Publications by authors named "T E Tully"

Viscoelastic testing evaluates the formation and lysis of a clot over time, allowing more complete assessment of patient hemostasis in real time, whereas traditional tests, such as prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time, only measure coagulation factor function. Patient-side viscoelastic coagulation monitors are easy to use, portable, and provide faster turnaround time than commercial laboratories. Viscoelastic testing requires only 0.

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Anthropogenic climate change poses a significant threat to species on the brink of extinction. Many non-avian reptiles are endangered, but uncovering their vulnerability to climate warming is challenging, because this requires analyzing the climate sensitivity of different life stages and modeling population growth rates. Such efforts are currently hampered by a lack of long-term life-history data.

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Neuroprostheses typically operate under supervised learning, in which a machine-learning algorithm is trained to correlate neural or myoelectric activity with an individual's motor intent. Due to the stochastic nature of neuromyoelectric signals, algorithm performance decays over time. This decay is accelerated when attempting to regress proportional control of multiple joints in parallel, compared with the more typical classification-based pattern recognition control.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study evaluates the effectiveness of two myoelectric prosthetic wrists (a commercial one and a new affordable "Utah wrist") in improving task performance for transradial amputees during a specific task.
  • - Results showed a significant reduction in task failure rates and compensatory movements when participants used the prosthetic wrists compared to when they did not use them.
  • - Importantly, using the prosthetic wrists did not increase cognitive load for users, suggesting they enhance dexterity without making the task mentally more challenging.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to assess how different anesthetics (isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane) affect induced hypothermia and rewarming times in Hispaniolan Amazon parrots, while also evaluating their cardiovascular and respiratory responses.
  • - Twelve adult parrots were used in a randomized trial where they were anesthetized with the three inhalants, and various temperature-related times during anesthesia were recorded and analyzed.
  • - Results showed that all anesthetics induced hypothermia at similar rates, but sevoflurane led to a significantly longer rewarming time compared to desflurane; transient apnea and heart rhythm issues were noted across all treatments.
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