Publications by authors named "Peter Ro"

Empirical use of beta-lactam antibiotics, the preferred agents for treating uncomplicated skin and soft tissue infections, may no longer be appropriate for these infections because of the increasing prevalence of community strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Retrospective studies, however, suggest that outcomes are good even when beta-lactams are used. We conducted a randomized, double-blind trial of 166 outpatient subjects comparing placebo to cephalexin at 500 mg orally four times for 7 days after incision and drainage of skin and soft tissue abscesses.

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The optic tectum (OT) of barn owls contains topographic maps of auditory and visual space. Barn owls reared with horizontally displacing prismatic spectacles (prisms) acquire a novel auditory space map in the OT that restores alignment with the prismatically displaced visual map. Although juvenile owls readily acquire alternative maps of auditory space as a result of experience, this plasticity is reduced greatly in adults.

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Flow and stress patterns in human carotid artery bifurcation models, which differ in the bifurcation angle, are analysed numerically under physiologically relevant flow conditions. The governing Navier-Stokes equations describing pulsatile, three-dimensional flow of an incompressible non-Newtonian fluid are approximated using a pressure correction finite element method, which has been developed recently. The non-Newtonian behaviour of blood is modelled using Casson's relation, based on measured dynamic viscosity.

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The flow pattern in the left main coronary artery has been calculated using an idealized geometry and by numerically solving the full Navier-Stokes equations for a Newtonian fluid. Two different forms for the entrance velocity profile were used, one a time-varying, flat profile and the other a time-varying, less flat velocity profile. The results obtained demonstrate the presence of secondary motions for conditions simulating flow in the left main coronary artery, with maximum secondary flow velocities being on the order of three to four percent of the maximum axial velocity.

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To analyse the pulsatile flow field and the mechanical stresses in a three-dimensional carotid artery bifurcation model, computer simulation is applied. The approximation of the Navier-Stokes equations uses a pressure correction finite element method. Numerical results are presented for axial and secondary flow velocity and wall shear stresses with special emphasis on the fluid dynamics in the carotid sinus.

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