travel characteristics and examining the association between the groups. Design/methodology/approach: With a quantitative-exploratory approach, this study collected 392 out-of-state visitors' responses to a cannabis festival in Denver, Colorado and classified them according to their motivation and activity participation. Using the classification results, the study profiled the festival visitors based on their demographic and travel characteristics. Latent class analysis, analysis of variance (ANOVA) and cross-tabulation were employed. Findings: The results revealed that festival visitors were categorized into four latent groups by motivation and three latent groups by travel activity participation. Regarding motivation, the cannabis seekers (relatively young, White/Caucasian and residents in liberal states) and multi-purpose seekers (relatively young, Black/African American and residents in conservative states) were strongly motivated by cannabis-related factors. For travel activity participation, moderate participants were more likely to be first-time visitors, whereas active and passive participants were classified as repeat visitors. Originality/value: The current study filled the research gap in the quantitative exploration of cannabis tourism industry in general and cannabis festival segment specifically. The findings contribute to (1) better understanding of out-of-state visitors' motivation and travel behaviors while attending a cannabis themed festival and (2) serving as a seminal work in the context of cannabis tourism literature since the recreational cannabis legalization in the United States.
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- 2021
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32. Optofluidic Raman-activated cell sorting for targeted genome retrieval or cultivation of microbial cells with specific functions
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Lee, Kang Soo, Pereira, Fátima C., Palatinszky, Márton, Behrendt, Lars, Alcolombri, Uria, Berry, David, Wagner, Michael, and Stocker, Roman
- Abstract
Stable isotope labeling of microbial taxa of interest and their sorting provide an efficient and direct way to answer the question “who does what?” in complex microbial communities when coupled with fluorescence in situ hybridization or downstream ‘omics’ analyses. We have developed a platform for automated Raman-based sorting in which optical tweezers and microfluidics are used to sort individual cells of interest from microbial communities on the basis of their Raman spectra. This sorting of cells and their downstream DNA analysis, such as by mini-metagenomics or single-cell genomics, or cultivation permits a direct link to be made between the metabolic roles and the genomes of microbial cells within complex microbial communities, as well as targeted isolation of novel microbes with a specific physiology of interest. We describe a protocol from sample preparation through Raman-activated live cell sorting. Subsequent cultivation of sorted cells is described, whereas downstream DNA analysis involves well-established approaches with abundant methods available in the literature. Compared with manual sorting, this technique provides a substantially higher throughput (up to 500 cells per h). Furthermore, the platform has very high sorting accuracy (98.3 ± 1.7%) and is fully automated, thus avoiding user biases that might accompany manual sorting. We anticipate that this protocol will empower in particular environmental and host-associated microbiome research with a versatile tool to elucidate the metabolic contributions of microbial taxa within their complex communities. After a 1-d preparation of cells, sorting takes on the order of 4 h, depending on the number of cells required.
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- 2021
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33. Support for Cannabis Tourism: A Tale of Two States
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Kang, Soo and McGrady, Pavlina
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The cannabis tourism market has seen tremendous growth in recent years. However, research activities by academic scholars and industry professionals have barely scratched the surface to explore this emerging tourism segment. This study addresses the gap by comparing resident perceptions on cannabis tourism in two states, Colorado and Oregon. A quantitative survey was distributed to Colorado (n = 254) and Oregon (n = 165) residents. Results of the study revealed that the respondents in each state appear to have different views on perceived impact from, benefit of, and support level for cannabis tourism. Overall, Colorado residents' attachment was higher than Oregon respondents. Additionally, Colorado residents showed that if they had a higher place identity, they were less likely to perceive negative impacts. In a similar context, the study results also confirmed that there was a stronger causal relationship between respondents' perceived impact and support for cannabis tourism among Colorado respondents than Oregon respondents, indicating that Colorado residents' support for cannabis tourism was more significantly influenced by their perceived positive and negative impact levels than Oregon respondent. Considering the continued evolvement in the legal and economic landscapes of cannabis tourism, policy makers and industry professionals should engage in continual conversations on how to plan and manage this new tourism segment for community and state development.
