58 research outputs found

    Calculation of territorial risks in the explosion of transformers at the electrical substation

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    Работа направлена на анализ причин выхода из строя трансформаторов, расчет рисков при взрыве трансформаторов на электрической станции, что позволяет сформулировать мероприятия по повышению безопасности ее работы. The work is aimed at analyzing the causes of failure of transformers, calculating risks in the explosion of transformers at a power plant, which allows us to formulate measures to improve the safety of its work

    Kommunizierende Syringomyelie und Syringobulbie nach Operation eines spinalen epiduralen Tuberkuloms

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    In a 46 year old patient a syringomyelia and syringobulbia were diagnosed clinically 18 years after a transverse lesion of the cord and removal of an epidural spinal tuberculoma. Post-myelographic CT and NMR scans showed a communicating syringomyelia and syringobulbia. A flavectomy was performed and a syringopleural shunt implanted. The operation was successful by neuroradiological criteria. Clinically there was a worsening of the spastic gait during one-year follow up. Neuroradiological findings and etiology of the syrinx are discussed, and a causal relationship to the tuberculoma is proposed

    Age-related spontaneous intracerebral hematoma in a German community

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    We investigated incidence, age distribution in relation to etiology, and localization of spontaneous intracerebral hematoma in 100 consecutive cases. Incidence in the total population of the Giessen area was estimated to be greater than 11/100,000 inhabitants/yr and increased with age. There was a trend toward higher incidence in males. Overall mortality was 27%, 22% of 58 patients aged less than 70 years and 33% of 42 patients aged greater than or equal to 70 years. Hypertensive putaminal hematoma showed the highest mortality rate (42%, 10 of 24 cases). Chronic alcoholism and anticoagulant medication influenced the mortality rate unfavourably. We found the following localizations and etiologies to have a specific relation with age: 1) lobar hematomas from vascular malformations, group aged less than 40 years; 2) hypertensive putaminal hematomas and hypertensive thalamic hematomas, group aged 40-69 years; and 3) lobar hematomas, group aged greater than or equal to 70 years. Alcoholism was an additional factor in 38% of the 13 middle-aged men with hypertensive putaminal hematomas. Fourteen cases of spontaneous intracerebral hematoma were possibly due to cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Six of these 14 patients had recurrent lobar hematomas, but only three of the six could be histologically investigated. In these three cases, cerebral amyloid angiopathy was proven

    NEW OPTIMIZATION MODELS FOR DATA MINING

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    Changing pattern of brain hemorrhage during 12 years of computed axial tomography

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    We examined whether the pattern of cerebral hemorrhage changed after the introduction of computed tomography

    Outcome of patients with aneurysmal and presumed aneurysmal bleeding. A hospital study based on 100 consecutive cases in a neurological clinic

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    One hundred patients with spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage due to aneurysm or presumed aneurysm consecutively admitted to a neurological clinic and subjected to CCT during the first 72 hours were examined retrospectively. The outcome after two months as defined by the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) was relatively good: 23% of the patients suffered management mortality (GOS I) (postoperative lethality 8%), 3% showed GOS-Grade II, 14% grade III, 17% grade IV, and 43% grade V. The extent of intracranial hemorrhage correlated well with the initial Hunt-Hess Grade which, in turn, had a strong influence on case fatality and the degree of disability. Lethal factors were: 1. massive subarachnoid hemorrhage together with a massive ventricular hemorrhage (p 20 ml (p < 0.05). Case fatality was lower when angiography was negative. In our study rebleeding (12%) and delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) (18%) were less frequent and the lethality due to acute hydrocephalus (5%) and delayed cerebral ischemia (5%) was less pronounced than in comparable studies. The degree of disability (GOS) was directly related to the amount of intracranial blood, to the development of acute or chronic hydrocephalus, delayed cerebral ischemia and rebleeding. DCI occurred in 60% of patients with marked hydrocephalus. Rebleeding was more frequent in patients with acute hydrocephalus. Hydrocephalus, DCI, and rebleeding were associated with a poorer initial grade on the Hunt and Hess Scale

    Cerebrovascular Diseases

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