448 research outputs found
Beiträge zur Geschichte Eschweilers und seines höheren Schulwesens Festschr. zur Feier d. Anerkenung d. Gymnasiums. Ostern 1905
Beilage zum Programm des Gymnasiums zu Eschweiler
Gymnasium zu Eschweiler mit Realprogymnasium und Realschulklassen1905/06(1906) - 1909/10(1910)Hauptsacht. d. Beil. zu 1906/07 u. 1908/09: Beilage zum Programm des Gymnasiums zu Eschweile
Das Schulwesen in Großbritannien Beil. zum Progr. d. Gymnasiums zu Eschweiler, Ostern 1907
Eschweiler, Schultheiß Wilhelm an Köln, Stift St. Maria im Kapitol (Kanonissen); Köln, Domstift (Fond) - 0.0.1244
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Interference screws vs. suture anchors for isolated medial patellofemoral ligament femoral fixation: A systematic review
Purpose: The present study aimed to systematically review and compare 2 femoral autograft fixation techniques, namely, interference screws and suture anchors, for isolated medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction in patients with recurrent patellofemoral instability at mid- to long-term follow-up.
Methods: A literature search was performed in September 2020. All studies reporting the outcomes of primary isolated medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction for recurrent patellofemoral instability were considered for inclusion. Only studies reporting the type of femoral autograft fixation under examination were considered. Studies reporting data from patients with elevated tibial tuberosity-tibial groove, patella alta, and/or Dejour's trochlear dysplasia types C and D, were not included. Only articles reporting data with a minimum follow-up period of 18 months were considered.
Results: Data from 19 studies (615 patients) were retrieved. The overall age was 24.4 +- 6.7 years (mean +- SD). The mean follow-up was 46.5 +- 20.9 months. There were 76 patients in the anchor group and 539 in the screw group. Comparability was found with regard to age and follow-up duration between the 2 study groups. There was comparability between the Kujala, Lysholm, and Tegner scores at baseline. At the last follow-up, no worthy differences were found in terms of mean Kujala (+2.1%; p = 0.04), Lysholm (+1.7%; p = 0.05), and Tegner (+15.8%; p = 0.05) scores. Although complications occurred almost exclusively in the screw cohort, no statistically significant difference was found.
Conclusion: Femoral autograft fixation through interference screws or suture anchors report similar clinical scores and rate of apprehension test, persistent joint instability, re-dislocations, and revisions. These results must be interpreted within the limitations of the present study
Rheinische Gesetz-Sammlung enth. d. wichtigsten d. in d. preuß. Rheinprovinz (Bezirk d. Appellationsgerichtshofes zu Köln) geltenden Gesetze u. Verordnungen
The effect of age and gender on anti-saccade performance: Results from a large cohort of healthy aging individuals
By 2050, the global population of people aged 65 years or older will triple. While this is accompanied with an increasing burden of age-associated diseases, it also emphasizes the need to understand the effects of healthy aging on cognitive processes. One such effect is a general slowing of processing speed, which is well documented in many domains. The execution of anti-saccades depends on a well-established brain-wide network ranging from various cortical areas and basal ganglia through the superior colliculus down to the brainstem saccade generators. To clarify the consequences of healthy aging as well as gender on the execution of reflexive and voluntary saccades, we measured a large sample of healthy, non-demented individuals (n = 731, aged 51–84 years) in the anti-saccade task. Age affected various aspects of saccade performance: The number of valid trials decreased with age. Error rate, saccadic reaction times (SRTs), and variability in saccade accuracy increased with age, whereas anti-saccade costs, accuracy, and peak velocity of anti-saccades and direction errors were not affected by age. Gender affected SRTs independent of age and saccade type with male participants having overall shorter SRTs. Our rigid and solid statistical testing using linear mixed-effect models provide evidence for a uniform slowing of processing speed independent of the actually performed eye movement. Our data do not support the assumption of a specific deterioration of frontal lobe functions with aging
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