Publications by authors named "H Greene"

Foot and ankle arthrodesis surgery is often associated with high rates of nonunion ranging from 8% to 40%. This complication can result in individual patient burden and system burden in the management of these complex patients. Biologic factors contribute greatly to the development of a nonunion, including patient-related modifiable risk factors, metabolic and endocrine factors, systemic disease, previous surgeries, medications, weight loss treatments, and posttraumatic and postsurgical factors.

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Background And Objectives: Compared with the modified Frailty Index-11 (mFI-11) frailty tool, reflective of patient comorbidities, the Fried phenotype weighs functional patient variables. This study examined using the Fried phenotype in predicting postoperative outcomes in craniotomy for patients with tumor.

Methods: This retrospective cohort analysis included patients with Current Procedural Terminology codes for supratentorial/infratentorial tumor resections and preoperative frailty scores.

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Nitroaromatic compounds are found in brown carbon aerosols emitted to the Earth's atmosphere by biomass burning, and are important organic chromophores for the absorption of solar radiation. Here, transient absorption spectroscopy spanning 100 fs-8 μs is used to explore the pH-dependent photochemical pathways for aqueous solutions of -nitrophenol, chosen as a representative nitroaromatic compound. Broadband ultrafast UV-visible and infrared probes are used to characterize the excited states and intermediate species involved in the multistep photochemistry, and to determine their lifetimes under different pH conditions.

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Defining and delineating species distribution and habitat is critical to informed management and conservation. This process is complicated in marine environments, where detection of marine taxa and characterization of marine habitat is more difficult. Small pelagic fishes and forage fishes are particularly challenging, though insights may be more accessible in species highly dependent on particular habitat.

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Nitrophenols are atmospheric pollutants found in brown carbon aerosols produced by biomass burning. Absorption of solar radiation by these nitrophenols contributes to atmospheric radiative forcing, but quantifying this climate impact requires better understanding of their photochemical pathways. Here, the photochemistry of near-UV (λ = 350 nm) excited -nitrophenol in aqueous solution is investigated using transient absorption spectroscopy and time-resolved infrared spectroscopy over the fs to μs time scale to characterize the excited states, intermediates, and photoproducts.

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