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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Frustration, or the competition between interacting components of a network, is often responsible for the emergent complexity of many-body systems. For instance, frustrated magnetism is a hallmark of poorly understood systems such as quantum spin liquids, spin glasses, and spin ices, whose ground states can be massively degenerate and carry high degrees of quantum entanglement. Here, we engineer frustrated antiferromagnetic interactions between spins stored in a crystal of up to 16 trapped (171)Yb(+) atoms. We control the amount of frustration by continuously tuning the range of interaction and directly measure spin correlation functions and their coherent dynamics. This prototypical quantum simulation points the way toward a new probe of frustrated quantum magnetism and perhaps the design of new quantum materials.
Science 05/2013; 340(6132):583-7. · 31.20 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
M U Mozer,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A study is presented of the mass and spin-parity of the new boson recently observed at the LHC at a mass near 125 GeV. An integrated luminosity of 17.3 fb^{-1}, collected by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at center-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV, is used. The measured mass in the ZZ channel, where both Z bosons decay to e or μ pairs, is 126.2±0.6(stat)±0.2(syst) GeV. The angular distributions of the lepton pairs in this channel are sensitive to the spin-parity of the boson. Under the assumption of spin 0, the present data are consistent with the pure scalar hypothesis, while disfavoring the pure pseudoscalar hypothesis.
Physical Review Letters 02/2013; 110(8):081803. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Results are presented from a search for the pair production of third-generation scalar and vector leptoquarks, as well as for top squarks in R-parity-violating supersymmetric models. In either scenario, the new, heavy particle decays into a τ lepton and a b quark. The search is based on a data sample of pp collisions at sqrt[s]=7 TeV, which is collected by the CMS detector at the LHC and corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 4.8 fb^{-1}. The number of observed events is found to be in agreement with the standard model prediction, and exclusion limits on mass parameters are obtained at the 95% confidence level. Vector leptoquarks with masses below 760 GeV are excluded and, if the branching fraction of the scalar leptoquark decay to a τ lepton and a b quark is assumed to be unity, third-generation scalar leptoquarks with masses below 525 GeV are ruled out. Top squarks with masses below 453 GeV are excluded for a typical benchmark scenario, and limits on the coupling between the top squark, τ lepton, and b quark, λ_{333}^{'} are obtained. These results are the most stringent for these scenarios to date.
Physical Review Letters 02/2013; 110(8):081801. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
C Lazaridis,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The polarizations of the Υ(1S), Υ(2S), and Υ(3S) mesons are measured in proton-proton collisions at sqrt[s]=7 TeV, using a data sample of Υ(nS)→μ^{+}μ^{-} decays collected by the CMS experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb^{-1}. The dimuon decay angular distributions are analyzed in three different polarization frames. The polarization parameters λ_{ϑ}, λ_{φ}, and λ_{ϑφ}, as well as the frame-invariant quantity λ[over ˜], are presented as a function of the Υ(nS) transverse momentum between 10 and 50 GeV, in the rapidity ranges |y|<0.6 and 0.6<|y|<1.2. No evidence of large transverse or longitudinal polarizations is seen in the explored kinematic region.
Physical Review Letters 02/2013; 110(8):081802. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Evidence is presented for the associated production of a single top quark and W boson in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=7 TeV with the CMS experiment at the LHC. The analyzed data correspond to an integrated luminosity of 4.9 fb^{-1}. The measurement is performed using events with two leptons and a jet originated from a b quark. A multivariate analysis based on kinematic properties is utilized to separate the tt[over ¯] background from the signal. The observed signal has a significance of 4.0σ and corresponds to a cross section of 16_{-4}^{+5} pb, in agreement with the standard model expectation of 15.6±0.4_{-1.2}^{+1.0} pb.
Physical Review Letters 01/2013; 110(2):022003. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
C Lazaridis,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Results are presented from a search for heavy, right-handed muon neutrinos, N_{μ}, and right-handed W_{R} bosons, which arise in the left-right symmetric extensions of the standard model. The analysis is based on a 5.0 fb^{-1} sample of proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV, collected by the CMS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. No evidence is observed for an excess of events over the standard model expectation. For models with exact left-right symmetry, heavy right-handed neutrinos are excluded at 95% confidence level for a range of neutrino masses below the W_{R} mass, dependent on the value of M_{W_{R}}. The excluded region in the two-dimensional (M_{W_{R}}, M_{N_{μ}}) mass plane extends to M_{W_{R}}=2.5 TeV.
