71 research outputs found
Relationship Between Rainfall in the Northern Hemisphere and Impulses of the Torque in the Sun's Motion
The analysis of major change in the angular momentum of the sun's irregular motion about the barycenter of the solar system, represented by extrema in the running variance of impulses of the torque (IOT), discloses a connection with both extrema in the Gleissberg cycle of secular sunspot activity and maxima in the thickness of varves from Lake Saki, Crimea. This significant relationship can be traced back to the 7th century. Further inquiries link the running variance in IOT to rainfall over central Europe, England, Wales, eastern United States, and India, as well as to temperature in Europe. This significant correlation covers more than 130 years
The barycentric motion of exoplanet host stars: tests of solar spin-orbit coupling
Empirical evidence suggests a tantalising but unproven link between various
indicators of solar activity and the barycentric motion of the Sun. The latter
is exemplified by transitions between regular and more disordered motion
modulated by the motions of the giant planets, and rare periods of retrograde
motion with negative orbital angular momentum. An examination of the
barycentric motion of exoplanet host stars, and their stellar activity cycles,
has the potential of proving or disproving the Sun's motion as an underlying
factor in the complex patterns of short- and long-term solar variability
indices, by establishing whether such correlations exist in other planetary
systems. A variety of complex patterns of barycentric motions of exoplanet host
stars is demonstrated, depending on the number, masses and orbits of the
planets. Each of the behavioural types proposed to correlate with solar
activity are also evident in exoplanet host stars: repetitive patterns
influenced by massive multiple planets, epochs of rapid change in orbital
angular momentum, and intervals of negative orbital angular momentum. The study
provides the basis for independent investigations of the widely-studied but
unproven suggestion that the Sun's motion is somehow linked to various
indicators of solar activity. We show that, because of the nature of their
barycentric motions, the host stars HD168443 and HD74156 offer particularly
powerful tests of this hypothesis.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Prospective Multicenter Trial of Cervical Arthroplasty with the ROTAIO® Cervical Disc Prosthesis.
STUDY DESIGN
Clinical observational study.
OBJECTIVE
The ROTAIO® cervical disc prosthesis is a novel unconstrained implant with a variable center of rotation aiming at physiological motion. The objective of this multicenter prospective trial was to evaluate clinical outcome and complications within 2 years.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
120 patients (72 females and 48 males with median age of 43.0 years [23-60 yrs] underwent ACDA (ROTAIO®, SIGNUS Medical, Alzenau, Germany) and were prospectively followed for 24 months. Preoperative complaints were mainly associated with radiculopathy (n = 104) or myelopathy (n=16). There were 108 monosegmental and 12 bisegmental procedures including 6 hybrid constructs. Clinical outcome was evaluated at 3, 12 and 24 months in 100%, 96% and 77% of the cohort by VAS, NDI, WL-26, Patient`s Satisfaction Index (PSI), SF-36, Nurick Score, mJOA, Composite Success Rate, complications, patient`s overall satisfaction and analgesics use.
RESULTS
Highly significant clinical improvements were observed according to NDI and VAS (P < .0001 (arm); P < .001 (neck); P = .002 (head)) at all time points. Analgetic use could be reduced in 87.1 to 95.2%. Doctor`s visits have been reduced in 93.8% after 24 months. Patient`s overall satisfaction was high with 78.4 to 83.5% of patients. The composite success rate was 77.5% after 12 months and 76.9% after 24 months. There were no major complications in this series. Slight subsidence of the prosthesis was observed in 2 patients and 3 patients demonstrated fusion after 24 months. 2 patients developed symptomatic foraminal stenosis, so that implant removal and fusion was performed resulting in a revision rate of 1.7% in 2 years.
CONCLUSION
The ROTAIO® cervical disc prosthesis is a safe and efficient treatment option for symptomatic degenerative disc disease demonstrating highly significant clinical improvement and high patient`s overall satisfaction with very low revision rates at 2 years
Prospective Multicenter Trial of Cervical Arthroplasty With the ROTAIO® Cervical Disc Prosthesis
Objective
Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Arthroplasty (ACDA) is an established treatment for degenerative cervical disc disease and seems to be an alternative to fusion in minimizing the risk of Adjacent Segment Disease (ASD). The ROTAIO® cervical disc prosthesis is a novel unconstrained implant with a variable center of rotation aiming at physiological motion. The objective of this multicenter prospective trial was to evaluate clinical outcome and complications within 2 years.
