3,673 research outputs found
Acellular dermal regeneration template for soft tissue reconstruction of the digits.
PURPOSE: Trauma to the digits often leaves soft tissue defects with exposed bone, joint, and/or tendon that require soft tissue replacement. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of acellular dermal regeneration template combined with full-thickness skin grafting for soft tissue reconstruction in digital injuries with soft tissue defects.
METHODS: Acellular dermal regeneration template was used to reconstruct digital injuries with exposed bone, joint, tendon, and/or hardware not amenable to treatment with healing by secondary intention, rotation flaps, or primary skin grafts. Acellular dermal regeneration template was applied to 21 digits in 17 patients. Nineteen digits had exposed bone, 8 digits had exposed tendon, 6 digits had exposed joints, and 2 digits had exposed hardware. The acellular dermal regeneration template was sutured over the soft tissue defect. Over 3 weeks, a neodermis formed. The superficial silicone layer of the acellular dermal regeneration template was removed, and the digits received full-thickness epidermal autografting with cotton bolster.
RESULTS: The duration of postoperative follow-up extended to a minimum of 12 months. For the injury sites where acellular dermal regeneration template was applied, the total area of application ranged from 1 cm(2) to 24 cm(2), with the largest individual site measuring 12 cm(2). Twenty of 21 digits demonstrated 100% incorporation of the acellular dermal regeneration template skin substitute. One digit that had sustained multilevel trauma developed necrosis requiring revision amputation. Full-thickness epidermal autografting was performed an average of 24 days after acellular dermal regeneration template skin substitute application and demonstrated a 100% take in 16 of 20 digits and partial graft loss of 15% to 25% in 4 of 20 digits that did not require further treatment.
CONCLUSIONS: Acellular dermal regeneration template combined with secondary full-thickness skin grafting is an effective method of skin reconstruction in complex digital injuries with soft tissue defects involving exposed bone, tendon, and joint. The neodermis increases tissue bulk and facilitates epidermal autografting with digital injuries that otherwise would require flap coverage or skeletal shortening of the digit.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic IV
Exact ground states of a spin-1/2 Ising-Heisenberg model on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice in a magnetic field
Exact ground states of a spin-1/2 Ising-Heisenberg model on the
Shastry-Sutherland lattice with Heisenberg intra-dimer and Ising inter-dimer
couplings are found by two independent rigorous procedures. The first method
uses a unitary transformation to establish a mapping correspondence with an
effective classical spin model, while the second method relies on the
derivation of an effective hard-core boson model by continuous unitary
transformations. Both methods lead to equivalent effective Hamiltonians
providing a convincing proof that the spin-1/2 Ising-Heisenberg model on the
Shastry-Sutherland lattice exhibits a zero-temperature magnetization curve with
just two intermediate plateaus at one-third and one-half of the saturation
magnetization, which correspond to stripe and checkerboard orderings of
singlets and polarized triplets, respectively. The nature of the remarkable
stripe order relevant to the one-third plateau is thoroughly investigated with
the help of the corresponding exact eigenvector. The rigorous results for the
spin-1/2 Ising-Heisenberg model on the Shastry-Sutherland lattice are compared
with the analogous results for the purely classical Ising and fully quantum
Heisenberg models. Finally, we discuss to what extent the critical fields of
SrCu2(BO3)2 and (CuCl)Ca2Nb3O10 can be described within the suggested
Ising-Heisenberg model.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, minor correction
Reweighting of the form factors in exclusive B --> X ell nu decays
A form factor reweighting technique has been elaborated to permit relatively
easy comparisons between different form factor models applied to exclusive B
--> X l nu decays. The software tool developped for this purpose is described.
It can be used with any event generator, three of which were used in this work:
ISGW2, PHSP and FLATQ2, a new powerful generator. The software tool allows an
easy and reliable implementation of any form factor model. The tool has been
fully validated with the ISGW2 form factor hypothesis. The results of our
present studies indicate that the combined use of the FLATQ2 generator and the
form factor reweighting tool should play a very important role in future
exclusive |Vub| measurements, with largely reduced errors.Comment: accepted for publication by EPJ
Effect of spin on electron motion in a random magnetic field
We consider properties of a two-dimensional electron system in a random
magnetic field. It is assumed that the magnetic field not only influences
orbital electron motion but also acts on the electron spin. For calculations,
we suggest a new trick replacing the initial Hamiltonian by a Dirac
Hamiltonian. This allows us to do easily a perturbation theory and derive a
supermatrix sigma model, which takes a form of the conventional sigma model
with the unitary symmetry. Using this sigma model we calculate several
correlation functions including a spin-spin correlation function. As compared
to the model without spin, we get different expressions for the single-particle
lifetime and the transport time. The diffusion constant turns out to be 2 times
smaller than the one for spinless particles.Comment: 7 pages, revtex, result of the spin correlation function corrected,
Appendix adde
Comparative Study of Fault Tolerant Switched Flux Permanent Magnet Machines
The fault tolerant capabilities are compared in this
paper for the conventional double layer switched flux permanent magnet machine and its single layer counterparts, i.e. C-core, Ecore and modular. The comparison includes the inter-turn shortcircuit and irreversible demagnetization faults. A combination of Simulink and finite element models is used in the study. Based on the predictions, it is found that the modular topology produces the lowest short-circuit current and also has the best demagnetization withstand capability while the conventional one produces the highest short-circuit current and has the worst demagnetization withstand capability. The frozen permeability method is employed to separate the flux produced by armature current and magnets, and the results showed that, besides the influence of short-circuit current, the available magnet volume and magnetic circuit configuration play an important role in the demagnetization process. It is also found that removing half of the magnets, such as using C-core, E-core and modular topologies, generally improves the demagnetization withstand capability and also increases the torque per magnet volume. Measured results are also presented to validate the short-circuit current predictions
