The effects of the hole size and the specimen width on the fracture behavior of several woven fabric composite plates are experimentally investigated in tension. It is shown in this paper that the characteristic length ( d o) in the Point Stress Criterion (PSC) depends on the hole size and the specimen width. A modified PSC for predicting the notched strength is proposed. An excellent agreement is found between the experimental results and the analytical predictions using the modified PSC. When the unstable fracture occurred, the equivalent critical crack length ( a c) corresponding to the damage zone size is about twice the characteristic length. The characteristic length decreases with an increase in the notched strength. The critical energy release rate ( G c) corresponding to the unstable fracture criterion is independent of the hole size for the same specimen width. G c increases with an increase in the specimen width. These results can be explained by the correlation between the G c and the notch sensitivity factor (k).
The prevalence of NPs with atopy and eosinophilic NPs has continuously increased in Korea, indicative that the sinonasal disease pattern is becoming similar with western countries.
Recent studies showed that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6), as well as high-sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP) levels are predictive factors of cardiovascular risk. However, the effect of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) intervention in coronary artery disease (CAD) patients on these factors is not known. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of CR and exercise on hsCRP and inflammatory cytokine levels in patients with CAD after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). CAD patients who underwent PCI were divided into a CR and exercise group (CRE, n = 29) or a control group (CON, n = 10). CR and exercise consisted of 6 weeks supervised exercise training and 8 weeks home-based, self-managed exercise. Compared to pre-experimental levels, TNF-alpha (by 20.4%; p = 0.006) and IL-6 (by 49.0%; p < 0.0001), as well as hsCRP (by 59.4%; p < 0.0001), were markedly decreased after CR and exercise in CAD patients but not in control group, except for IL-6 (by 41.6%; p = 0.001). However, there was no significant alteration of adiposity-related variables such as BMI, percent body fat, and waist circumferences, in both groups. We suggest that CR and exercise in CAD patients after PCI induce significant reduction in hsCRP and inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha and IL-6), and marked increase in exercise tolerance and capacity.
Infectious clones were generated from 17 new Korean radish isolates of Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV). Phylogenetic analysis indicated that all new isolates, and three previously characterized Korean radish isolates, belong to the basal-BR group (indicating that the pathotype can infect both Brassica and Raphanus spp.). Pairwise analysis revealed genomic nucleotide and polyprotein amino acid identities of >87.9 and >95.7%, respectively. Five clones (HJY1, HJY2, KIH2, BE, and prior isolate R007) had lower sequence identities than other isolates and produced mild symptoms in Nicotiana benthamiana. These isolates formed three distinct sequence classes (HJY1/HJY2/R007, KIH2, and BE), and several differential amino acid residues (in P1, P3, 6K2, and VPg) were present only in mild isolates HJY1, HJY2, and R007. The remaining isolates all induced systemic necrosis in N. benthamiana. Four mild isolates formed a phylogenetic subclade separate from another subclade including all of the necrosis-inducing isolates plus mild isolate KIH2. Symptom severity in radish and Chinese cabbage genotypes was not correlated with pathogenicity in N. benthamiana; indeed, Chinese cabbage cultivar Norang was not infected by any isolate, whereas Chinese cabbage cultivar Chusarang was uniformly susceptible. Four isolates were unable to infect radish cultivar Iljin, but no specific amino acid residues were correlated with avirulence. These results may lead to the identification of new resistance genes against TuMV.
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