877 resultados para Girona (Catalonia) -- History -- 14th century -- Book reviews
Resumo:
El trabajo que a continuación presentamos es una breve noticia que completa la publicación, iniciada en esta misma revista (García Sánchez 1997), del corpus de inscripciones impresas sobre ánforas halladas en las sucesivas campañas de excavación del yacimiento de Mas Castellar de Pontós (Alt Emporda, Girona), dirigidas por la Dra. Enriqueta Pons i Brun.
Resumo:
Digamos en primer lugar que nos encontramos ante una obra interesante. El autor nos ofrece una visión general de aspectos económicos, sociales y religiosos de la Oretania preromana y romana que cubre de manera más que correcta un hueco en la bibliografía existente. Ésta, protagonizada por José Mª Blázquez, estudiaba todo tipo de aspectos económicos y sociales, pero sin realizar una visión de conjunto que, en una sola obra y de modo unitario, expusiera al lector la evolución de esta región de la Alta Andalucía. Suponemos que el lector universitario agradecerá su aparición. Tenemos que lamentar que la publicación de este trabajo, resultado de una tesis doctoral leída en 1991, se haya retrasado hasta 1996, aunque la bilbiografía reciente aporte relativamente poco.
Resumo:
The Summer Olympic Games constitute the biggest concentration of human sports and activities in a particular place and time since 776 BCE, when the written history of the Olympic Games in Olympia began. Summer and Winter Olympic anti-doping laboratories, accredited by the International Olympic Committee in the past and the World Anti-Doping Agency in the present times, acquire worldwide interest to apply all new analytical advancements in the fight against doping in sports, hoping that this major human event will not become dirty by association with this negative phenomenon. This article summarizes the new analytical progresses, technologies and knowledge used by the Olympic laboratories, which for the vast majority of them are, eventually, incorporated into routine anti-doping analysis.
Resumo:
During the last two decades, endoscopic endonasal approach has completed the minimally invasive skull base surgery armamentarium. Endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery (EESBS) was initially developed in the field of pituitary adenomas, and gained an increasing place for the treatment of a wide variety of skull base pathologies, extending on the midline from crista galli process to the occipitocervical junction and laterally to the parasellar areas and petroclival apex. Until now, most studies are retrospective and lack sufficient methodological quality to confirm whether the endoscopic endonasal pituitary surgery has better results than the microsurgical trans-sphenoidal classical approach. The impressions of the expert teams show a trend toward better results for some pituitary adenomas with the endoscopic endonasal route, in terms of gross total resection rate and probably more comfortable postoperative course for the patient. Excepting intra- and suprasellar pituitary adenomas, EESBS seems useful for selected lesions extending onto the cavernous sinus and Meckel's cave but also for clival pathologies. Nevertheless, this infatuation toward endoscopic endonasal approaches has to be balanced with the critical issue of cerebrospinal fluid leaks, which constitutes actually the main limit of this approach. Through their experience and a review of the literature, the authors aim to present the state of the art of this approach as well as its limits.
Resumo:
Interventional paediatric and congenital cardiology is expanding at a rapid pace. Validated techniques (such as aortic or pulmonary valve dilatations and occlusion of persistent ductus arteriosus and atrial septal defects) are improving thanks to the use of smaller introducers and sheaths, low-profile balloons and novel devices. Moreover, catheter-based interventions have emerged as an attractive alternative to surgery in other fields: pulmonary valve replacement, balloon and stent implantation for native and recurrent coarctation, and percutaneous closure of ventricular septal defects. On the other hand, percutaneous interventions in the paediatric population may be limited by patient size or the anatomy of the defect. Hybrid approaches involving both cardiac interventionists and surgeons are being developed to overcome these limitations. Based on a better understanding of cardiac development, fetal cardiac interventions are being attempted in order to alter the history of severe obstructive lesions. Finally, some interventional procedures still carry a low success rate-for example, pulmonary vein stenosis, even with the use of conventional stents. Biodegradable stents and devices are being developed and may find an application in this setting as well as in others. The purpose of this review is to highlight the advances in paediatric interventional cardiology since the beginning of the third millennium.