783 research outputs found
Parachute glider Patent
Multiple parachute system for landing control of Apollo type spacecraf
Broadband Relaxation-Optimized Polarization Transfer in Magnetic Resonance
Many applications of magnetic resonance are limited by rapid loss of spin
coherence caused by large transverse relaxation rates. In nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR) of large proteins, increased relaxation losses lead to poor
sensitivity of experiments and increased measurement time. In this paper we
develop broadband relaxation optimized pulse sequences (BB-CROP) which approach
fundamental limits of coherence transfer efficiency in the presence of very
general relaxation mechanisms that include cross-correlated relaxation. These
broadband transfer schemes use new techniques of chemical shift refocusing
(STAR echoes) that are tailored to specific trajectories of coupled spin
evolution. We present simulations and experimental data indicating significant
enhancement in the sensitivity of multi-dimensional NMR experiments of large
molecules by use of these methods
Space capsule Patent
Manned space capsule configuration for orbital flight and atmospheric reentr
Aerodynamic Characteristics at Transonic and Supersonic Speeds of a Rocket-propelled Airplane Configuration Having a 52.5 Degree Delta Wing and a Low, Swept Horizontal Tail
Free-flight Investigation over a Mach Number Range from 0.74 to 1.43 at Lift Coefficients from Minus 0.15 to 0.75 of an Airplane-configuration Model Having a 52.5 Degree Delta Wing and a Low Swept Horizontal Tail
Aerodynamic characteristics at transonic and supersonic speeds of a rocket-propelled airplane configuration having a diamond-plan-form wing of aspect ratio 3.08 and a low, swept horizontal tail
Some Effects of Reynolds Number on the Stability of a Series of Flared-body and Blunted-cone Models at Mach Numbers from 1.62 to 6.86
Cathepsin-S degraded decorin are elevated in fibrotic lung disorders - development and biological validation of a new serum biomarker
Supportive interventions to improve physiological and psychological health outcomes among patients undergoing cystectomy: A systematic review
Background
Our understanding of effective perioperative supportive interventions for patients undergoing cystectomy procedures and how these may affect short and long-term health outcomes is limited.
Methods
Randomised controlled trials involving any non-surgical, perioperative interventions designed to support or improve the patient experience for patients undergoing cystectomy procedures were reviewed. Comparison groups included those exposed to usual clinical care or standard procedure. Studies were excluded if they involved surgical procedure only, involved bowel preparation only or involved an alternative therapy such as aromatherapy. Any short and long-term outcomes reflecting the patient experience or related urological health outcomes were considered.
Results
19 articles (representing 15 individual studies) were included for review. Heterogeneity in interventions and outcomes across studies meant meta-analyses were not possible. Participants were all patients with bladder cancer and interventions were delivered over different stages of the perioperative period. The overall quality of evidence and reporting was low and outcomes were predominantly measured in the short-term. However, the findings show potential for exercise therapy, pharmaceuticals, ERAS protocols, psychological/educational programmes, chewing gum and nutrition to benefit a broad range of physiological and psychological health outcomes.
Conclusions
Supportive interventions to date have taken many different forms with a range of potentially meaningful physiological and psychological health outcomes for cystectomy patients. Questions remain as to what magnitude of short-term health improvements would lead to clinically relevant changes in the overall patient experience of surgery and long-term recovery
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