Physical Review Letters 12/2012; 109(26):261802. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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J. Resta-Lopez,
C. I. Clarke,
A. Faus-Golfe,
N. Fuster-Martinez,
C. Hast,
R. M. Jones,
A. Latina,
M. Pivi,
G. Rumolo,
D. Schulte, J. Smith,
R. Tomas
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Collimator wakefields in the Beam Delivery System (BDS) of future linear
colliders, such as the International Linear Collider (ILC) and the Compact
Linear Collider (CLIC), can be an important source of emittance growth and beam
jitter amplification, consequently degrading the luminosity. Therefore, a
better understanding of collimator wakefield effects is essential to optimise
the collimation systems of future linear colliders in order to minimise
wakefield effects. In the past, measurements of single-bunch collimator
wakefields have been carried out at SLAC with the aim of benchmarking theory,
numerical calculations and experiments. Those studies revealed some
discrepancies between the measurements and the theoretical models. New
experimental tests using available beam test facilities, such as the End
Station A Test Beam (ESTB) at SLAC, would help to improve our understanding on
collimator wakefields. ESTB will provide the perfect test bed to investigate
collimator wakefields for different bunch length conditions, relevant for both
ILC (300 micrometers nominal bunch length) and CLIC (44 micrometers nominal
bunch length) studies. Here we propose to perform new experimental tests of
collimator wakefield effects on electron/positron beams at SLAC ESTB.
12/2012;
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We report an investigation of the invariant mass spectrum of the two jets with highest transverse momentum in pp→W+2-jet and W+3-jet events to look for resonant enhancement. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 5.0 fb^{-1} collected with the CMS detector at sqrt[s]=7 TeV. We find no evidence for the anomalous structure reported by the CDF Collaboration, and establish an upper limit of 5.0 pb at 95% confidence level on the production cross section for a generic Gaussian signal with mass near 150 GeV. Additionally, we exclude two theoretical models that predict a CDF-like dijet resonance near 150 GeV.
Physical Review Letters 12/2012; 109(25):251801. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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D. Abbaneo,
G. Abbiendi,
M. Abbrescia,
S. Abdullin,
A. Abdulsalam,
B.S. Acharya,
D. Acosta,
J.G. Acosta,
A. Adair,
W. Adam, [......],
M.H. Zoeller,
O. Zorba,
P. Zotto,
W. Zou,
G. Zumerle,
M. Zupan,
A. Zuranski,
R. Zuyeuski,
M. Zvada,
P. Zych
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The Higgs boson was postulated nearly five decades ago within the framework of the standard model of particle physics and
has been the subject of numerous searches at accelerators around the world. Its discovery would verify the existence of a
complex scalar field thought to give mass to three of the carriers of the electroweak force—the W+, W–, and Z0 bosons—as well as to the fundamental quarks and leptons. The CMS Collaboration has observed, with a statistical significance
of five standard deviations, a new particle produced in proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. The
evidence is strongest in the diphoton and four-lepton (electrons and/or muons) final states, which provide the best mass resolution
in the CMS detector. The probability of the observed signal being due to a random fluctuation of the background is about 1
in 3 × 106. The new particle is a boson with spin not equal to 1 and has a mass of about 1.25 giga–electron volts. Although its measured
properties are, within the uncertainties of the present data, consistent with those expected of the Higgs boson, more data
are needed to elucidate the precise nature of the new particle.
Science 12/2012; 338(6114):1569-1575. · 31.20 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The suppression of the individual Υ(nS) states in PbPb collisions with respect to their yields in pp data has been measured. The PbPb and pp data sets used in the analysis correspond to integrated luminosities of 150 μb^{-1} and 230 nb^{-1}, respectively, collected in 2011 by the CMS experiment at the LHC, at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon pair of 2.76 TeV. The Υ(nS) yields are measured from the dimuon invariant mass spectra. The suppression of the Υ(nS) yields in PbPb relative to the yields in pp, scaled by the number of nucleon-nucleon collisions, R_{AA}, is measured as a function of the collision centrality. Integrated over centrality, the R_{AA} values are 0.56±0.08(stat)±0.07(syst), 0.12±0.04(stat)±0.02(syst), and lower than 0.10 (at 95% confidence level), for the Υ(1S), Υ(2S), and Υ(3S) states, respectively. The results demonstrate the sequential suppression of the Υ(nS) states in PbPb collisions at LHC energies.
Physical Review Letters 11/2012; 109(22):222301. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan,
M Friedl, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A search for physics beyond the standard model is performed in events with at least three jets and large missing transverse momentum produced in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of sqrt[s]=7 TeV. No significant excess of events above the expected backgrounds is observed in 4.98 fb^{-1} of data collected with the CMS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The results are presented in the context of the constrained minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model and more generically for simplified models. For the simplified models of gluino-gluino and squark-squark production, gluino masses below 1.0 TeV and squark masses below 0.76 TeV are excluded in case the lightest supersymmetric particle mass is below 200 GeV. These results significantly extend previous searches.
