The effect of differing water management schemes on the emission of methane (CH4) from rice paddies to the atmosphere was studied in a Japanese paddy field. Using an automated sampling and analyzing system, the test site was divided into two plots: a continuously flooded plot which was maintained flooded by constant irrigation from May to August, and an intermittently drained plot in which short‐term draining practices were performed several times during the flooding period . The draining practice had a strong effect on CH4 emission. A large flush of CH4 emission was observed in the intermittently drained plot immediately after each drainage. It was followed by a rapid decrease in CH4 flux in most of the cases. A large flush of CH4 was observed after the final drainage at the end of August in the continuously flooded plot, accounting for about 7% of the total CH4 emitted in the plot. Total emission rates of CH4 during the cultivation period were 14.8 and 8.63 g m−2 for 1991 and 9.49 and 5.18 g m−2 for 1993 in the continuously flooded and intermittently drained plots, respectively. Companion N2O flux measurements showed that almost no N2O was emitted from either plot until the final drainage. These results indicate that short‐term draining practices strongly reduce CH4 emission from rice paddy fields, and that improvement in water management can be one of the most important mitigation strategies for CH4 emission from rice paddy fields.
BACKGROUND & AIMS:Cold snare polypectomy (CSP) has become the standard resection method for small colorectal polyps (<10 mm). Sessile serrated lesions (SSL) have low prevalence of advanced histology irrespective of size, and thus could be amenable to CSP. In this study, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of CSP for SSLs ‡10 mm.
METHODS:Between November 2018 and January 2020, we prospectively enrolled 300 consecutive patients who underwent CSP for 474 SSLs ‡10 mm. To delineate SSL borders, indigo carmine chromoendoscopy and/or image-enhanced endoscopy was conducted. Piecemeal CSP (pCSP) was performed in cases where en-bloc resection was difficult. Biopsy specimens were obtained from the margins of the post-polypectomy defect to confirm complete resection. Surveillance colonoscopy was performed to screen for local recurrence.
RESULTS:All lesions were successfully resected using CSP without submucosal injection. The median diameter of the resected lesions was 14 mm, and pCSP was used to resect 106 (22%) lesions.Post-polypectomy biopsies revealed residual serrated tissue in only one case (0.2%). Adverse events included immediate bleeding in 8 (3%) patients; no delayed bleeding events occurred, irrespective of the use of antithrombotic drugs. During a 7-month median follow-up period, surveillance colonoscopies were performed for 384 lesions (81%), and no local recurrences were detected.
Objectives
This study was aimed to reveal risk factors for delayed bleeding after endoscopic resection (ER) of superficial non‐ampullary duodenal epithelial tumors (SNADETs) and at exploring measures to prevent this complication.
Methods
A total of 235 consecutive patients with 249 SNADETs who had undergone ER were enrolled in this study. They were divided into two groups: OTSC group, consisting of the initial 114 cases in which the defects were closed only using OTSCs; and OTSC‐c group, consisting of the later 135 cases in which conventional clips were additionally used to cover the inverted submucosa after post‐procedure defect closure using OTSCs. The therapeutic outcomes were then compared between the OTSC and OTSC‐c groups.
Results
All lesions were successfully resected en‐bloc, and the R0 resection rate was 92.4%. The complete defect closure rate was 90.0% and no delayed perforation occurred when successful defect closure was achieved. The rate of delayed bleeding was significantly higher in the OTSC group than in OTSC‐c group (11.4% vs. 1.5%, P = 0.001). Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed that tumor location distal to the ampulla (OR 10.0; 95% CI 1.24–81.0, P = 0.03) and use of a DOAC (OR 8.83; 95% CI 1.13–68.7, P = 0.04) were significant independent predictors of delayed bleeding. Propensity score‐matching analysis revealed that additional use of conventional clips was associated with a significantly reduced risk of delayed bleeding (P = 0.003).
Conclusions
Additional use of conventional clips after prophylactic defect closure using OTSCs appears to be useful to reduce the risk of delayed bleeding after ER of SNADETs.
UMIN Clinical Trials (No. 000035478).
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