131 research outputs found
Focal Myositis of Unilateral Leg
Focal myositis is a rare, benign inflammatory pseudotumor of the skeletal muscle of unknown etiology. In Korea, there is no case report of focal myositis, which is not combined with connective tissue disease. We present an unusual case of focal myositis with ankle contracture, involving more than two muscles. A 26-year-old man visited our clinic complaining of right ankle contracture and leg muscle pain. Physical examination revealed no muscle weakness or any other neurological abnormality. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the right leg demonstrated diffuse high signal intensity of the right gastrocnemius, flexor digitorum longus, and tibialis anterior muscles. Needle electromyography showed profuse denervation potentials with motor unit action potentials of short duration and small amplitude from the involved muscles. All these findings suggested a diagnosis of focal inflammatory myositis and the patient was put under oral prednisolone and physical therapy
Обеспечение безопасности радиоактивных источников на гипотетическом объекте
Объектом исследования является вопросы организации и функционирования систем физической защиты, учета и контроля ядерных материалов.
Целью работы является создание методического подхода для описания и построения гипотетического объекта и его систем безопасности, с дальнейшем его применением в учебных целях по специальности Безопасность и нераспространение ядерных материалов.The object of research is the organization and functioning of systems of physical protection, accounting and control of nuclear materials.
The aim of the work is to create a methodological approach to the description and construction of a hypothetical object and its security systems, with its further application for educational purposes in the specialty safety and non-proliferation of nuclear materials
Information on antiprotonic atoms and the nuclear periphery from the PS209 experiment
In the PS209 experiments at CERN two kinds of measurements were performed:
the in-beam measurement of X-rays from antiprotonic atoms and the
radiochemical, off-line determination of the yield of annihilation products
with mass number A_t -1 (less by 1 than the target mass). Both methods give
observables which allows to study the peripheral matter density composition and
distribution.Comment: LaTeX (espcrc1 style), 6 pages, 3 EPS figures, 1 table, Proceedings
of the Sixth Biennal Conference on Low-Energy Antiproton Physics LEAP 2000,
Venice, Ital
Neutron density distributions from antiprotonic 208Pb and 209Bi atoms
The X-ray cascade from antiprotonic atoms was studied for 208Pb and 209Bi.
Widths and shifts of the levels due to the strong interaction were determined.
Using modern antiproton-nucleus optical potentials the neutron densities in the
nuclear periphery were deduced. Assuming two parameter Fermi distributions
(2pF) describing the proton and neutron densities the neutron rms radii were
deduced for both nuclei. The difference of neutron and proton rms radii /\r_np
equal to 0.16 +-(0.02)_{stat} +- (0.04)_{syst} fm for 208Pb and 0.14 +-
(0.04)_{stat} +- (0.04)_{syst} fm for 209Bi were determined and the assigned
systematic errors are discussed. The /\r_np values and the deduced shapes of
the neutron distributions are compared with mean field model calculations.Comment: 22 pages, 8 tables, 15 figure
Strong interaction and E2 effect in even- A antiprotonic Te atoms
The x-ray cascade from antiprotonic atoms was studied for Te-122, Te-124, Te-126, Te-128, and Te-130. Widths and shifts due to the strong interaction were deduced for several levels. The E2 nuclear resonance effect was observed in all investigated nuclei. In Te-130 the E2 resonance allowed to determine level widths and shifts of the LS-split deeply bound (n,l)=(6,5) state, otherwise unobservable. The measured level widths and shifts, corrected for the E2-resonance effect, were used to investigate the nucleon density in the nuclear periphery. The deduced neutron distributions are compared with results of the previously introduced radiochemical method and with Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov model calculations
Incisional hernia repair after caesarean section: a population based study
BACKGROUND Incisional hernias occur at surgical abdominal incision sites but the association with caesarean section (CS) has not been examined. AIM: To determine whether CS is a risk factor for incisional hernia repair. MATERIAL and METHODS: Population-based cohort study in Australia using linked birth and hospital data for women who gave birth from 2000 to 2011. (n=642,578) Survival analysis was used to explore the association between CS and subsequent incisional hernia repair. Analyses were adjusted for confounding factors including other abdominal surgery. The main outcome measure was surgical repair of an incisional hernia. RESULTS: 217,555 women (33.9%) had at least one CS and 1,554 (0.2%) had an incisional hernia repair. The frequency of incisional hernia repair in women who had ever had a caesarean section was 0.47%, compared to 0.12% in women who never had a caesarean section. After controlling for different follow up lengths and known explanatory variables, the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) was 2.73 (95%CI 2.45-3.06, P <0.001). Incisional hernia repair risk increased with number of caesarean sections: women with two CS had a threefold increased risk of incisional hernia repair, which increased to 6 fold after five CS (aHR=6.29, 95%CI 3.99-9.93, P<0.001) compared to women with no CS. Prior abdominal surgery including other hernia repair also increased the risk of incisional hernia repair (all p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: There was a strong association between maternal CS and subsequent incisional hernia repair, which increased as the number of CSs increased, but the absolute risk of incisional hernia repair was low.We thank the New South Wales (NSW) Ministry of Health for access to the population health data and the NSW Centre for Health Record Linkage for linking the data sets. This work was supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Centre for Research Excellence Grant (1001066). CLR is supported by a NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship (#APP1021025)
Nucleon density in the nuclear periphery determined with antiprotonic x-rays: cadmium and tin isotopes
The x-ray cascade from antiprotonic atoms was studied for 106Cd, 116Cd,
112Sn, 116Sn, 120Sn, and 124Sn. Widths and shifts of the levels due to strong
interaction were deduced. Isotopic effects in the Cd and Sn isotopes are
clearly seen. The results are used to investigate the nucleon density in the
nuclear periphery. The deduced neutron distributions are compared with the
results of the previously introduced radiochemical method and with HFB
calculations
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