SummaryBackgroundSeveral studies have shown that diabetes confers a higher relative risk of vascular mortality among women than among men, but whether this increased relative risk in women exists across age groups and within defined levels of other risk factors is uncertain. We aimed to determine whether differences in established risk factors, such as blood pressure, BMI, smoking, and cholesterol, explain the higher relative risks of vascular mortality among women than among men.MethodsIn our meta-analysis, we obtained individual participant-level data from studies included in the Prospective Studies Collaboration and the Asia Pacific Cohort Studies Collaboration that had obtained baseline information on age, sex, diabetes, total cholesterol, blood pressure, tobacco use, height, and weight. Data on causes of death were obtained from medical death certificates. We used Cox regression models to assess the relevance of diabetes (any type) to occlusive vascular mortality (ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke, or other atherosclerotic deaths) by age, sex, and other major vascular risk factors, and to assess whether the associations of blood pressure, total cholesterol, and body-mass index (BMI) to occlusive vascular mortality are modified by diabetes.ResultsIndividual participant-level data were analysed from 980 793 adults. During 9·8 million person-years of follow-up, among participants aged between 35 and 89 years, 19 686 (25·6%) of 76 965 deaths were attributed to occlusive vascular disease. After controlling for major vascular risk factors, diabetes roughly doubled occlusive vascular mortality risk among men (death rate ratio [RR] 2·10, 95% CI 1·97–2·24) and tripled risk among women (3·00, 2·71–3·33; χ2 test for heterogeneity p<0·0001). For both sexes combined, the occlusive vascular death RRs were higher in younger individuals (aged 35–59 years: 2·60, 2·30–2·94) than in older individuals (aged 70–89 years: 2·01, 1·85–2·19; p=0·0001 for trend across age groups), and, across age groups, the death RRs were higher among women than among men. Therefore, women aged 35–59 years had the highest death RR across all age and sex groups (5·55, 4·15–7·44). However, since underlying confounder-adjusted occlusive vascular mortality rates at any age were higher in men than in women, the adjusted absolute excess occlusive vascular mortality associated with diabetes was similar for men and women. At ages 35–59 years, the excess absolute risk was 0·05% (95% CI 0·03–0·07) per year in women compared with 0·08% (0·05–0·10) per year in men; the corresponding excess at ages 70–89 years was 1·08% (0·84–1·32) per year in women and 0·91% (0·77–1·05) per year in men. Total cholesterol, blood pressure, and BMI each showed continuous log-linear associations with occlusive vascular mortality that were similar among individuals with and without diabetes across both sexes.InterpretationIndependent of other major vascular risk factors, diabetes substantially increased vascular risk in both men and women. Lifestyle changes to reduce smoking...
High-resolution electron microscopy, on-zone bright-field imaging, and image simulation were used to investigate the shape of capped In 0.6 Ga 0.4 As/GaAs semiconductor quantum dots. Cross-section ͗110͘ highresolution images suggest that the quantum dots are lens shaped, while the ͓001͔ on-zone bright-field images show a contrast that suggests a quantum dot morphology with four edges parallel to ͗100͘. The image simulation, however, suggests that a spherical quantum dot can produce a square-shaped image. These observations lead to the conclusion that the quantum dots in buried In 0.6 Ga 0.4 As/GaAs semiconductor heterostructures are lens shaped. ͓S0163-1829͑98͒51432-4͔
Straight beta-silicon carbide nanorods have been grown on silicon wafers using hot filament chemical vapor deposition with iron particles as catalyst. A plate made of a C–Si–SiO2 powder mixture was used as carbon and silicon sources. Hydrogen, which was the only gas fed into the deposition system, acts both as a reactant and as a mass transporting medium. The diameter of the β-SiC nanorod ranged from 20 to 70 nm, while its length was approximately 1 μm. A growth mechanism of beta-silicon carbide nanorods was proposed. The field emission properties of the beta-silicon carbide nanorods grown on the silicon substrate are also reported.
Charge-trapping memory with high-k insulator films is a candidate for future memory devices. Many efforts with different indirect methods have been made to confirm the trapping position of the charges, but the reported results in the literatures are contrary, from the bottom to the top of the trapping layers. Here we characterize the local charge distribution in the high-k dielectric stacks under different bias with in situ electron holography. The retrieved phase change induced by external bias strength is visualized with high spatial resolution and the negative charges aggregated on the interface between Al 2 O 3 block layer and HfO 2 trapping layer are confirmed. Moreover, the positive charges are discovered near the interface between HfO 2 and SiO 2 films, which may have an impact on the performance of the chargetrapping memory but were neglected in previous models and theory.
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