17 research outputs found

    Nerve Injury and Small Saphenous Vein Surgery

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    AbstractObjectiveTo assess nerve injuries in small (short) saphenous vein surgery.DesignProspective study.MethodsDuring a five and a half year period, 272 small saphenous vein operations were studied in 217 consecutive unselected patients, to assess postoperative nerve injuries. Patients with nerve injuries were treated and followed-up by an independent peripheral nerve surgeon.ResultsA peripheral nerve injury occurred three times in 272 procedures: two sural nerve injuries and one common peroneal nerve injury. There was a full recovery of all three nerve injuries, the latest after 18 months.ConclusionsNerve injuries following small saphenous vein surgery are rare and may have a good recovery

    The effects on increasing cardiac output with adrenaline or isoprenaline on arterial haemoglobin oxygen saturation and shunt during one-lung ventilation

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    Publisher's copy made available with the permission of the publisher © 2000 Australian Society of AnaesthetistsTheoretically, if the cardiac output were increased in the presence of a given intrapulmonary shunt, the arterial haemoglobin oxygen saturation (SaO2) should improve as the venous oxygen extraction per ml of blood decreases. To test this hypothesis, eight pigs were subjected to one-lung ventilation and adrenaline and isoprenaline infusions used to increase the cardiac output. The mixed venous oxygen, shunt fraction and oxygen consumption were measured. With both adrenaline and isoprenaline, although there was a small rise in mixed venous oxygen content, there was a fall in SaO2. With adrenaline, the mean shunt rose from 48% to 65%, the mean oxygen consumption rose from 126 ml/min to 134 ml/min and the mean SaO2 fell from 86.9% to 82.5%. With isoprenaline, the mean shunt rose from 45% to 59%, the mean oxygen consumption rose from 121 ml/min to 137 ml/min and the mean SaO2 fell from 89.5% to 84.7%. It is concluded that potential improvement in SaO2, which might occur from a catecholamine-induced increase in mixed venous oxygen content during one-lung ventilation, is more than offset by increased shunting and oxygen consumption which reduce SaO2.W.J. Russell, M.F. Jameshttp://www.aaic.net.au/Article.asp?D=200010

    The first direct search for inelastic boosted dark matter with COSINE-100

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    A search for inelastic boosted dark matter (IBDM) using the COSINE-100 detector with 59.5 days of data is presented. This relativistic dark matter is theorized to interact with the target material through inelastic scattering with electrons, creating a heavier state that subsequently produces standard model particles, such as an electron-positron pair. In this study, we search for this electron-positron pair in coincidence with the initially scattered electron as a signature for an IBDM interaction. No excess over the predicted background event rate is observed. Therefore, we present limits on IBDM interactions under various hypotheses, one of which allows us to explore an area of the dark photon parameter space that has not yet been covered by other experiments. This is the first experimental search for IBDM using a terrestrial detector

    A search for solar axion induced signals with COSINE-100

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    We present results from a search for solar axions with the COSINE-100 detector. We find no evidence of solar axion events from a data set of 6,303.9 kg⋅days exposure and set a 90\,\% confidence level upper limit on the axion-electron coupling, gae, at 1.70~×~10−11 for an axion mass less than 1\,keV/c2. This limit excludes QCD axions heavier than 0.59\,eV/c2 in the DFSZ model and 168.1\,eV/c2 in the KSVZ model

    Arterial Injury as a Result of Mowing Clover

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