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- 2020
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34. Study on Zn-Mn Alloy Plating on the Surface of Steel Sheet Prepared in Hydrochloric Acid Bath
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Kang, Soo Young
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Zinc plating using the principle of sacrificial anode is used to prevent steel corrosion. Pure zinc plating has some problems and Zn-Mn alloy plating has been studied as one of the measures to increase the corrosion resistance. Zn-Mn alloy plating can be applied to automotive parts requiring high corrosion resistance despite high plating cost. In this study, Zn-Mn alloy plating was electrodeposited in acidic chloride solution. The effects of electrolytic conditions on the composition of the alloy plating in the chloride bath were investigated. As the current density increased, the Zn content decreased and the Mn content increased. As the temperature of the electrolyte increased, the Zn content decreased and the Mn content increased.
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- 2020
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35. Tailored Nanopatterning by Controlled Continuous Nanoinscribing with Tunable Shape, Depth, and Dimension.
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Dong Kyo Oh, Seungjo Lee, Seung Hu Lee, Wonseok Lee, Gyubeom Yeon, Nayeong Lee, Kang-Soo Han, Sunmin Jung, Dong Ha Kim, Dae-Young Lee, Sang Hoon Lee, Hui Joon Park, and Ok, Jong G.
- Published
- 2019
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36. Enhanced Cross-Plane Thermoelectric Figure of Merit Observed in an Al2O3/ZnO Superlattice Film by Hole Carrier Blocking and Phonon Scattering.
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Lee, Won-Yong, Park, No-Won, Kang, Soo-Young, Kim, Gil-Sung, Koh, Jung-Hyuk, Saitoh, Eiji, and Lee, Sang-Kwon
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- 2019
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37. Incremental Value of Subtended Myocardial Mass for Identifying FFR-Verified Ischemia Using Quantitative CT Angiography: Comparison With Quantitative Coronary Angiography and CT-FFR.
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Yang, Dong Hyun, Kang, Soo-Jin, Koo, Hyun Jung, Kweon, Jihoon, Kang, Joon-Won, Lim, Tae-Hwan, Jung, Joonho, Kim, Namkug, Lee, June-Goo, Han, Seungbong, Ahn, Jung-Min, Park, Duk-Woo, Lee, Seung-Whan, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Park, Seung-Jung, Mintz, Gary S., and Kim, Young-Hak
- Abstract
Abstract Objectives This study examined the incremental value of subtended myocardial mass (V sub) as assessed by coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) for identifying lesion-specific ischemia verified by invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) in quantitative coronary CTA. Background FFR is determined not only by coronary stenosis severity, but also by V sub. One-step evaluation of combined V sub and coronary lesion morphology may improve the accuracy of coronary CTA for identifying ischemia-producing lesions. Methods A total of 246 intermediate coronary artery lesions (30% to 80% diameter stenosis) in 220 patients (mean age 61.7 years, 168 men) interrogated by FFR were retrospectively studied. Coronary CTA data were used to assess the V sub by coronary artery stenosis, minimal lumen area (MLA), percentage of aggregated plaque volume (%APV), positive remodeling, and low-attenuation plaque. The ability of V sub /MLA
