Background: In patients with traumatic posterior shoulder instability, little is known about the precise location and size of the reverse Hill-Sachs lesion.
Methods: Forty-nine shoulders of 47 patients with traumatic posterior instability were included in this study based on the following inclusion criteria: (1) a primary or recurrent traumatic posterior shoulder dislocation and (2) the initial event being caused by trauma. Patients were excluded if they had (1) no history of trauma, (2) prior shoulder surgery, (3) no computed tomographic (CT) examination, or (4) were seizure cases.
Biological control programs frequently rely on predators to control vector-borne pathogens by consumptive effects on vector abundance in agroecosystems. Meanwhile, the spread of vectored disease depends on the vector preference for host status (healthy or infected hosts). Yet, it is unclear how vector preferences alter the controlled effectivity of predators in pathogen transmission.
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