and magnet demagnetization
Ill-Behaved Convergence of a Model of the Gd3Ga5O12 Garnet Antiferromagnet with Truncated Magnetic Dipole-Dipole Interactions
Previous studies have found that calculations which consider long-range
magnetic dipolar interactions truncated at a finite cut-off distance Rc predict
spurious (unphysical) long-range ordered phases for Ising and Heisenberg
systems on the pyrochlore lattice. In this paper we show that, similar to these
two cases, calculations that use truncated dipolar interactions to model the
Gd3Ga5O12 garnet antiferromagnet also predict unphysical phases with
incommensurate ordering wave vector q_ord that is very sensitive to the dipolar
cut-off distance Rc.Comment: 7 pages, 2 color figures; Proceedings of the HFM2006 conference, to
appear in a special issue of J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Investigation of Irreversible Demagnetization in Switched Flux Permanent Magnet Machines under Short-Circuit Conditions
The irreversible magnet demagnetization phenomena are investigated in this paper
,
under
both
healthy and short -
circuit conditions for a switched flux permanent magnet (SFPM) machine. The
temperature effects on permanent magnet material are taken into account and the influence of short
-
circuit
current over demagnetization is evaluated. In order to
calculate the short
-
circuit current (mainly inter
-
turn
short
-
circuit), the MATLAB/Simulink model has been employed. The aforementioned short
-
circuit current
is then fed to the finite element model, so the demagnetization analysis can be carried out.
Variou
s fault
scenarios are investigated, including high speeds and high fault severity.
It is found that the short
-
circuit
current has li
mited
effect on the magnet demagnetization due to particular features of the SFPM machines.
The mechanism of demagnetization
has been revealed and found out to be mainly due to temperature rise
and poor PM materials
utilization
. Experiments have been carried out to validate
the
MATLAB/Simulink
model for short
-
circuit current predictions
Analyzing Input and Output Representations for Speech-Driven Gesture Generation
This paper presents a novel framework for automatic speech-driven gesture
generation, applicable to human-agent interaction including both virtual agents
and robots. Specifically, we extend recent deep-learning-based, data-driven
methods for speech-driven gesture generation by incorporating representation
learning. Our model takes speech as input and produces gestures as output, in
the form of a sequence of 3D coordinates. Our approach consists of two steps.
First, we learn a lower-dimensional representation of human motion using a
denoising autoencoder neural network, consisting of a motion encoder MotionE
and a motion decoder MotionD. The learned representation preserves the most
important aspects of the human pose variation while removing less relevant
variation. Second, we train a novel encoder network SpeechE to map from speech
to a corresponding motion representation with reduced dimensionality. At test
time, the speech encoder and the motion decoder networks are combined: SpeechE
predicts motion representations based on a given speech signal and MotionD then
decodes these representations to produce motion sequences. We evaluate
different representation sizes in order to find the most effective
dimensionality for the representation. We also evaluate the effects of using
different speech features as input to the model. We find that mel-frequency
cepstral coefficients (MFCCs), alone or combined with prosodic features,
perform the best. The results of a subsequent user study confirm the benefits
of the representation learning.Comment: Accepted at IVA '19. Shorter version published at AAMAS '19. The code
is available at
https://github.com/GestureGeneration/Speech_driven_gesture_generation_with_autoencode
Current correlations and quantum localization in 2D disordered systems with broken time-reversal invariance
We study long-range correlations of equilibrium current densities in a
two-dimensional mesoscopic system with the time reversal invariance broken by a
random or homogeneous magnetic field. Our result is universal, i.e. it does not
depend on the type (random potential or random magnetic field) or correlation
length of disorder. This contradicts recent sigma-model calculations of
Taras-Semchuk and Efetov (TS&E) for the current correlation function, as well
as for the renormalization of the conductivity. We show explicitly that the new
term in the sigma-model derived by TS&E and claimed to lead to delocalization
does not exist. The error in the derivation of TS&E is traced to an incorrect
ultraviolet regularization procedure violating current conservation and gauge
invariance.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Weak Localization and Integer Quantum Hall Effect in a Periodic Potential
We consider magnetotransport in a disordered two-dimensional electron gas in
the presence of a periodic modulation in one direction. Existing quasiclassical
and quantum approaches to this problem account for Weiss oscillations in the
resistivity tensor at moderate magnetic fields, as well as a strong
modulation-induced modification of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations at higher
magnetic fields. They do not account, however, for the operation at even higher
magnetic fields of the integer quantum Hall effect, for which quantum
interference processes are responsible. We then introduce a field-theory
approach, based on a nonlinear sigma model, which encompasses naturally both
the quasiclassical and quantum-mechanical approaches, as well as providing a
consistent means of extending them to include quantum interference corrections.
A perturbative renormalization-group analysis of the field theory shows how
weak localization corrections to the conductivity tensor may be described by a
modification of the usual one-parameter scaling, such as to accommodate the
anisotropy of the bare conductivity tensor. We also show how the two-parameter
scaling, conjectured as a model for the quantum Hall effect in unmodulated
systems, may be generalized similarly for the modulated system. Within this
model we illustrate the operation of the quantum Hall effect in modulated
systems for parameters that are realistic for current experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, ReVTeX; revised version with condensed
introduction; two figures taken out; reference adde
- …