2 to discriminate lesions with FFR ≤0.80 was examined. Diagnostic performance, odds ratios, and category-less net reclassification improvements of coronary CTA parameters for FFR-verified (≤0.80) ischemia were evaluated. On-site computed tomography (CT) derived–FFR (CT-FFR) and quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) data were also compared. Results Of 246 lesions, 84 (34.1%) showed an FFR ≤0.80. V sub was independently associated with an FFR ≤0.80 (odds ratio: 1.04/1 cm3 ; p = 0.032) and showed incremental value over MLA. V sub /MLA2 >4.16 was the best single parameter for discriminating an FFR ≤0.80 with 83.3% sensitivity and 67.9% specificity. The area under the curve (AUC) of V sub /MLA2 >4.16 (0.80 [95% confidence interval: 0.75 to 0.85]) was better than that of MLA (change in [Δ]AUC: 0.069; p < 0.001), %APV (ΔAUC: 0.096; p = 0.017), and diameter stenosis of QCA (ΔAUC: 0.080; p = 0.037) and was comparable to that of CT-FFR (AUC 0.77; ΔAUC: 0.035; p = 0.304). Conclusions V sub is an independent determinant of an FFR ≤0.80. The mathematical index of V sub /MLA2 >4.16 assessed by coronary CTA shows better diagnostic performance for the detection of ischemia-producing lesions than CT-derived MLA alone or %APV and QCA parameters and was comparable to that of on-site CT-FFR. Graphical abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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38. Cryopreservation of Neuroectoderm on a Pillar Plate and In SituDifferentiation into Human Brain Organoids
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Zolfaghar, Mona, Acharya, Prabha, Joshi, Pranav, Choi, Na Young, Shrestha, Sunil, Lekkala, Vinod Kumar Reddy, Kang, Soo-Yeon, Lee, Minseong, and Lee, Moo-Yeal
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Cryopreservation in cryovials extends cell storage at low temperatures, and advances in organoid cryopreservation improve reproducibility and reduce generation time. However, cryopreserving human organoids presents challenges due to the limited diffusion of cryoprotective agents (CPAs) into the organoid core and the potential toxicity of these agents. To overcome these obstacles, we developed a cryopreservation technique using a pillar plate platform. To demonstrate cryopreservation application to human brain organoids (HBOs), early stage HBOs were produced by differentiating induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) into neuroectoderm (NE) in an ultralow attachment (ULA) 384-well plate. The NE was transferred and encapsulated in Matrigel on the pillar plate. The NE on the pillar plate was exposed to four commercially available CPAs, including the PSC cryopreservation kit, CryoStor CS10, 3dGRO, and 10% DMSO, before being frozen overnight at −80 °C and subsequently stored in a liquid nitrogen dewar. We examined the impact of the CPA type, organoid size, and CPA exposure duration on cell viability post-thaw. Additionally, the differentiation of NE into HBOs on the pillar plate was assessed using RT-qPCR and immunofluorescence staining. The PSC cryopreservation kit proved to be the least toxic for preserving the early stage HBOs on the pillar plate. Notably, smaller HBOs showed higher cell viability postcryopreservation than larger ones. An incubation period of 80 min with the PSC kit was essential to ensure optimal CPA diffusion into HBOs with a diameter of 400–600 μm. These cryopreserved early stage HBOs successfully matured over 30 days, exhibiting gene expression patterns akin to noncryopreserved HBOs. The cryopreserved early stage HBOs on the pillar plate maintained high viability after thawing and successfully differentiated into mature HBOs. This on-chip cryopreservation method could extend to other small organoids, by integrating cryopreservation, thawing, culturing, staining, rinsing, and imaging processes within a single system, thereby preserving the 3D structure of the organoids.
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- 2024
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39. Preoperative EUS-guided FNA: effects on peritoneal recurrence and survival in patients with pancreatic cancer.
