1,693 research outputs found
Total fractures of the tibial pilon
AbstractComplete fractures of the tibial pilon are rare and their treatment difficult. The pathophysiology includes three groups: (A) high-energy trauma (motor vehicle injuries), with severe articular and soft tissue lesions, (B) rotation trauma, (skiing accidents), with modest articular and soft tissue damage, and (C) low-energy trauma in elderly people. These three groups occasion very different problems and complications. In emergency situations, these fractures should be stabilized, most often using external fixation to restore length and prepare definitive fixation. The second stage can be applied once soft tissue healing is achieved. Two methods are discussed: internal plating and definitive external fixation. The first goal of treatment is to restore the articular surface, although this does not always prevent secondary arthritis. The second is to restore correct positioning of the foot as regard to the leg. The complication rate is high. Neither of the two fixation techniques has proven to be more effective. In group B, the two methods are similar, but external fixation seems to be safer in group A
A neglected disease of humans: a new focus of visceral leishmaniasis in Bakool, Somalia.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) was observed in children in Bakool region, Somalia, an area where VL has not been reported before. We describe the extent of the problem in this war- and famine-stricken area. A retrospective analysis was done of all cases admitted to a VL treatment centre between July 2000 and August 2001. Patients with longstanding fever, splenomegaly and a positive direct agglutination test (DAT; titre > 1:3200) were treated as suspected VL cases. A rapid epidemiological and entomological assessment was performed in the area. Species identification was attempted from blood samples by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of cysteine proteinase B genes. In 1 year, 230 serologically-positive cases were diagnosed as VL, and response to therapy was good in 91.6% of the 225 treated with sodium stibogluconate. Parasitological confirmation was attempted and obtained in 2 cases. Parasites were found to be most similar to Sudanese and Ethiopian reference strains of the Leishmania donovani complex. In a serological survey of 161 healthy displaced persons, 15% were positive by the leishmanin skin test and 3 (2%) were positive by the DAT. The sandfly captures showed Phlebotomus martini and P. vansomerenae. VL seems to be a longstanding and serious health problem in Bakool region. Food insecurity might have contributed to the emergence and detection of VL in this area
Reducible valgus flat-foot: Assessment of posterior subtalar joint surface displacement by posterior arthroscopy during sinus tarsi expansion screwing
AbstractIntroductionSubtalar arthroereisis corrects childhood and adult reducible valgus flat-foot in certain indications. Inserting an expansion screw in the sinus tarsi simultaneously corrects the calcaneal valgus of the talocalcaneal divergence and first-ray pronation if these are reducible. The displacement induced in the posterior subtalar joint (decoaptation, translation, rotation) is, however, poorly known. The present study involved arthroscopic assessment of posterior subtalar joint surface displacement during insertion of a talocalcaneal arthroereisis screw, with the hypothesis that displacement varies in three dimensions according to screw size.Material and methodEight specimens were used for the study. All ankles were supple, taken from adult subjects. A 4.5-mm arthroscope was used and measurements were taken with a graduated palpator in the posterior subtalar joint. Three sinus tarsi expansion screws of incremental diameter were assessed. Before and after insertion measurements were made of posterolateral and posteromedial talar exposure on the calcaneus, anteroposterior and lateromedial translation, and talocalcaneal joint-line opening.ResultsMedial rotation, varization and anterior translation of the calcaneus were comparable in all cases. Mean lateral opening of the posterior subtalar joint was 0.88mm with 8-mm screws and 1.25mm with 16-mm screws. Significant differences between 8 and 16mm screws were found for lateral subtalar joint opening (P=0.028) and for lateromedial translation (P=0.004).ConclusionSinus tarsi expansion screwing corrects hindfoot valgus and talocalcaneal divergence by inducing medial translation of the calcaneus under the talus and talar medial rotation and varization, proportional to screw size (medial translation and lateral opening of the subtalar joint).Level of evidenceIII
Conversion of total shoulder arthroplasty to reverse shoulder arthroplasty made possible by custom humeral adapter
AbstractReverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) is increasingly being used to revise anatomical total shoulder arthroplasty cases. This procedure's high complication rate has been reduced by the availability of modular shoulder systems, which allows the humeral component to be preserved during the conversion. This case report describes the revision of an anatomical shoulder implant inserted in 1998. Polyethylene wear and the resulting metal-on-metal contact had caused metallosis. Since the existing humeral implant was not compatible with standard conversion products, the manufacturer provided a custom humeral adapter that allowed the humeral stem to be preserved. This approach greatly simplified the surgical procedure and resulted in good anatomical and clinical outcomes after 9 months of follow-up
The influence of layer defect in the Ferroelectric films
Using the modified transverse Ising model, and the effective field theory based on the probability distribution technique, the phase transition temperature, the polarization and susceptibility for ferroelectric thin films with structural defects are studied. It is shown that the defect layers in ferroelectric thin films can induce strong increase or decrease of the critical temperature of ferroelectric phase transition due to different exchange interactions in the defect layers. The obtained results are in qualitative agreement with experimental data for thin ferroelectric film with different thickness.Using the modified transverse Ising model, and the effective field theory based on the probability distribution technique, the phase transition temperature, the polarization and susceptibility for ferroelectric thin films with structural defects are studied. It is shown that the defect layers in ferroelectric thin films can induce strong increase or decrease of the critical temperature of ferroelectric phase transition due to different exchange interactions in the defect layers. The obtained results are in qualitative agreement with experimental data for thin ferroelectric film with different thickness
ZnTe/CdSe type-II core/shell spherical quantum dot under an external electric field
International audienceWe have investigated in the framework of the envelope function approximation and taking into account the dependence of the electron effective mass on radius the energy of an electron inside a ZnTe/CdSe core/shell spherical quantum dot. In order to make the problem more realistic, we describe the conduction band-edge alignment between core and shell materials by a finite height barrier. By applying the Ritz variational principle the effect of the electric field on the electronic states was also examined. Our numerical results show the opportunity to control the energy states position of the charge carriers inside our core/shell nanostructures by controlling the size (core radius, shell thickness) of the nanostructure and the strength of the external electric field
Fluorescent oxide nanoparticles adapted to active tips for near-field optics
We present a new kind of fluorescent oxide nanoparticles with properties well
suited to active-tip based near-field optics. These particles with an average
diameter in the range 5-10 nm are produced by Low Energy Cluster Beam
Deposition (LECBD) from a YAG:Ce3+ target. They are studied by transmission
electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), classical
photoluminescence, cathodoluminescence and near-field scanning optical
microscopy (NSOM). Particles of extreme photo-stability as small as 10 nm in
size are observed. These emitters are validated as building blocks of active
NSOM tips by coating a standard optical tip with a 10 nm thick layer of
YAG:Ce3+ particles directly in the LECBD reactor and by subsequently performing
NSOM imaging of test surfaces.Comment: Changes made following Referee's comments; added references; one
added figure. See story on this article at:
http://nanotechweb.org/cws/article/tech/3606
STM topography and manipulation of single Au atoms on Si(100)
The low-temperature (12 K) adsorption of single Au atoms on Si(100) is studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Comparison between experimental and calculated STM topographies as well as density-functional-theory calculations of the adsorption energies enable us to identify two adsorption configurations of Au atoms between Si-dimer rows (BDRs) and on top of Si-dimer rows (TDRs). In both adsorption configurations, the Au atoms are covalently bound to two Si atoms through a partial electron transfer from Si to Au. STM manipulation confirms that the TDR adsorption configuration is metastable, whereas the BDR one is the most stable configuration.Peer reviewe
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