Objective : Although a transradial angiography is accepted as the gold standard for cardiovascular procedures, cerebral angiography has been performed via transfemoral approach in most institutions. The purpose of this study is to present our experience concerning the feasibility, efficacy, and safety of a transradial approach to cerebral angiography as an alternative to a transfemoral approach. Methods : Between February 2007 and October 2009, a total of 1,240 cerebral angiographies were performed via a transradial approach in a single center. The right radial approach was used as an initial access route. The procedure continued only after the ulnar artery was proven to provide satisfactory collateral perfusion according to two tests (a modified Allen's test and forearm angiography). Results : The procedural success rate was 94.8% with a mean duration of 28 minutes. All supra-aortic vessels were successfully catheterized with a success rate of 100%. The success rates of selective catheterization to the right vertebral artery, right internal carotid artery, left internal carotid artery, and left vertebral artery were 96.1%, 98.6%, 82.6% and 52.2%, respectively. The procedure was performed more than twice in 73 patients (5.9%), including up to 4 times in 2 patients. The radial artery occlusion was found in 4 patients (5.4%) on follow-up cerebral angiography, but no ischemic symptoms were observed in any of the cases. Conclusion : This study suggests that cerebral angiography using a transradial approach can be performed with minimal risk of morbidity. In particular, this procedure might be useful for follow-up angiographies and place less stress on patients.
Methyl vinyl ketone (MVK), a volatile compound with photochemical activity, has received considerable attention in the fields of environmental chemistry and atmospheric chemistry. We explored the conformational stabilities of MVK...
One-photon vacuum ultraviolet mass-analyzed threshold ionization (VUV-MATI) spectroscopy was used to characterize the essential conformations of tetrahydrofuran (THF) and thus determine the stereochemistry of the furanose ring constituting the backbones of DNA and RNA. Since the VUV-MATI spectrum of THF exactly corresponds to the vibrational spectrum of the gas-phase THF cation, the above cation was detected using time-of-flight mass spectrometry featuring the delayed pulsed-field ionization of the target in high Rydberg states by scanning the wavelength of the VUV pulse across the region of the vibrational spectrum. The position of the 0-0 band in the recorded VUV-MATI spectrum was extrapolated to the zero-field limit, allowing the adiabatic ionization energy of THF to be accurately estimated to be 9.4256 ± 0.0004 eV. The above ionization was assigned to a transition between C-symmetric neutral (S) and cationic (D) ground states. The potential energy surfaces associated with molecular pseudorotation in the above states were constructed at the B3LYP/aug-cc-pVDZ level, being in good agreement with experimental observations. The twisted (C-symmetric) and bent (C-symmetric) conformers of the S state were predicted to be separated by a small interconversion barrier, whereas the D state exclusively existed in the C conformation. Based on the above, the peaks in the MATI spectrum were successfully assigned based on the Franck-Condon factors and vibrational frequencies calculated by varying the geometrical parameters of the C conformation, which determines the precise molecular structure of the THF cation.
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