Publications by authors named "Matthew Carmichael"

Background Risk stratification and appropriate treatment selection are essential for the management of head and neck malignancies, in order to optimize long-term outcomes. Salivary gland carcinomas (SGCs) pose a particular challenge due to their extensive biologic heterogeneity. Primary surgical resection remains the mainstay of treatment; however, outcomes with single modality therapy for 'non-high-risk' lesions are less elucidated in the literature present on the subject.

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Middle ear barotrauma is a well known entity with typical injury occurring when diving or ascending in a commercial jetliner. Patients often present with symptoms of acute onset otalgia, hearing loss and sometimes haemotympanum (with or without tympanic membrane perforation). On rare occasions, facial nerve paralysis can occur when the tympanic segment of the facial nerve is dehiscent within the middle ear.

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Background: Ligation of the significantly injured infrarenal inferior vena cava (IVC) is an accepted practice in the setting of damage control surgery. This is a report of inpatient management, outcomes, and long-term follow-up in 25 patients after IVC ligation.

Methods: The records of patients with injuries to the IVC treated in an urban level I trauma center from 1995 to 2008 were reviewed.

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Pressurized planar electrochromatography (PPEC) is a new planar chromatographic technique in which the mobile phase is driven by electroosmotic flow, while the sorbent layer is pressurized in a manner that allows heat to flow from the layer through an electrically insulating, thermally conducting, sheet of aluminum nitride ceramic. A prototype apparatus for performing PPEC is described. Separation by PPEC is faster than by conventional TLC, and an example is presented of a 24-fold enhancement in the speed of separation.

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Planar electrochromatography is performed by applying an electric field across a thin layer chromatography (TLC) plate. In addition to electroosmotic flow in the axial direction, there is also flow to the surface of the TLC layer, and this can substantially degrade the quality of separation. This effect is offset by Joule heating which causes evaporation of liquid from the layer surface, and which under some conditions causes degradation of separation quality by excessive drying of the layer.

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