2,745 research outputs found
Operative fixation of fractures in children
A total of 39 fractures of the diaphyses of long bones in 31 children were subjected to operative fixation. Indications for surgery included concomitant severe head injury, multiple injuries, patients nearing skeletal maturity, inability to obtain a satisfactory reduction by conservative means, severe soft tissue injury with or without vascular trauma, long-standing neurological disorder with incapacity and contractures, malunion, and delayed union. Although long-bone diaphyseal fractures in children are generally managed non-operatively, the use of fixation may be indicated in certain cases
The Massive and Distant Clusters of WISE Survey V: Extended Radio Sources in Massive Galaxy Clusters at z~1
We present the results from a pilot study with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large
Array (JVLA) to determine the radio morphologies of extended radio sources and
the properties of their host-galaxies in 10 massive galaxy clusters at z~1, an
epoch in which clusters are assembling rapidly. These clusters are drawn from a
parent sample of WISE-selected galaxy clusters that were cross-correlated with
the VLA Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-Centimeters survey (FIRST) to
identify extended radio sources within 1 of the cluster centers. Out
of the ten targeted sources, six are FR II sources, one is an FR I source, and
three sources have undetermined morphologies. Eight radio sources have
associated Spitzer data, 75% presenting infrared counterparts. A majority of
these counterparts are consistent with being massive galaxies. The angular
extent of the FR sources exhibits a strong correlation with the cluster-centric
radius, which warrants further investigation with a larger sample.Comment: accepted to Ap
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Cognitive tests used in chronic adult human randomised controlled trial micronutrient and phytochemical intervention studies
In recent years there has been a rapid growth of interest in exploring the relationship between nutritional therapies and the maintenance of cognitive function in adulthood. Emerging evidence reveals an increasingly complex picture with respect to the benefits of various food constituents on learning, memory and psychomotor function in adults. However, to date, there has been little consensus in human studies on the range of cognitive domains to be tested or the particular tests to be employed. To illustrate the potential difficulties that this poses, we conducted a systematic review of existing human adult randomised controlled trial (RCT) studies that have investigated the effects of 24 d to 36 months of supplementation with flavonoids and micronutrients on cognitive performance. There were thirty-nine studies employing a total of 121 different cognitive tasks that met the criteria for inclusion. Results showed that less than half of these studies reported positive effects of treatment, with some important cognitive domains either under-represented or not explored at all. Although there was some evidence of sensitivity to nutritional supplementation in a number of domains (for example, executive function, spatial working memory), interpretation is currently difficult given the prevailing 'scattergun approach' for selecting cognitive tests. Specifically, the practice means that it is often difficult to distinguish between a boundary condition for a particular nutrient and a lack of task sensitivity. We argue that for significant future progress to be made, researchers need to pay much closer attention to existing human RCT and animal data, as well as to more basic issues surrounding task sensitivity, statistical power and type I error
Transmitting health philosophies through the traditionalist Chinese martial arts in the UK
The dynamic relationships between “martial arts”, society and health remain unclear, particularly due to research that typically views health in a purely biomedical and compartmentalized way. Martial arts and combat sports (MACS) offer a diversity of disciplines with their own intended training outcomes and techne. The traditionalist Chinese martial arts (TCMAs), such as Taijiquan (Tai Chi Chuan) and Wing Chun Kung Fu, stress health promotion/preservation, personal development and lifelong practice. Adopting a structurationist framework, this article explores the connections between three distinct philosophies of health and TCMAs, institutions spreading such discourse, and the personal narratives of transformation and self-cultivation through these embodied art forms. Taking a perspective starting from the practitioners themselves, I explore the interplay between discourse and narrative as applied in everyday British society. Following detailed qualitative analysis, “Western scientific”, “contemporary Daoist” and “New Age” health philosophies are identified as explored via three detailed, reflexive cases of long-term practitioner-instructors, their schools and documents that connect them to international exponents across time. This article thus contributes to sociological knowledge on MACS and health, while considering the connections between health philosophies, discourse and narrative
