Design product with regard to muscles expansion throughout adulthood

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Similarities between spatial diffusion and multi-site exchange events allow us to extend our results to nuclear spin relaxation due to translational diffusion. As a result we are able to show that the NMR treatment of intramolecular exchange and translational diffusion represent valid quantum Markovian processes compatible with the rigorous definitions of open quantum theory.
To demonstrate a technique for the robot-assisted laparoscopic surgical management of cesarean section scar ectopic pregnancy (CSP) and hysterotomy repair.
Step-by-step presentation of the procedure using video.
CSP is a rare form of ectopic pregnancy. The incidence of CSP has been increasing with rising cesarean deliveries and is estimated to range from 1 of 1800 to 1 of 2500 of all pregnancies. Various management of CSP have been used such as systemic or local methotrexate, surgical resection, and uterine artery chemoembolization. Exogenic or deep CSP occurs when the gestational sac is deeply embedded in the scar and the surrounding myometrium and grows toward the bladder. Surgical resection of this type of CSP seemed reasonable, which could shorten hospitalization and follow-up time and reduce the failure rate of treatment. For its magnification of the 3-dimensional laparoscope, flexibility endo-wrist, and stabilization of instruments within the surgical field, robot-assisted laparoscopic resection cas followed up for 3 years with regular menstruation and no abnormal uterine bleeding.
Robot-assisted laparoscopic excision of CSP and hysterotomy repair is an effective procedure for the management of this increasingly more common condition. The use of a cervix dilator and robot-assisted laparoscopic suturing can prevent hemorrhage and peripheral tissue damage and allow for the safe removal of the ectopic pregnancy with multilayer repair of the uterine defect.
Robot-assisted laparoscopic excision of CSP and hysterotomy repair is an effective procedure for the management of this increasingly more common condition. The use of a cervix dilator and robot-assisted laparoscopic suturing can prevent hemorrhage and peripheral tissue damage and allow for the safe removal of the ectopic pregnancy with multilayer repair of the uterine defect.
To review the literature for the preoperative clinical characteristics, surgical findings, and outcomes of patients who underwent laparoscopic surgical treatment of ureteral endometriosis (UE).
A systematic search was performed in the PubMed and Scopus databases.
Following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines, studies in English language that assessed UE treated surgically by laparoscopy published between 2008 and 2020 were selected.
In an initial search, 1313 articles were identified, 193 in PubMed and 1120 in Scopus databases. A total of 1291 articles that did not meet eligibility criteria were excluded. The remaining 22 studies were included in the final qualitative analysis, with a total of 1337 patients. Data on preoperative patient's characteristics, preoperative imaging examinations, intraoperative findings, and postoperative complications were abstracted by 1 author. The descriptive nature of included studies prevented the performance of meta-analysis. Temsirolimus etriosis pain symptoms and a low rate of lower urinary tract symptoms. The standard surgical technique for UE treatment is not yet a consensus; however, the laparoscopic approach with previous ureterolysis, leaving ureteral resection only for refractory cases, seems to be a safe and effective treatment, with improvement of symptoms and few intraoperative and postoperative complications.
UE is associated with common endometriosis pain symptoms and a low rate of lower urinary tract symptoms. The standard surgical technique for UE treatment is not yet a consensus; however, the laparoscopic approach with previous ureterolysis, leaving ureteral resection only for refractory cases, seems to be a safe and effective treatment, with improvement of symptoms and few intraoperative and postoperative complications.
Traditional imaging modalities are not useful in the follow-up of irradiated metastatic brain tumors, because radiation can change imaging characteristics. We aimed to assess the ability of treatment response assessment maps (TRAMs) calculated from delayed-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in differentiation between radiation effect and persistent tumoral tissue.
TRAMs were calculated by subtracting three-dimensional T1 MRIs acquired 5 minutes after contrast injection from the images acquired 60-105 minutes later. Red areas were regarded as radiation effect and blue areas as persistent tumoral lesion. Thirty-seven patients with 130 metastatic brain tumors who were treated with Gamma Knife radiosurgery and who underwent TRAMs perfusion-weighted MRI were enrolled in this retrospective study.
The median age was 58 years and the most common primary diagnosis was lung cancer (n= 21). The median follow-up period of patients was 12 months. The overall local control rate was 100% at 1 year and 98.9% at 2 years. The median progression-free survival was 12 months. The mean overall survival was 27.3 months. The radiologic and clinical follow-up showed a clinicoradiologic diagnosis of a persistent tumoral lesion in 3 tumors (2.3%) and radiation effect in 127 tumors (97.7%). There was a fair agreement between clinicoradiologic diagnosis and TRAMs analysis (κ= 0.380). The sensitivity and positive predictive value of TRAMs in diagnosing radiation effect were 96.06% and 99.2%, respectively. TRAMs showed comparable results to perfusion-weighted MRI, with a diagnostic odds ratio of 27.4 versus 20.7, respectively.
The presented results show the ability of TRAMs in differentiating radiation effect and persistent tumoral lesions.
The presented results show the ability of TRAMs in differentiating radiation effect and persistent tumoral lesions.
We sought to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lumbar fusion versus nonoperative care for the treatment of chronic low back pain associated with degenerative disk disease.
A comprehensive duplicate electronic database search including PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and China National Knowledge Infrastructure was conducted to identify relevant prospective studies published up to June 30, 2020. The main outcomes including clinical results, complications, and all-cause additional surgeries were presented in the form of short- (<2 years) and long-term (≥2 years) follow-up results. Analyses were performed in Review Manager software 5.3.
Six prospective studies involving 159 patients for short-term follow-up and 675 for long-term follow-up were included. The 2 interventions exhibited little difference in regard to short- and long-term Oswestry Disability Index and visual analog scale scores for back and leg pain, except that lumbar fusion might bring about lower additional surgery rate (risk ratio, 0.