Publications by authors named "Jens Haase"

The tibial nerve (TN) has three main terminal branches: the medial and lateral plantar nerves and the calcaneal branch (CB), which innervates the foot sole. The design and implantation of nerve cuff electrodes with separate channels for each of these three terminal branches would provide significant sensory information, which can be used in functional electrical stimulation systems to assist standing or to correct foot drop. Detailed quantitative anatomical data about fascicular size and separability of the terminal branches of TN are needed for the design and implantation of such cuff electrodes.

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Objective: To evaluate a selective implantable drop foot stimulator (ActiGait) in terms of effect on walking and safety.

Design: A phase II trial in which a consecutive sample of participants acted as their own controls.

Subjects: People who had suffered a stroke at least 6 months prior to recruitment and had a drop-foot that affected walking were recruited from 3 rehabilitation centres in Denmark.

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Virtual reality systems seems to be useful for training the use of brain spatulas without damaging brain tissue but the success of such a system is dependant on the human ability to discriminate pressures applied with the spatula. This paper describes an experiment designed to explore some central issues related to this ability: are surgeons better than laypeople, are the abilities in Virtual Reality (VR) and real world (RW) comparable, and will visual feedback enhance the ability. A group of surgeons and a control group of laypeople were tested in VR and RW.

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A computer based virtual reality system is presented allowing the user to train skills related to brain retraction. The system is designed and the core training system implemented and tested. The initial test shows promising results.

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This paper describes a method for surgery simulation, or more specifically a learning system of how to use a brain spatula. Improper use of brain spatulas can lead to brain tissue lesions such as tearing of brain tissue and ischemia. The idea is to provide surgeons with a tool which can teach them the correlation between deformation and applied force.

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Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1) is an inherited metabolic disorder characterized by recurrent urolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis frequently leading to progressive renal insufficiency during the second decade of life. Systemic organ involvement as a result of the accumulation of calcium oxalate crystal deposits in vessel walls often is observed. We report a case of a 56-year-old woman with late-onset of PH1 who developed rapidly progressive renal failure and severe systemic oxalosis with skin and eye involvement despite intensified hemodialytic therapy during the waiting period for combined liver and kidney transplantation.

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