Material and Methods
120 patients (72 females and 48 males with a median age of 43.0 years; range: 23 to 60 years) underwent ACDA (ROTAIO®, SIGNUS Medical, Alzenau, Germany) and were prospectively followed for 24 months. Preoperative complaints were mainly associated with radiculopathy (n=104) or myelopathy (n=16). There were 108 monosegmental and 12 bisegmental procedures including 6 hybrid constructs.
Clinical outcome was evaluated at 3, 12 and 24 months by the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for head, neck and arm pain, the Neck Disability Index (NDI), the Work Limitation Questionnaire (WL-26), the Patient`s Satisfaction Index (PSI) and a Quality of Life Questionnaire (SF-36). The Nurick Score, the Modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association Score (mJOA) plus a Composite Success Rate have been additionally applied. Finally, complications, the patient`s overall satisfaction and the amount of analgesics were assessed.
Results
Highly significant clinical improvements were observed according to NDI and VAS (p<0.0001 (arm); p<0.001 (neck); p=0.002 (head)) at all postoperative time points. Analgetic medication could be reduced after 3 months in 91.3%, after 12 months in 87.1% and after 24 months in 95.2% of patients. Doctor`s visits for cervical spine problems have been reduced in 93.8% after 24 months.
Patient`s overall satisfaction was high after 3, 12 and 24 months with 83.5%, 78.4% and 79.1% of patients, while 4.1%, 6.8% and 7.0% respectively were not satisfied. The composite success rate was 77.5% after 12 months and 76.9% after 24 months. There were no major complications in this series. Slight subsidence of the prosthesis was observed in 2 patients and 3 patients demonstrated fusion after 24 months. 2 patients developed symptomatic foraminal stenosis, so that implant removal and fusion was performed.
Conclusion
The ROTAIO® cervical disc prosthesis is a safe and efficient treatment option for symptomatic degenerative disc disease demonstrating excellent clinical results at 2 years. Outcome proves to be stable over time with very low revision rates
Sun's retrograde motion and violation of even-odd cycle rule in sunspot activity
The sum of sunspots number over an odd numbered 11 yr sunspot cycle exceeds
that of its preceding even numbered cycle, and it is well known as Gnevyshev
and Ohl rule (or G--O rule) after the names of the authors who discovered it in
1948. The G--O rule can be used to predict the sum of sunspot numbers of a
forthcoming odd cycle from that of its preceding even cycle. But this is not
always possible because occasionally the G--O rule is violated. So far no
plausible reason is known either for the G--O rule or the violation of this
rule. Here we showed the epochs of the violation of the G--O rule are close to
the epochs of the Sun's retrograde orbital motion about the centre of mass of
the solar system (i.e., the epochs at which the orbital angular momentum of the
Sun is weakly negative). Using this result easy to predict the epochs of
violation of the G--O rule well in advance. We also showed that the solar
equatorial rotation rate determined from sunspot group data during the period
1879--2004 is correlated/anti-correlated to the Sun's orbital torque during
before/after 1945. We have found the existence of a statistically significant
17 yr periodicity in the solar equatorial rotation rate. The
implications of these findings for understanding the mechanism behind the solar
cycle and the solar-terrestrial relationship are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted by MNRA
A shared frequency set between the historical mid-latitude aurora records and the global surface temperature
Herein we show that the historical records of mid-latitude auroras from 1700
to 1966 present oscillations with periods of about 9, 10-11, 20-21, 30 and 60
years. The same frequencies are found in proxy and instrumental global surface
temperature records since 1650 and 1850, respectively and in several planetary
and solar records. Thus, the aurora records reveal a physical link between
climate change and astronomical oscillations. Likely, there exists a modulation
of the cosmic ray flux reaching the Earth and/or of the electric properties of
the ionosphere. The latter, in turn, have the potentiality of modulating the
global cloud cover that ultimately drives the climate oscillations through
albedo oscillations. In particular, a quasi 60-year large cycle is quite
evident since 1650 in all climate and astronomical records herein studied,
which also include an historical record of meteorite fall in China from 619 to
1943. These findings support the thesis that climate oscillations have an
astronomical origin. We show that a harmonic constituent model based on the
major astronomical frequencies revealed in the aurora records is able to
forecast with a reasonable accuracy the decadal and multidecadal temperature
oscillations from 1950 to 2010 using the temperature data before 1950, and vice
versa. The existence of a natural 60-year modulation of the global surface
temperature induced by astronomical mechanisms, by alone, would imply that at
least 60-70% of the warming observed since 1970 has been naturally induced.
Moreover, the climate may stay approximately stable during the next decades
because the 60-year cycle has entered in its cooling phase.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
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