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Kim, Sun Hwa, Woo, Young Sik, Lee, Kwang Hyuck, Lee, Jong Kyun, Lee, Kyu Taek, Park, Joo Kyung, Kang, Soo Hoon, Kim, Ji Won, Park, Jae Keun, and Park, Sung-Wook
- Abstract
Background and Aims EUS-guided FNA (EUS-FNA) is an accurate and relatively safe tissue confirmation method for pancreatic cancer. However, there is concern that this procedure may spread tumor cells along the needle track or within the peritoneum. We aimed to estimate the effect of preoperative EUS-FNA on the risk of peritoneal recurrence and long-term outcomes in resected pancreatic cancer. Methods We retrospectively reviewed records of patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer who had undergone curative resection between 2009 and 2013 to investigate the overall survival, cancer-free survival, and peritoneal recurrence. Peritoneal recurrence was diagnosed based on image findings or cytology-confirmed ascites. Results Of 411 patients, 90 underwent preoperative EUS-FNA (EUS-FNA group), whereas 321 did not (non–EUS-FNA group). The median length of follow-up was 16.2 months (range, 2-46). Peritoneal recurrence occurred in 131 patients: 30% (27/90) in the EUS-FNA group versus 32% (104/321) in the non–EUS-FNA group (P =.66). Cancer-free survival or overall survival was not significantly different between the 2 groups: median overall survival of 25.3 months in the EUS-FNA group versus 23.7 months in the non–EUS-FNA group (P =.36) and median cancer-free survival of 12.7 months in the EUS-FNA group versus 11.6 months in the non–EUS-FNA group (P =.38). Conclusions Preoperative EUS-FNA for pancreatic cancer was not associated with an increased rate of peritoneal recurrence or mortality. Therefore, EUS-FNA is an accurate and safe method to obtain suspicious pancreatic mass tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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40. Risk factors of urinary tract infection caused by extended spectrum β-lactamase-producing Escherichia coli in emergency department.
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Lee, Hyeonseok, Han, Seung Baik, Kim, Ji Hye, Kang, Soo, and Durey, Areum
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Objectives: The incidence of urinary tract infection (UTI) due to extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli has increased over recent years. Initial empirical therapy is often ineffective for these resistant isolates resulting in prolonged hospitalization and increased mortality. This study was conducted to determine the risk factors of UTI caused by ESBL E. coli in the emergency department (ED).Methods: This is a retrospective case-control study at a university hospital in Korea with UTI patients who visited ED between June 2015 and December 2016. We compared case patients with ESBL E. coli UTI (n = 50) to control patients with non-ESBL-producing E. coli UTI (n = 100), which were matched for age and sex. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to explore risk factors.Results: Our study showed that hospital-acquired infection (OR = 3.86; 95% CI = 1.26-11.8; p = .017), prior UTI within 1 year (OR = 3.26; 95% CI = 1.32-8.05; p = .010), and underlying cerebrovascular disease (OR = 3.24; 95% CI = 1.45-7.25; p = .004) were independent risk factors for acquisition of ESBL-producing E. coli. Notably, 35 (70%) out of 50 case patients had community-acquired infection, and 68% and 54% of ESBL E. coli were resistance to ciprofloxacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, respectively. On the contrary, 98% of ESBL E. coli was susceptible to amikacin.Conclusion: The main risk factors identified in our study should be considered when treating UTI patients in ED. Amikacin may improve the outcome of empirical treatment without increasing carbapenem utilization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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41. Support of marijuana tourism in Colorado: A residents’ perspective using social exchange theory.
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Kang, Soo K. and Lee, Jaeseok
- Abstract
This paper examines how residents’ support of marijuana tourism is shaped in the state of Colorado. Known as the new green rush,’ the legalization of recreational marijuana presents a significant research opportunity for the hospitality and tourism industry. This study employs social exchange theory to explain how perceived impacts affect an individual's level of support for marijuana tourism development. Findings reveal that social exchange theory fits the data well by confirming that the more residents perceive impacts positively, the more they are likely to support tourism. Furthermore, the moderating effect of place attachment exerts itself differently among the structural relationships across levels of place attachment. For high-level attachment residents, personal benefit contributes significantly to building up support toward marijuana tourism, whereas perceived negative impact and personal benefit are the only significant antecedents to support for low-level attachment residents. As a seminal work investigating residents’ perceptions in the context of marijuana tourism, this study contributes to the body of knowledge of tourism literature in this burgeoning area and serves as a guiding reference for future studies concerning marijuana tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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42. Hemodynamic changes after propacetamol administration in patients with febrile UTI in the ED.
