Objective: Venous leg ulcers (VLUs) are considered the most frequent category of hard-to-heal limb ulcers. Although evidence-based care of VLUs suggests that compression therapy plays a pivotal role in the standard of care, patient adherence is considered low, with at least 33% non-compliance, either due to perceived problems from clinicians regarding their own competency in applying the bandages, or from the patient finding the wrapping bothersome. For many years, four-layer bandaging has been considered the 'gold standard', but application can be difficult and may also prove uncomfortable for patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe goal of the Perspective-n-Point problem (PnP) is to find the relative pose between an object and a camera from a set of n pairings between 3D points and their corresponding 2D projections on the focal plane. Current state of the art solutions, designed to operate on images, rely on computationally expensive minimization techniques. For the first time, this work introduces an event-based PnP algorithm designed to work on the output of a neuromorphic event-based vision sensor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInertial confinement fusion (ICF) requires a high resolution (~10 μm) neutron imaging system to observe deuterium and tritium (DT) core implosion asymmetries. A new large (150 mm entrance diameter: scaled for Laser MégaJoule [P. A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroRehabilitation
July 2003
Twenty five (25) out of 29 patients (86%) with unequivocal memorydisorders who received Memory Compensation Training (MCT) completed both a brief survey regarding their use of memory compensations and the Memory Compensation Questionnaire. Twenty-two (22) of the 25 patients (88%) reported daily use of memory compensation several months to years after the onset of their memory problems. The benefits included, by their report, being more productive, less disorganized, and less confused.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Soc Nephrol
September 1997
Clinical and experimental data relating to the functional capacity of the surviving nephrons of the chronically diseased kidney for the most part support the thesis that these nephrons retain their essential functional integrity regardless of the nature of the underlying form of chronic Bright's disease. There are instances in which specific alterations of function correlate with pathologic involvement of a particular site of the nephron but these appear to represent the exceptions, and in general the more advanced the disease becomes, the less evident are the differentiating features. Studies on dogs with unilateral renal disease indicate that the functional capacity of the nephrons of the diseased kidney parallels that of the nephrons of the contralateral normal kidney.
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