Introduction: To systematically review the available literature reporting on genetic mutations leading to dento-maxillofacial malformations in mice.
Materials And Methods: An electronic search was performed across Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases up to May 2024, targeting all in vivo studies on gene mutations causing dento-maxillofacial deformities in mice. Studies reporting oral clefts were excluded.
Much current work in Science and Technology Studies inflects knowing with care. Analyses of the ethos of objectivity, and of the practices by which objectivity is crafted, have shown that knowing and caring cannot be thought apart from each other. Using case studies from our own work we analyse how, in the sociotechnical relationships that we study, knowing and caring are entangled through 'attachments'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present an in silico method to estimate the contribution of each residue in a protein to its overall stability using three database-derived statistical potentials that are based on inter-residue distances, backbone torsion angles and solvent accessibility, respectively. Residues that contribute very unfavorably to the folding free energy are defined as stability weaknesses, whereas residues that show a highly stabilizing contribution are called stability strengths. Strengths and/or weaknesses on residues that are in spatial contact are clustered into 3-dimensional (3D) stability patches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech A
February 2007
Purpose: Chylothorax is an uncommon complication of cardiac surgery. We report two cases of the thoracoscopic management of persistent postoperative chylothorax by thoracic duct thermofusion and section with the LigaSure device.
Materials And Methods: A 6-year-old boy and a 3-year-old girl developed persistent chylothorax following an aortic coarctation repair and a Fontan procedure, respectively.
J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech A
August 2006
Nonparasitic splenic cysts are uncommon lesions, for which partial splenectomy offers a definitive treatment while preserving splenic function. We report the use of radiofrequency energy for laparoscopic partial splenectomy to treat two children with nonparasitic splenic cysts by creating a 1-cm thick coagulated parenchyma resection plane, allowing bloodless splenic transection. This approach spares the need for blood transfusions, reduces hospital stay, and offers great promise for partial splenectomy in children.
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