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Kang, Soo, Durey, Areum, Kim, Ah Jin, and Suh, Young Ju
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Objectives: Clinical studies have indicated that transient hypotension can occur after propacetamol administration. This study aimed to analyze the hemodynamic changes after propacetamol administration in patients visiting the ED due to febrile UTI. We also examined the incidence of propacetamol-induced hypotension and compared the clinical characteristics of patients with persistent hypotension, defined as requiring additional fluids or vasopressors, to those with transient hypotension.Methods: A retrospective analysis of the electronic medical records of patients who visited the ED between June 2015 and May 2016, were diagnosed with febrile UTI, and treated with propacetamol, was conducted.Results: We included 195 patients in this study; of these, 87 (44.6%) showed hypotension. In all patients, significant decreases in systolic blood pressure (SBP; 135.06±20.45mmHg vs 117.70±16.41mmHg), diastolic blood pressure (DBP; 79.74±12.17mmHg vs 69.69±10.96mmHg), and heart rate (97.46±17.14mmHg vs 90.72±14.90mmHg) were observed after propacetamol administration. The basal SBP and DBP were higher in the hypotension than in the non-hypotension group (basal SBP: 144.4±22.3mmHg vs 127.6±15.3mmHg; basal DBP: 83.3±12.6mmHg vs 76.9±11.0mmHg). Patients with persistent hypotension had a lower baseline BP, which was not elevated despite fever, and a higher rate of bacteremia than those with transient hypotension.Conclusions: Although febrile UTI patients treated with propacetamol in the ED showed hemodynamic changes, these changes did not have a large effect on their prognosis. However, in patients who showed bacteremia or a normal initial BP despite fever, the possibility of developing persistent hypotension should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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43. Comparison of drug-eluting stents and drug-coated balloon for the treatment of drug-eluting coronary stent restenosis: A randomized RESTORE trial.
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Wong, Yiu Tung Anthony, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Jin Bae, Rha, Seung-Woon, Hong, Young Joon, Shin, Eun-Seok, Her, Sung-Ho, Nam, Chang Wook, Chung, Woo-Young, Kim, Moo Hyun, Lee, Cheol Hyun, Lee, Pil Hyung, Ahn, Jung-Min, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Park, Duk-Woo, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
Background: This study sought to evaluate the optimal treatment for in-stent restenosis (ISR) of drug-eluting stents (DESs).Methods: This is a prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized study comparing the use of drug-eluting balloon (DEB) versus second-generation everolimus-eluting stent for the treatment of DES ISR. The primary end point was in-segment late loss at 9-month routine angiographic follow-up.Results: A total of 172 patients were enrolled, and 74 (43.0%) patients underwent the angiographic follow-up. The primary end point was not different between the 2 treatment groups (DEB group 0.15±0.49 mm vs DES group 0.19±0.41 mm, P=.54). The secondary end points of in-segment minimal luminal diameter (MLD) (1.80±0.69 mm vs 2.09±0.46 mm, P=.03), in-stent MLD (1.90±0.71 mm vs 2.29±0.48 mm, P=.005), in-segment percent diameter stenosis (34%±21% vs 26%±15%, P=.05), and in-stent percent diameter stenosis (33%±21% vs 21%±15%, P=.002) were more favorable in the DES group. The composite of death, myocardial infarction, or target lesion revascularization at 1 year was comparable between the 2 groups (DEB group 7.0% vs DES group 4.7%, P=.51).Conclusions: Treatment of DES ISR using DEB or second-generation DES did not differ in terms of late loss at 9-month angiographic follow-up, whereas DES showed better angiographic results regarding minimal MLD and percent diameter stenosis. Both treatment strategies were safe and effective up to 1year after the procedure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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44. Si-quantum-dot heterojunction solar cells with 16.2% efficiency achieved by employing doped-graphene transparent conductive electrodes.
