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Abstract
Aims
Treating patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) presenting with volume overload is a common task. However, optimal guidance of decongesting therapy and treatment targets are not well defined. The inferior vena cava (IVC) diameter and its collapsibility can be used to estimate right atrial pressure, which is a measure of right‐sided haemodynamic congestion. The CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 trial is designed to test the hypothesis that ultrasound assessment of the IVC in addition to clinical assessment improves decongestion as compared with clinical assessment alone.
Methods and results
CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 is a randomized, controlled, patient‐blinded, multicentre, parallel‐group trial randomly assigning 388 patients with ADHF to either decongesting therapy guided by ultrasound assessment of the IVC in addition to clinical assessment or clinical assessment alone. IVC ultrasound will be performed daily between baseline and hospital discharge in all patients. However, ultrasound results will only be reported to treating physicians in the intervention group. Treatment target is relief of congestion‐related signs and symptoms in both groups with the additional goal to reduce the IVC diameter ≤21 mm and increase IVC collapsibility >50% in the intervention group. The primary endpoint is change in N‐terminal pro‐brain natriuretic peptide from baseline to hospital discharge. Secondary endpoints evaluate feasibility, efficacy of decongestion on other scales, and the impact of the intervention on clinical endpoints.
Conclusions
CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 will investigate whether IVC ultrasound supplementing clinical assessment improves decongestion in patients admitted for ADHF.
Lead-cluster investigations
(2017)
In this thesis, investigations on lead clusters stored in a Penning trap are presented. The measurements are performed at the ClusterTrap setup at the Institute of Physics of the University of Greifswald. A Penning trap with a superconducting magnet (B=12 Tesla) makes up the central part of the experiment. In this trap, singly positively or negatively charged lead clusters (a group of lead atoms) are stored, their amplitudes of motion are cooled, and a specific cluster size is selected. Thus, clusters of only a single size are prepared for experimental investigation. After interactions with electrons and/or photons, the trap content is extracted and analyzed by time-of-flight mass spectrometry.
In the first experiment, the size-selected clusters are excited by a frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser, which leads to fragmentation processes. The preferred fragmentation pathway, which is observed to be break-off of a seven-atom neutral cluster is unusual for metal clusters, which typically evaporate monomers. Furthermore, the already known magic cluster sizes are observed.
In a subsequent experiment, positively charged lead clusters with 31 atoms are irradiated with laser light and fragmentation processes are time resolved investigated. The assumption that lead clusters fragment by break-off of neutral heptamers is confirmed.
In the following experiment, an electron beam is guided through the Penning trap to ionize pulsed-in argon atoms. While the positive argon ions leave the trap, the secondary electrons are trapped together with the selected lead clusters. This allows the electrons to attach to the singly charged lead clusters, which leads to multiply negatively charged lead clusters. The relative abundance of multiply-charged clusters is measured with respect to the cluster size, from which the appearance sizes of di- and trianions can be calculated. In addition to the attachment of electrons, fragmentation products similar to those of the photoexcitation measurements are observed. Furthermore, the cluster sizes 10 and 12 are observed regardless of the investigated precursor size, together with clusters of the precursor size reduced by 10 and 12. This is a first hint for a fission process of doubly negatively charged lead clusters into two singly charged products. In a following measurement, doubly charged lead clusters are produced and photoexcited. The observed abundance spectra confirm this assumption.
The multi-cell Penning–Malmberg trap concept has been proposed as a way to accumulate and confine unprecedented numbers of antiparticles, an attractive but challenging goal. We report on the commissioning and first results (using electron plasmas) of the World's second prototype of such a trap, which builds and improves on the findings of its predecessor. Reliable alignment of both ‘master’ and ‘storage’ cells with the axial magnetic field has enabled confinement of plasmas, without use of the ‘rotating wall’ (RW) compression technique, for over an hour in the master cell and tens of seconds in the storage cells. In the master cell, attachment to background neutrals is found to be the main source of charge loss, with an overall charge-confinement time of 8.6 h. Transfer to on-axis and off-axis storage cells has been demonstrated, with an off-axis transfer rate of 50% of the initial particles, and confinement times in the storage cells in the tens of seconds (again, without RW compression). This, in turn, has enabled the first simultaneous plasma confinement in two off-axis cells, a milestone for the multi-cell trap concept.