256 research outputs found
Modelled subglacial floods and tunnel valleys control the life cycle of transitory ice streams
Ice streams are corridors of fast-flowing ice that
control mass transfers from continental ice sheets to oceans.
Their flow speeds are known to accelerate and decelerate,
their activity can switch on and off, and even their locations
can shift entirely. Our analogue physical experiments reveal
that a life cycle incorporating evolving subglacial meltwater
routing and bed erosion can govern this complex transitory
behaviour. The modelled ice streams switch on and accelerate
when subglacial water pockets drain as marginal outburst
floods (basal decoupling). Then they decelerate when the lubricating
water drainage system spontaneously organizes itself
into channels that create tunnel valleys (partial basal recoupling).
The ice streams surge or jump in location when
these water drainage systems maintain low discharge but they
ultimately switch off when tunnel valleys have expanded to
develop efficient drainage systems. Beyond reconciling previously
disconnected observations of modern and ancient ice
streams into a single life cycle, the modelling suggests that
tunnel valley development may be crucial in stabilizing portions
of ice sheets during periods of climate change
A study to explore the professional conceptualization and challenges of self-management in children and adolescents with lymphedema
Background: The aim of this study was to explore the professional experience of caring for children and adolescents with lymphedema and to explore the way in which they understand and implement self-management strategies and the influence of their own self-efficacy beliefs on this process.
Methods and Results: Participants were recruited during an educational camp for children with lymphedema. Three individual semistructured focus groups were undertaken in English, French, and Italian with simultaneous translation. Data were analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). Analysis of the data produced three superordinate themes: professional concepts of self-management, professional practice, and redefining the cornerstone of lymphedema care. An additional seven subthemes were as follows: readiness to self-management, professional perspectives on self-management, defining success and treatment failure, emotional burden, traditional views on complex decongestive therapy, new ways to practice, and sole practitioner versus multidisciplinary teams.
Conclusions: The purpose of the study was to explore the challenges professionals face when introducing self-management to children and adolescents with lymphedema and their parents and to explore their own sense of self-efficacy in approaching this. The research allowed in-depth discussion about the ways they conceptualize self-management and faced professional challenges. The research highlighted the need to define what is considered an acceptable outcome within a complex and uncertain condition and the self-management strategies that are needed to support this
Prognostic factors to succeed in surgical treatment of chronic acromioclavicular dislocations
AbstractIntroductionTreatment of chronic acromioclavicular joint dislocation (ACJD) remains a poorly known and controversial subject. Given the many surgical options, it is not always easy to determine which steps are indispensable.MethodsThis article reports a multicenter prospective study. The clinical and radiological follow-up involved a comparative analysis of the preoperative and postoperative data at 1 year, including pain (visual analogue scale), subjective functional incapacity (QuickDASH), and the objective Constant score, as well as a comparative analysis of vertical and horizontal movements measured on simple x-rays.ResultsBased on a series of 140 operated ACJDs, we included 24 chronic ACJDs. The mean time to surgery was 46 weeks (range, 1 month to 4 years). The patients’ mean age was 41 years, with a majority of males (75%), 72% of whom participated in recreational sports. Professionally, 40% of the subjects had jobs involving manual labor. We noted 40% grade III, 24% grade IV, and 36% grade V injury according to the Rockwood classification. In 92% of cases, coracoclavicular stabilization was provided by a double button implant, reinforced with a biological graft in 88% of the cases. In 29%, millimeters to centimeters of the distal clavicle were resected and acromioclavicular stabilization was associated in 54%. We observed complications in 33% of the cases. At 1 year postoperative, 21 patients underwent clinical and radiological follow-up (87.5%). Only 35% of the patients were satisfied or very satisfied, whereas 100% of them would recommend the operation. Full-time work was resumed in 91% of the cases and all sports could be resumed in 86%. The pre- and postoperative values at 1 year changed as follows: the mean Constant score improved from 61 to 87 (p=0.00002); the subjective QuickDASH score decreased from 41 to 9 (p=0.00002); and radiologically significant reduction of the initial displacement was observed in the vertical plane (p<10−3) and the horizontal plane (p=0.022).ConclusionIn this study, the favorable prognostic factors found were: time to surgery less than 3 months (p=0.02), associated acromioclavicular stabilization, and postoperative immobilization with a sling extended to 6 weeks. However, resection of the distal clavicle did not influence the final result.Level of proofLevel II prospective non-randomized comparative study
Results on Charmonium States in Pb-Pb Interactions
We present cross-sections for J/, and Drell-Yan production in lead-lead interactions at 158 GeV/nucleon. The Pb-Pb data, when compared with previous results obtained with lighter target or projectiles, show a similar behaviour for Drell-Yan, but exhibit an anomalous J/ suppression, which increases with centrality
Anomalous suppression in Pb-Pb interactions at 158 GeV per nucleon
The Drell-Yan and J/psi cross-sections measured in Pb-Pb collisions are compared with the values extrapolated from the results obtained in proton and light ion induced reactions. While the Drell-Yan production exhibits the normal expected behaviour, the yield of J/psi in Pb-Pb interactions is abnormally low, as it lies 9 standard deviations below the expected value. Moreover, the departure from the expected behaviour increases significantly from peripheral to central collisions. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V
Intermediate mass dimuons in NA38/NA50
The NA38/NA50 experiments have measured, at the CERN SPS, the dimuon production in proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions. In this paper it is shown that the mass continuum between the and the can be satisfactorily described, after having removed the combinatorial background due to uncorrelated and decays, as a sum of two contributions, namely the Drell-Yan process and the semi-leptonic decay of pairs of charmed mesons, whose mass shape in the acceptance of the experiment has been evaluated using PYTHIA. However, in order to describe the A - B (namely S - U and Pb - Pb) mass spectra, the dimuon yield from open charm decays, which in - A collisions is found to be consistent with direct open charm measurements from other CERN and FNAL experiments, has to be enhanced with respect to a linear extrapolation of - A results. The size of the enhancement smoothly increases from peripheral S - U to central Pb - Pb interactions, reaching a factor 3 in central Pb - Pb collisions. The distributions of the events in the mass continuum are also compatible with the hypothesis of open charm enhancement in A - B collisions
Transverse momentum distributions of , Drell-Yan and continuum dimuons produced in Pb-Pb interactions at the SPS
NA50Muon pairs produced in Pb-Pb interactions at 158~GeV/ per nucleon are used to study the transverse momentum distributions of the \jpsi, \psip\ and dimuons in the mass continuum. In particular, the dependence of these distributions on the centrality of the Pb-Pb collision is investigated in detail
Low mass dimuon production in proton and ion induced interactions at SPS
The low mass dimuon spectra collected in -U collisions by the NA38 experiment significantly exceeds the total cross section expected from previous analysis, done by other experiments. The 'excess' events have a harder distribution than the muon pairs from and Dalitz decays, expected to dominate the mass window 0.4—0.65~GeV/. We conjecture that the excess events might be due to annihilations, negligible at low but made visible by the cut applied in the NA38 data. Taking this assumption to parametrise the -U spectra, we proceed with the analysis of the S-Cu, S-U and Pb-Pb data, collected by the NA38 and NA50 experiments, where we find that the measured mass spectra does not seem to exceed the expected low mass `cocktail' by more than 20%
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