579 research outputs found
Breathing straws
Following nasal, septal or endoscopic surgery, it is common practice to insert nasal packs in both nasal cavities to achieve haemostasis, if there has been any bleeding at the end of the procedure. However, such packs make it difficult for patients to breathe, mainly in the first post-operative night which leads to discomfort and poor sleep. To enable patients to breathe better with nasal packs in situ, we describe a simple technique using trimmed straws and wrapped Netcell® packs for post-operative care following septal surgery, rhinoplasty and endoscopic sinus surgery. These packs also assist suction of any blood or mucous from the post-nasal spac
Mobility and Trapping of Molecules During Oxygen Adsorption on Cu(110)
Adsorption of oxygen on Cu(110) at 4 K has been investigated by scanning tunneling microscopy. We have observed that weakly bound, “trapped” molecules coexist with pairs of atoms which are preferentially oriented along [110] and [001]. Molecules and atoms are both adsorbed in hollow sites. Clustering of O2 at step edges perpendicular to [110] indicates substantial anisotropic mobility of the molecular precursor. It is concluded that precursor dynamics and multidimensionality of the potential energy surface have a dominant influence on the dissociative chemisorption of O2 on Cu(110)
Limitations of balloon sinuplasty in frontal sinus surgery
Balloon sinuplasty is a tool that is used to treat selected patients with paranasal sinus pathologies. No studies have investigated the aetiology of failed access to the frontal sinus. The aim of our study was to specify the intraoperative technical failure rate and to analyse the aetiology of the failed access to predict potential technical difficulties before surgery. We retrospectively analysed the charts of patients who underwent balloon sinuplasty from November 2007 to July 2010 at three different ENT-Centres. CT-analysis of the patients with failed access was performed. Of the 104 frontal sinuses, dilation of 12 (12%) sinuses failed. The anatomy of all failed cases revealed variations in the frontal recess (frontoethmoidal-cell, frontal-bulla-cell or agger-nasi-cell) or osteoneogenesis. In one patient, a lymphoma was overlooked during a balloon only procedure. The lymphoma was diagnosed 6months later with a biopsy during functional endoscopic sinus surgery. In complex anatomical situations of the frontal recess, balloon sinuplasty may be challenging or impossible. In these situations, it is essential to have knowledge of classical functional endoscopic sinus surgery of the frontal recess area. The drawbacks of not including a histopathologic exam should be considered in balloon only procedure
The role of the spin in quasiparticle interference
Quasiparticle interference patterns measured by scanning tunneling microscopy
(STM) can be used to study the local electronic structure of metal surfaces and
high temperature superconductors. Here, we show that even in non-magnetic
systems the spin of the quasiparticles can have a profound effect on the
interference patterns. On Bi(110), where the surface state bands are not
spin-degenerate, the patterns are not related to the dispersion of the
electronic states in a simple way. In fact, the features which are expected for
the spin-independent situation are absent and the observed interference
patterns can only be interpreted by taking spin-conserving scattering events
into account.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Looking at electronic wave functions on metal surfaces
The project described here is not only a beautiful example of the visual side tophysics, it is also a beautiful example of international cooperation. The first use of the idea—to apply a Fourier transform to STM pictures to see electron waves instead of just the surface atoms—came out of a collaboration between Plummer, Sprunger and the Aarhus group headed by Besenbacher. Hofman, who had beenworking at Tennessee, took Be(1010) samples to Berlin where the images shown in this pictorial were taken. All of the participants are now preparing a paper on the use of a Fourier transform to map the Fermi contour at metal surfaces
Implication of the overlap representation for modelling generalized parton distributions
Based on a field theoretically inspired model of light-cone wave functions,
we derive valence-like generalized parton distributions and their double
distributions from the wave function overlap in the parton number conserved
s-channel. The parton number changing contributions in the t-channel are
restored from duality. In our construction constraints of positivity and
polynomiality are simultaneously satisfied and it also implies a model
dependent relation between generalized parton distributions and transverse
momentum dependent parton distribution functions. The model predicts that the
t-behavior of resulting hadronic amplitudes depends on the Bjorken variable
x_Bj. We also propose an improved ansatz for double distributions that embeds
this property.Comment: 15 pages, 8 eps figure
How the other half lives: CRISPR-Cas's influence on bacteriophages
CRISPR-Cas is a genetic adaptive immune system unique to prokaryotic cells
used to combat phage and plasmid threats. The host cell adapts by incorporating
DNA sequences from invading phages or plasmids into its CRISPR locus as
spacers. These spacers are expressed as mobile surveillance RNAs that direct
CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins to protect against subsequent attack by the
same phages or plasmids. The threat from mobile genetic elements inevitably
shapes the CRISPR loci of archaea and bacteria, and simultaneously the
CRISPR-Cas immune system drives evolution of these invaders. Here we highlight
our recent work, as well as that of others, that seeks to understand phage
mechanisms of CRISPR-Cas evasion and conditions for population coexistence of
phages with CRISPR-protected prokaryotes.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
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