The Tessier collection is an inheritance of a whole career of a surgeon and a life dedicated to cranio-facial malformations. It is a good opportunity to analyse some particular points of the surgical work of Paul Tessier, in particular to understand how the midface advancement procedures were made up and thought out. Medical files, pictures, X-rays and drawings help us to describe step by step the different types of midface osteotomies done by Paul Tessier, from TESSIER I to TESSIER VII osteotomies. The author describes the reason for the surgical lines and their modifications justified by all those files and by Tessier's personal annotations. Based on a single clinical case, Tessier experimented with new surgical procedures, firstly on skulls and dissection then the proposed surgery, the experience of the surgery and the post-operative result for each patient made him decide to change lines and procedures. At each step, the modification was done to improve stability, aesthetics, or to do the procedure in an easier way. Difficulties and mistakes were always new lessons for further patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcms.2013.04.003 | DOI Listing |
Expert Rev Mol Diagn
October 2022
Consortia for Improving Medicine with Innovation & Technology, Boston, MA, USA.
IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol
April 2021
Granite HealthCare Advisors Grantham NH USA.
This paper explores how the approach, process, and learnings of the RADx Tech Deployment Core in its support of manufacturing, deployment, and implementation of medical technologies is creating a replicable model for the future. Initially, the key construct of the RADx Tech Deployment Core was helping companies manufacture, commercialize, and develop a digital infrastructure for the purpose of SARS-CoV-2 testing and reporting. However, the team and RADx Tech leadership soon realized that the larger infrastructure to deploy testing in non-clinical environments was nonexistent and that wrap-around services were required to build the necessary bridge between manufacturing and end users.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe RADx Tech program was a unique funding and support mechanism to accelerate the market introduction of diagnostic tests for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. In addition to providing funding, the RADx Tech program provided unprecedented levels of non- monetary support. Applications were evaluated using a deep dive process which involved a 1- to 2-week intensive collaboration between the applicant and a team of experts from RADx Tech.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Open J Eng Med Biol
April 2021
Consortia for Improving Medicine with Innovation and Technology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
RADx Tech's mission is to rapidly accelerate deployment of SARS-CoV-2 tests and could not utilize typical grant application and review processes that can run 4 to 6 months. Instead, RADx Tech leveraged methodologies developed by CIMIT and utilized by POCTRN as described further in this special issue. RADx Tech uses a multi-stage review with two review panels, a Viability Panel and a Steering Panel, that are supported by subject matter experts and a Deep Dive team.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Plast Surg
December 2011
Division of Plastic Surgery, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
The clavicular myocutaneous island flap, with circulation provided by the platysma and superficial cervical fascia, was first performed by Paul Tessier in 1970, taking his motivation from the prior experience of John Barron with subcutaneous island flaps. A manuscript written by Dr. Tessier on his experience of 120 cases using the flap (which we will refer to as the BT, or Barron-Tessier flap) has been translated and is presented, as well the experiences of Matthews and Wolfe, who learned the procedure from Dr.
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