97 research outputs found

    An Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Flapping-Wing Propulsion

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    AIAA Paper No. 99-0995, 37th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, Nevada, Jan. 1999.Flapping-wing propulsion is investigated experimentally and numerically with direct comparisons between experimental and numerical thrust measurements for several geometrically simple configurations. Numerical simulations are performed using linear theory, and a previously developed, unsteady panel method that models one or two independently moving airfoils with three-degrees of freedom and non-linear deforming wakes. Experiments are carried out in the Naval Postgraduate School 5'×5' low-speed tunnel. A flapping mechanism that approximates the two-dimensional motions modeled by the panel code is suspended with cables in the wind tunnel, and thrust measurements are made by measuring the streamwise displacement of the model using a laser range-finder. The experimental flapping mechanism utilizes variable aspect-ratio wings and optional tip plates to investigate the effect of three-dimensionality. The device flaps two airfoils, each with two degrees of freedom and adjustable pitch and plunge amplitudes, and additional stationary wings may be attached up and/or downstream of the flapping wings to investigate interference effects

    Clinical Trials in Head Injury

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    Traumatic brain injury (TBI) remains a major public health problem globally. In the United States the incidence of closed head injuries admitted to hospitals is conservatively estimated to be 200 per 100,000 population, and the incidence of penetrating head injury is estimated to be 12 per 100,000, the highest of any developed country in the world. This yields an approximate number of 500,000 new cases each year, a sizeable proportion of which demonstrate signficant long-term disabilities. Unfortunately, there is a paucity of proven therapies for this disease. For a variety of reasons, clinical trials for this condition have been difficult to design and perform. Despite promising pre-clinical data, most of the trials that have been performed in recent years have failed to demonstrate any significant improvement in outcomes. The reasons for these failures have not always been apparent and any insights gained were not always shared. It was therefore feared that we were running the risk of repeating our mistakes. Recognizing the importance of TBI, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) sponsored a workshop that brought together experts from clinical, research, and pharmaceutical backgrounds. This workshop proved to be very informative and yielded many insights into previous and future TBI trials. This paper is an attempt to summarize the key points made at the workshop. It is hoped that these lessons will enhance the planning and design of future efforts in this important field of research.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63185/1/089771502753754037.pd

    An overview of tissue engineering approaches for management of spinal cord injuries

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    Severe spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to devastating neurological deficits and disabilities, which necessitates spending a great deal of health budget for psychological and healthcare problems of these patients and their relatives. This justifies the cost of research into the new modalities for treatment of spinal cord injuries, even in developing countries. Apart from surgical management and nerve grafting, several other approaches have been adopted for management of this condition including pharmacologic and gene therapy, cell therapy, and use of different cell-free or cell-seeded bioscaffolds. In current paper, the recent developments for therapeutic delivery of stem and non-stem cells to the site of injury, and application of cell-free and cell-seeded natural and synthetic scaffolds have been reviewed

    Translational considerations in injectable cell-based therapeutics for neurological applications: concepts, progress and challenges

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    Significant progress has been made during the past decade towards the clinical adoption of cell-based therapeutics. However, existing cell-delivery approaches have shown limited success, with numerous studies showing fewer than 5% of injected cells persisting at the site of injection within days of transplantation. Although consideration is being increasingly given to clinical trial design, little emphasis has been given to tools and protocols used to administer cells. The different behaviours of various cell types, dosing accuracy, precise delivery, and cell retention and viability post-injection are some of the obstacles facing clinical translation. For efficient injectable cell transplantation, accurate characterisation of cellular health post-injection and the development of standardised administration protocols are required. This review provides an overview of the challenges facing effective delivery of cell therapies, examines key studies that have been carried out to investigate injectable cell delivery, and outlines opportunities for translating these findings into more effective cell-therapy interventions

    Geochemical and isotopic analyses on the Po delta water: insights to understand a complex riverine ecosystem

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    This contribution was preliminarily presented with an oral communication during the “Water Day 2015” conference organized in Rome the 20th of March 2015 by the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. It implements a recent paper that studied the Po river water from the Alpine springs toward the Adriatic Sea (Marchina et al. Environ Sci Pollut Res 22, 5184–5203, 2015), specifically focussing on its deltaic part. The new geochemical analyses are useful to evaluate the extent of salinization (due to mixing with sea-water) and to monitor the flux of nutrients that are conveyed by the river toward the coastal environment. The paper also contains oxygen/hydrogen water isotopes that represent a snapshot of the current climatic conditions to be compared with the literature data and with the future composition to set up a hydro-archive that should be updated to evaluate on-going climatic changes. Moreover, the paper reports preliminary nitrogen isotopes composition of Po river water that trace the impact of human activities, to be monitored in the future to understand possible on-going pollutions. We conclude that geochemical researches on Po river should consider with particular attention the delta because it is an extremely fragile ecosystem where biogeochemical variations are more relevant

    Flexible Flapping Airfoil Propulsion at Zero Freestream Velocity

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    Propulsion Theory of Flapping Airfoils: Comparison with Computational Fluid Dynamics

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