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Kim, Jong Min, Kim, Sung, Shin, Dong Hee, Seo, Sang Woo, Lee, Ha Seung, Kim, Ju Hwan, Jang, Chan Wook, Kang, Soo Seok, Choi, Suk-Ho, Kwak, Gyea Young, Kim, Kyung Joong, Lee, Hanleem, and Lee, Hyoyoung
- Abstract
To overcome small- and indirect-bandgap nature of crystalline bulk Si, a lot of efforts have been made to utilize Si quantum dots (SQDs) in optoelectronic devices. By controlling the size of Si quantum dots (SQDs), it is possible to vary the energy bandgap based on quantum confinement effect, which can maximize the power-conversion efficiency (PCE) of solar cells due to the energy harvesting in a broader spectral range. Here, we first employ graphene transparent conductive electrodes (TCEs) for SQDs-based solar cells, showing a maximum PCE of 16.2%, much larger than ever achieved in bulk-Si solar cells with graphene TCEs. In this work, the graphene TCEs are doped with two kinds of materials such as AuCl 3 and Ag nanowires for efficient collection of the carriers photo-induced in SQDs. The encapsulation of the doped-graphene TCE with another graphene layer prevents the doping elements from being desorbed or oxidized, thereby making the PCE higher, its doping dependence more evident, and the long-term performance more stable. The observed unique solar cell characteristics prove to be dominated by the trade-off effects between doping-induced variations of diode quality, transmittance/sheet resistance of graphene, energy barrier at the graphene TCE/SQDs interface, and reflectance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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45. Comparison of the stability of eGFP displayed on the Bacillus subtilisspore surface using CotB and C-terminally truncated CotB proteins as an anchoring motif under extreme conditions
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Kang, Soo, Park, Eun, Lee, Dong, and Hong, Kwang
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We investigated the expression and stability of enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under extreme conditions using two types of high-copy-number vectors and two types of anchoring motifs (CotB and C-terminally truncated ∆CotB spore coat proteins) for the development of a spore surface display system in Bacillus subtilis. The fused cotB-gfpand ΔcotB-gfpDNA fragments were cloned into the pUB19 (pUB110-derived) and pHY300PLK vectors. Four types of expression vectors were transformed into B.subtilis 168. The expression level of eGFP on the surface of spores prepared from B. subtilistransformants was measured by flow cytometry. When pUB19 vector was used, the activities of ∆CotB-eGFP and CotB-eGFP were 17.9 and 5.6 times higher than those of the pHY300PLK vector, respectively. In addition, the activity of pUB19-∆CotB-eGFP was 1.76 times higher than that of pUB19-CotB-eGFP. Overall, the activity of eGFP was more stable under extreme conditions (heat, pH, and protease challenges) when ∆CotB was used as an anchoring motif instead of CotB. Compared to the control groups, the activities of ΔCotB-eGFP and CotB-eGFP were maintained at 56% and 41% at 80 °C and 88% and 55% at pH 10, respectively. The activities of ΔCotB-eGFP and CotB-eGFP were maintained at 62% and 41%, respectively, when treated with 0.03 U of proteinase K. In addition, the activities were maintained at 77% and 36%, respectively, when treated with 5.5 U of trypsin.
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- 2019
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46. The cannabis festival: quality, satisfaction, and intention to return
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Kang, Soo, Miller, Jeffrey, and Lee, Jaeseok
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to understand how festival quality, satisfaction and intention to return among cannabis festival attendees were interrelated by using the 2018 Mile High 420 Cannabis Festival in Denver, Colorado, USA. Design/methodology/approach: This study employed an online survey with festival attendees to the 2018 Mile High 420 Festival. A total of 664 attendees participated in the survey. Findings: Findings of the study revealed the demographic profile of cannabis festival attendees (i.e. relatively young, single and evenly distributed in terms of gender and residency) and its relationships with respondents’ perceived festival qualities. In addition, two dimensions of festival quality unique to the context of marijuana festival influenced attendees’ satisfaction and intent to return significantly. Festival attendees’ travel characteristics were used to describe attendees’ satisfaction and intent to return to a different degree. This research has also highlighted a lack of research in the area of cannabis events/festivals. Originality/value: This study is the first investigation that studied a cannabis-themed festival in the tourism literature. As legalization of recreational cannabis has been embraced in the USA and abroad (i.e. Canada), the findings of this empirical study will help the industry professionals and policy makers to understand this unprecedented SIT market and can be used as the benchmarks for their legal and operational practicality. Further, this study highlights research gaps in the tourism literature, and identifies those areas where future study is unlikely to provide new knowledge.
