42 research outputs found

    In Search of a Trade Mark: Search Practices and Bureaucratic Poetics

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    Trade marks have been understood as quintessential ‘bureaucratic properties’. This article suggests that the making of trade marks has been historically influenced by bureaucratic practices of search and classification, which in turn were affected by the possibilities and limits of spatial organisation and technological means of access and storage. It shows how the organisation of access and retrieval did not only condition the possibility of conceiving new trade marks, but also served to delineate their intangible proprietary boundaries. Thereby they framed the very meaning of a trade mark. By advancing a historical analysis that is sensitive to shifts, both in actual materiality and in the administrative routines of trade mark law, the article highlights the legal form of trade mark as inherently social and materially shaped. We propose a historical understanding of trade mark law that regards legal practice and bureaucratic routines as being co-constitutive of the very legal object itself

    Mental function after general anaesthesia for transurethral procedures

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    We have assessed the influence of age and preoperative mental status score on postoperative mental function, using a choice reaction time test. One hundred and twelve patients (mean age 70 yr, range 48-88 yr) were given a standardized general anaesthetic for transurethral procedures. Mental status before anaesthesia was measured with the Clifton Assessment Procedure for the Elderly (CAPE);Reaction time was measured before anaesthesia and for up to 3 days after anaesthesia. Variability in reaction time performance was increased 24 h after anaesthesia in transurethral patients, but not in a control group of orthopaedic patients (P = 0.0006). Factors contributing to increased variability of reaction time after operation in a multiple regression analysis were reduced CAPE score before operation (P < 0.0001), extent of surgery (P = 0.023), postoperative pain (P = 0.007) and postoperative sedative drugs (P = 0.009). Factors not contributing included age, diagnosis of cancer, number of previous operations in pa years, duration of anaesthesia, minimum mean arterial pressure, minimum and maximum perioperative Pco2 values, postoperative pyrexia and poor sleep. © 1991 British Journal of Anaesthesia
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