198 research outputs found

    Water's worth. Urban society and subsidiarity in seventeenth-century Holland

    Get PDF
    By taking water as a viewpoint, this dissertation reveals that the urban communities of seventeenth-century Holland were highly subsidiary in nature. Individual townspeople, men and women alike, knew how to fend for themselves, incidentally having recourse to other inhabitants, businessmen, corporations or magistrates. Together, they constituted a tiered society, wherein nearly each entity bore the responsibilities that fitted its capacities. For this PhD thesis, the reports of human encounters with water were used to evaluate the allocation of duties and responsibilities within Holland’s urban communities between 1600 and 1660. This was done by systematically examining the reports of water-related issues in (a) notarial records and (b) petitions to the urban magistrates, originating from the cities of Alkmaar, Haarlem, The Hague and Rotterdam. Additional archival sources, such as patent applications, tendering documents, and legal records helped to put the findings from the notarial records and petitions into perspective

    M & L Jaargang 22/2

    Get PDF
    Hans Foncke en Leen Meganck De naoorlogse jaren van de Prijs Van de Ven (1950-1968): de zoektocht naar een architectuur voor de moderne tijd. [The Prijs Van de Ven. ]Mimi Debruyn en Madeleine Manderyck Renovatie en herbestemming van drie historische panden aan de Blindestraat tot Hogeschool Antwerpen. [Conversion of three historic houses in the Blindestraat to the Hogeschool Antwerpen.]Summar

    Natural course of Myoclonus-Dystonia in adulthood: stable motor signs but increased psychiatry

    Get PDF
    Myoclonus‐dystonia (M‐D) is a rare hyperkinetic movement disorder characterized by upper body–predominant myoclonus and dystonia.1 A large proportion of cases are caused by autosomal‐dominant inherited mutations in the SGCE gene. In addition to the motor manifestations, psychiatric disorders are frequently reported.2 Several studies have suggested that they may form a primary component of the M‐D phenotype.3, 4 This study represents the first long‐term follow‐up study of both motor and psychiatric symptomatology in adults with M‐D (SGCE mutation), providing further insights into the natural history of M‐D and enabling more prognostic information

    Long-term experience with intraoperative microrecording during DBS neurosurgery in STN and GPi

    Get PDF
    Intraoperative microelectrode recording (MER) for targeting during deep brain stimulation (DBS) procedures has been evaluated over a period of 4 years, in 57 consecutive patients with Parkinson's disease, who received DBS in the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS), and 28 consecutive patients with either dystonia (23) or Parkinson's disease (five), in whom the internal segment of the globus pallidus (GPi-DBS) was targeted. The procedure for DBS was a one-stage bilateral stereotactic approach using a combined electrode for both MER and macrostimulation. Up to five micro/macro-electrodes were used in an array with a central, lateral, medial, anterior, and posterior position. Final target location was based on intraoperative test stimulation. For the STN, the central trajectory was chosen for implantation in 50% of the cases and for the globus pallidus internus (GPi) in 57% of the cases. Furthermore, in 64% of the cases, the channel selected for the permanent electrode corresponded with the trajectory having the longest segment of STN MER activity. For the GPi, this was the case in 61%. The mean and standard deviation of the deepest contact point with respect to the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based target for the STN was 2.1 +/- 1.5 mm and for the GPi was -0.5 +/- 1.2 mm. MER facilitates the selection of the final electrode location in STN-DBS and GPi-DBS, and based on the observed MER activity, a pre-selection could be made as to which channel would be the best candidate for macro-test stimulation and at which depth should be stimulated. The choice of the final location is based on intraoperative test stimulation, and it is demonstrated that regularly it is not the central channel that is chosen for implantation. On average, the target as defined by MER activity intensity was in accordance with the MRI-based targets both for the STN and GPi. However, the position of the best MER activity did not necessarily correlate with the locus that produced the most beneficial clinical response on macroelectrode testing intraoperativel

    The intermuscular 3–7 Hz drive is not affected by distal proprioceptive input in myoclonus-dystonia

    Get PDF
    In dystonia, both sensory malfunctioning and an abnormal intermuscular low-frequency drive of 3–7 Hz have been found, although cause and effect are unknown. It is hypothesized that sensory processing is primarily disturbed and induces this drive. Accordingly, experimenter-controlled sensory input should be able to influence the frequency of the drive. In six genetically confirmed myoclonus-dystonia (MD) patients and six matched controls, the low-frequency drive was studied with intermuscular coherence analysis. External perturbations were applied mechanically to the wrist joint in small frequency bands (0–4, 4–8 and 8–12 Hz; ‘angle protocol) and at single frequencies (1, 5, 7 and 9 Hz; ‘torque’ protocol). The low-frequency drive was found in the neck muscles of 4 MD patients. In these patients, its frequency did not shift due to the perturbation. In the torque protocol, the externally applied frequencies could be detected in all controls and in the two patients without the common drive. The common low-frequency drive was not be affected by external perturbations in MD patients. Furthermore, the torque protocol did not induce intermuscular coherences at the applied frequencies in these patients, as was the case in healthy controls and in patients without the drive. This suggests that the dystonic 3–7 Hz drive is caused by a sensory-independent motor drive and sensory malfunctioning in MD might rather be a consequence than a cause of dystonia
    corecore