Physical Review Letters 10/2012; 109(17):171803. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan,
M Friedl, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The transverse energy (E_{T}) in Pb-Pb collisions at 2.76 TeV nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy (sqrt[s_{NN}]) has been measured over a broad range of pseudorapidity (η) and collision centrality by using the CMS detector at the LHC. The transverse energy density per unit pseudorapidity (dE_{T}/dη) increases faster with collision energy than the charged particle multiplicity. This implies that the mean energy per particle is increasing with collision energy. At all pseudorapidities, the transverse energy per participating nucleon increases with the centrality of the collision. The ratio of transverse energy per unit pseudorapidity in peripheral to central collisions varies significantly as the pseudorapidity increases from η=0 to |η|=5.0. For the 5% most central collisions, the energy density per unit volume is estimated to be about 14 GeV/fm^{3} at a time of 1 fm/c after the collision. This is about 100 times larger than normal nuclear matter density and a factor of 2.6 times higher than the energy density reported at sqrt[s_{NN}]=200 GeV at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider.
Physical Review Letters 10/2012; 109(15):152303. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
E Aguilo,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A search is performed in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=7 TeV for exotic particles decaying via WZ to final states with electrons and muons. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of approximately 5 fb^{-1}. No significant excess is observed in the data above the expected standard model background. Upper bounds at 95% confidence level are set on the production cross section of the W^{'} boson described by the sequential standard model and on the W^{'} WZ coupling. W^{'} bosons with masses below 1143 GeV are excluded. Limits are also set in the context of low-scale technicolor models, under a range of assumptions concerning the model parameters.
Physical Review Letters 10/2012; 109(14):141801. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We describe an unusual case of a prostatic adenocarcinoma presenting with a ureteric stricture secondary to a discrete metastatic lesion. A 76-year-old man presented with a short history of right loin pain. Initial examination was unremarkable, digital rectal examination was normal and prostate specific antigen was within normal range. Computed tomography showed right hydronephrosis and a distal ureteric stricture. A distal ureteric transitional cell carcinoma was thought to be most likely. A nephroureterectomy was carried out and histology revealed a skipped lesion of a metastatic prostate adenocarcinoma. Metastatic lesions to the ureters due to prostate cancer are rare. It was believed to be secondary to a transitional cell carcinoma as there was no evidence initially to suggest prostatic disease as the cause. A prostatic adenocarcinoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of any lesions in the ureter believed to have a malignant origin.
Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England 10/2012; 94(7):213-4. · 1.23 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Frustration, or the competition between interacting components of a network,
is often responsible for the complexity of many body systems, from social and
neural networks to protein folding and magnetism. In quantum magnetic systems,
frustration arises naturally from competing spin-spin interactions given by the
geometry of the spin lattice or by the presence of long-range antiferromagnetic
couplings. Frustrated magnetism is a hallmark of poorly understood systems such
as quantum spin liquids, spin glasses and spin ices, whose ground states are
massively degenerate and can carry high degrees of quantum entanglement. The
controlled study of frustrated magnetism in materials is hampered by short
dynamical time scales and the presence of impurities, while numerical modeling
is generally intractable when dealing with dynamics beyond N~30 particles.
Alternatively, a quantum simulator can be exploited to directly engineer
prescribed frustrated interactions between controlled quantum systems, and
several small-scale experiments have moved in this direction. In this article,
we perform a quantum simulation of a long-range antiferromagnetic quantum Ising
model with a transverse field, on a crystal of up to N = 16 trapped Yb+ atoms.
We directly control the amount of frustration by continuously tuning the range
of interaction and directly measure spin correlation functions and their
dynamics through spatially-resolved spin detection. We find a pronounced
dependence of the magnetic order on the amount of frustration, and extract
signatures of quantum coherence in the resulting phases.
09/2012;
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan,
M Friedl, [......],
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
F Palmonari,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The dimuon invariant mass spectrum is searched in the range between 5.5 and 14 GeV for a light pseudoscalar Higgs boson a, predicted in a number of new physics models, including the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model. The data sample used in the search corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 1.3 fb^{-1} collected in pp collisions at sqrt[s]=7 TeV with the CMS detector at the LHC. No excess is observed above the background predictions and upper limits are set on the cross section times branching fraction σ×B(pp→a→μ^{+}μ^{-}) in the range of 1.5-7.5 pb. These results improve on existing bounds on the abb[over ¯] coupling for m_{a}<m_{Υ(1S)} and are the first significant limits for m_{a}>m_{Υ(3S)}. Constraints on the supersymmetric parameter space are presented in the context of the next-to-minimal model.