Resolving Zeeman splitting in quantum dot ensembles
This letter presents a technique for the investigation of the fine structure and spin properties of quantum dot (QD) ensembles, allowing measurement of QD parameters previously accessible only from studies of individual QDs. We show how ∼μeV splittings can be deduced from information contained in the shape of the ensemble polarization spectra and demonstrate the effectiveness of this technique by measuring Zeeman splittings, g-factors, and sensitivity to QD fine structure effects
Concert recording 2015-11-19
[Track 01]. Partita. Prelude ; [Track 02]. Capriccio ; [Track 03]. Sarabande ; [Track 04]. Bourree ; [Track 05]. Schezo / Arthur Butterworth -- [Track 06]. Introduction and dance / J.E. Barat -- [Track 07]. Concert pierce no. 1 / Joseph Turrin -- [Track 08]. Sonata. Allegro ; [Track 09]. Aria / Bruce Broughton -- [Track 10]. Variations on the Carnival of Venice / J.B. Arban -- [Track 11]. Concerto for bass tuba. Allegro moderato ; [Track 12]. Romanza / Ralph Vaughan Williams -- [Track 13]. Concerto, op. 114 / Derek Bourgeois -- [Track 14]. Milori blue. Simply ; [Track 15]. Presto / Jonathan Newman
Structure, ontogeny and evolution of the patellar tendon in emus (Dromaius novaehollandiae) and other palaeognath birds
The patella (kneecap) exhibits multiple evolutionary origins in birds, mammals, and lizards, and is thought to increase the mechanical advantage of the knee extensor muscles. Despite appreciable interest in the specialized anatomy and locomotion of palaeognathous birds (ratites and relatives), the structure, ontogeny and evolution of the patella in these species remains poorly characterized. Within Palaeognathae, the patella has been reported to be either present, absent, or fused with other bones, but it is unclear how much of this variation is real, erroneous or ontogenetic. Clarification of the patella’s form in palaeognaths would provide insight into the early evolution of the patella in birds, in addition to the specialized locomotion of these species. Findings would also provide new character data of use in resolving the controversial evolutionary relationships of palaeognaths. In this study, we examined the gross and histological anatomy of the emu patellar tendon across several age groups from five weeks to 18 months. We combined these results with our observations and those of others regarding the patella in palaeognaths and their outgroups (both extant and extinct), to reconstruct the evolution of the patella in birds. We found no evidence of an ossified patella in emus, but noted its tendon to have a highly unusual morphology comprising large volumes of adipose tissue contained within a collagenous meshwork. The emu patellar tendon also included increasing amounts of a cartilage-like tissue throughout ontogeny. We speculate that the unusual morphology of the patellar tendon in emus results from assimilation of a peri-articular fat pad, and metaplastic formation of cartilage, both potentially as adaptations to increasing tendon load. We corroborate previous observations of a ‘double patella’ in ostriches, but in contrast to some assertions, we find independent (i.e., unfused) ossified patellae in kiwis and tinamous. Our reconstructions suggest a single evolutionary origin of the patella in birds and that the ancestral patella is likely to have been a composite structure comprising a small ossified portion, lost by some species (e.g., emus, moa) but expanded in others (e.g., ostriches)
Influence of p-doping on the temperature dependence of In As/GaAs quantum dot excited state radiative lifetime
The radiative lifetime of the excited state transition of undoped and p-doped InAs/GaAs quantum dots(QDs) is estimated from measurements of time-integrated and time-resolved luminescence from both ground and excited states. The radiative lifetime of the undoped QDs increases from 500 ps at 10 K to almost 3 ns at room temperature, consistent with a Boltzmann redistribution of holes over the available energy states. The rate of increase can be suppressed by a factor of ∼2 by p-doping the QDs to maintain a hole population in the lowest confined dot states to high temperatures
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