18 research outputs found

    Two Pandemics - Making Meaning of Illness through the Works of Thomas Mann and Thomas Glavinic

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    By March 2020, most of the world had gone into varying levels of lockdown to try to prevent further spread of what was proving to be a deceptively deadly disease: COVID-19, commonly referred to as “the Coronavirus.” One way to gauge the effect that a massive, traumatic event such as a global pandemic has on individuals is to analyze how those people write about their experiences. In this study, I examine what the German body of discourse contained and what it can teach regarding two major pandemics that fell one hundred years apart via Thomas Mann’s novella Der Tod in Venedig (Death in Venice) and Thomas Glavinic’s autofictional “Der Corona-Roman” (“The Corona Novel”). By finding common themes and subjecting them to various critiques and analyses, I discovered that the “German experience,” so to speak, was remarkably similar to those I was reading from my compatriots in English, if a bit blunter. I analyze these texts cross-linguistically to understand universal themes of experience during pandemic times, and how those views have changed across time and space, with four overarching topics: time, self-writing of illness, pandemic descriptions, and mortality. In this way, I show how readers are able to connect with the texts and use them to make meaning in their own lives

    Synchronisation von Steuerungen via Ethernet: Diplom 2015

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    Ziel dieser Diplomarbeit ist es für die Firma Imperix eine Synchronisation zwischen mehreren Systemen über ein Ethernet Netzwerk zu ermöglichen, wobei das Precision Time Protokoll sowie der Sync-E Standard verwendet werden sollen

    The Gracilis Myocutaneous Free Flap: A Quantitative Analysis of the Fasciocutaneous Blood Supply and Implications for Autologous Breast Reconstruction

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    BACKGROUND: Mastectomies are one of the most common surgical procedures in women of the developed world. The gracilis myocutaneous flap is favoured by many reconstructive surgeons due to the donor site profile and speed of dissection. The distal component of the longitudinal skin paddle of the gracilis myocutaneous flap is unreliable. This study quantifies the fasciocutaneous vascular territories of the gracilis flap and offers the potential to reconstruct breasts of all sizes. METHODS: Twenty-seven human cadaver dissections were performed and injected using lead oxide into the gracilis vascular pedicles, followed by radiographic studies to identify the muscular and fasciocutaneous perforator patterns. The vascular territories and choke zones were characterized quantitatively using the 'Lymphatic Vessel Analysis Protocol' (LVAP) plug-in for Image J® software. RESULTS: We found a step-wise decrease in the average vessel density from the upper to middle and lower thirds of both the gracilis muscle and the overlying skin paddle with a significantly higher average vessel density in the skin compared to the muscle. The average vessel width was greater in the muscle. Distal to the main pedicle, there were either one (7/27 cases), two (14/27 cases) or three (6/27 cases) minor pedicles. The gracilis angiosome was T-shaped and the maximum cutaneous vascular territory for the main and first minor pedicle was 35 × 19 cm and 34 × 10 cm, respectively. CONCLUSION: Our findings support the concept that small volume breast reconstructions can be performed on suitable patients, based on septocutaneous perforators from the minor pedicle without the need to harvest any muscle, further reducing donor site morbidity. For large reconstructions, if a 'T' or tri-lobed flap with an extended vertical component is needed, it is important to establish if three territories are present. Flap reliability and size may be optimized following computed tomographic angiography and surgical delay
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