Physical Review Letters 09/2012; 109(12):121801. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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CALICE Collaboration,
C. Adloff,
J. Blaha,
J. -J. Blaising,
C. Drancourt,
A. Espargilière,
R. Gaglione,
N. Geffroy,
Y. Karyotakis,
J. Prast, [......],
J. Smolik,
V. Vrba,
J. Zalesak,
B. Belhorma,
H. Ghazlane,
T. Takeshita,
S. Uozumi,
J. Sauer,
S. Weber,
C. Zeitnitz
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The energy resolution of a highly granular 1 m3 analogue scintillator-steel
hadronic calorimeter is studied using charged pions with energies from 10 GeV
to 80 GeV at the CERN SPS. The energy resolution for single hadrons is
determined to be approximately 58%/sqrt(E/GeV}. This resolution is improved to
approximately 45%/sqrt(E/GeV) with software compensation techniques. These
techniques take advantage of the event-by-event information about the
substructure of hadronic showers which is provided by the imaging capabilities
of the calorimeter. The energy reconstruction is improved either with
corrections based on the local energy density or by applying a single
correction factor to the event energy sum derived from a global measure of the
shower energy density. The application of the compensation algorithms to Geant4
simulations yield resolution improvements comparable to those observed for real
data.
07/2012;
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S Chatrchyan,
V Khachatryan,
A M Sirunyan,
A Tumasyan,
W Adam,
T Bergauer,
M Dragicevic,
J Erö,
C Fabjan,
M Friedl, [......],
C Lazaridis,
J Leonard,
R Loveless,
A Mohapatra,
I Ojalvo,
G A Pierro,
I Ross,
A Savin,
W H Smith,
J Swanson
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The azimuthal anisotropy of charged particles in Pb-Pb collisions at sqrt[s_{NN}]=2.76 TeV is measured with the CMS detector at the LHC over an extended transverse momentum (p_{T}) range up to approximately 60 GeV/c. The data cover both the low-p_{T} region associated with hydrodynamic flow phenomena and the high-p_{T} region where the anisotropies may reflect the path-length dependence of parton energy loss in the created medium. The anisotropy parameter (v_{2}) of the particles is extracted by correlating charged tracks with respect to the event-plane reconstructed by using the energy deposited in forward-angle calorimeters. For the six bins of collision centrality studied, spanning the range of 0-60% most-central events, the observed v_{2} values are found to first increase with p_{T}, reaching a maximum around p_{T}=3 GeV/c, and then to gradually decrease to almost zero, with the decline persisting up to at least p_{T}=40 GeV/c over the full centrality range measured.
Physical Review Letters 07/2012; 109(2):022301. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: An alpaca was presented with a history of respiratory difficulty and death. Histology of the phrenic nerves and diaphragm revealed degenerative changes consistent with denervation atrophy, and a diagnosis of diaphragmatic paralysis was established. No gross or histological abnormalities were observed in the spinal cord or other organs. The etiology of the phrenic nerve neuropathy could not be determined. The need to examine phrenic nerves and diaphragm in camelids with respiratory distress is emphasized, as failure to examine these samples will preclude a diagnosis of diaphragmatic paralysis.
Veterinary Pathology 06/2012; · 1.95 Impact Factor
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[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT:
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) remains a significant complication of major orthopedic surgery, and chronic kidney disease (CKD) is common among elderly patients undergoing total hip replacement (THR).
The purpose of this study was to evaluate thrombosis and bleeding outcomes in patients with stage 3B CKD treated with either desirudin or enoxaparin after elective THR.
This was a post hoc subgroup analysis of a randomized, multicenter, double-blind study of desirudin vs. enoxaparin in patients undergoing elective THR.
Patients received either subcutaneous desirudin 15 mg twice daily or subcutaneous enoxaparin 40 mg once daily. Of the 2078 randomized patients who received study medication, 577 had stage 3B CKD or worse (27.8%), and the proportion of these patients who experienced a major VTE in the enoxaparin treatment group was found to be much higher than in the desirudin treatment group (11.1% vs. 3.4%, model-adjusted odds ratio 3.52, 95% confidence interval 1.48-8.40, P=0.004). There was no statistically significant difference between treatment groups in terms of rates of major bleeding, regardless of stage of renal function.
CKD has been reported previously to increase the risk of bleeding with anticoagulants, and these findings suggest that CKD may also increase the risk of major VTE for patients treated with enoxaparin, but not for patients treated with desirudin. Clinicians should consider the impact of CKD on the risk of VTE when choosing a prophylaxis agent.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 06/2012; 10(8):1515-20. · 5.73 Impact Factor