933 resultados para Medicine in Literature
Resumo:
Tässä diplomityössä selvitettiin biopolttoaineiden ominaisuuksia leijutuksen kannalta. Ensiksi tutkittavat biopolttoaineet, hake ja turve, seulottiin ja seulotut näytteet analysoitiin. Seuraavaksi turvetta ja haketta leijutettiin eri nopeuksilla ja eri leijutusnopeuksilla saadut näytteet analysoitiin kuva-analysilla. Partikkeleista selvitettiin runsaasti mittoja, kuten keskihalkaisija, pinta-ala ja muotokerroin. Kirjallisuudesta löytyvien korrelaatioiden avulla laskettiin leijutettujen partikkelien vastuskertoimet ja terminaalinopeudet. Korrelaatioiden tuloksia verrattiin mittaustuloksiin. Tässä työssä myös laskettiin kyseisiin biopolttoaineisiin vaikuttavat ominaisvoimat leijutuksessa sekä laskettiin korjauskerroin, jota käytettiin ominaisvoimien korjaamiseen. Referenssiaineina käytettiin hiekkaa ja lasikuulia.
Resumo:
The authors report a case of laryngeal chondroma , a rare benign larynx tumor in the cricoid and arytenoid cartilages. There are aproximately 250 cases previously described in literature. A male, 41 year-old patient, presented a severe and progressive dyspnea leading to tracheostomy. Direct microlaryngoscopy revealed arytenoid enlargement and subglottic stenosis and the endoscopical biopsy was inconclusive, since the tumor present a hard gnistency. We performed surgical excision by laringofissura and total resection of the tumor, with good result. The histopathological examination showed a chondroma with no malignance.
Resumo:
Acquired chest wall defects present a challenging problem for thoracic surgeons. Many of such defects can be repaired with the use of local and regional musculocutaneous flaps, but larger defects compromising skeletal structure require increasingly sophisticated reconstructive techniques. The following discussion will review the options for repair acquired chest wall defects based in literature. The authors searched the Pubmed (www.pubmed.com) and found citations from January 1996 to February 2008. By reading the titles and the abstracts most of the citations were discharged because they focused in congenital chest wall defects or were cases report. However, many papers were found describing the outcome of large series of patients with acquired chest wall deformities. A review of recent literature shows that the repair of chest wall defects with soft tissues, if possible, remains the treatment of choice. Large chest wall defects require skeletal reconstruction to prevent paradoxical respiration. The selection of the most appropriate flap is primary dictated by the location and the size of the defect. It is important to transfer tissue with good vitality, so understanding the vascular supply is imperative. Autogenous grafts have been used in the past for skeletal reconstruction but a combination of synthetic materials with musculocutaneous flaps has been used lately. Based in the literature, the use of prosthetic material in chest wall reconstruction does not significantly increases the risk of wound infection.