- Published
- 2019
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47. Tailored Nanopatterning by Controlled Continuous Nanoinscribing with Tunable Shape, Depth, and Dimension
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Oh, Dong Kyo, Lee, Seungjo, Lee, Seung Hu, Lee, Wonseok, Yeon, Gyubeom, Lee, Nayeong, Han, Kang-Soo, Jung, Sunmin, Kim, Dong Ha, Lee, Dae-Young, Lee, Sang Hoon, Park, Hui Joon, and Ok, Jong G.
- Abstract
We present that the tailored nanopatterning with tunable shape, depth, and dimension for diverse application-specific designs can be realized by utilizing controlled dynamic nanoinscribing (DNI), which can generate bur-free plastic deformation on various flexible substrates viacontinuous mechanical inscription of a small sliced edge of a nanopatterned mold in a compact and vacuum-free system. Systematic controlling of prime DNI processing parameters including inscribing force, temperature, and substrate feed rate can determine the nanopattern depths and their specific profiles from rounded to angular shapes as a summation of the force-driven plastic deformation and heat-driven thermal deformation. More complex nanopatterns with gradient depths and/or multidimensional profiles can also be readily created by modulating the horizontal mold edge alignment and/or combining sequential DNI strokes, which otherwise demand laborious and costly procedures. Many practical user-specific applications may benefit from this study by tailor-making the desired nanopattern structures within desired areas, including precision machine and optics components, transparent electronics and photonics, flexible sensors, and reattachable and wearable devices. We demonstrate one vivid example in which the light diffusion direction of a light-emitting diode can be tuned by application of specifically designed DNI nanopatterns.
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- 2019
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48. Comparative effectiveness of different contemporary drug-eluting stents in routine clinical practice: a multigroup propensity score analysis using data from the stent-specific, multicenter, prospective registries
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Kwon, Osung, Kang, Se Hun, Lee, Jung-Bok, Ahn, Jung-Min, Lee, Cheol Hyun, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Park, Duk-Woo, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.
- Published
- 2019
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49. Enhanced Cross-Plane Thermoelectric Figure of Merit Observed in an Al2O3/ZnO Superlattice Film by Hole Carrier Blocking and Phonon Scattering
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Lee, Won-Yong, Park, No-Won, Kang, Soo-Young, Kim, Gil-Sung, Koh, Jung-Hyuk, Saitoh, Eiji, and Lee, Sang-Kwon
- Abstract
We experimentally investigate the cross-plane figure of merit (ZT) for an Al2O3/ZnO (AO/ZnO) superlattice film by measuring cross-plane electrical and thermal conductivity and Seebeck coefficient using the 3-ω method and an in-house Seebeck coefficient measurement system recently developed for 300–500 K and examine how ZTfactors depend on the AO layer inside the AO/ZnO superlattice film using measured thermoelectric properties. The AO/ZnO superlattice film exhibited maximum power factor of ∼276.2 μW/m K2with low thermal conductivity (∼0.31 W/m K), producing ZT≥ 0.45 at 500 K, which is approximately 2,650% improvement compared with an undoped ZnO film (∼0.017). The enhanced ZTperformance of the AO/ZnO superlattice film can be explained by enhanced phonon scattering at the interface and minority carrier blocking at the interfacial barrier due to the AO layer, suggesting that the interfacial AO layer is important to enhance ZTin oxide-based films. These results open new applications for micro- or nanoscale thin film-based thermoelectric devices.
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- 2019
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50. Temporal changes in characteristics, treatment strategies, and outcomes of coronary bifurcation lesion interventions
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Kang, Se Hun, Ahn, Jung-Min, Lee, Jung-Bok, Lee, Cheol Hyun, Kang, Do-Yoon, Lee, Pil Hyung, Kang, Soo-Jin, Lee, Seung-Whan, Kim, Young-Hak, Lee, Cheol Whan, Park, Seong-Wook, Park, Duk-Woo, and Park, Seung-Jung
- Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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