scholarly journals Characterization of the acoustic output of therapeutic ultrasound equipment

1992 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-8
Author(s):  
M. G. Van der Merwe ◽  
N. Bhagwandin ◽  
J. E. Van der Spuy ◽  
P. E. Le Roux

The safety and efficacy of ultrasound therapy may be compromised if the output from therapy transducers differs considerably from the indicated value. Although the total power output of a transducer can be easily measured using a pressure balance, it is also important to know how this energy is distributed through space. By using a hydrophone scanning technique, beam profiles of the energy distribution can be obtained. From the beam profiles various parameters such as the effective radiating area (ERA) and the beam non-uniformity ratio (BNR) can be determined. Since the spatial-average intensity selected for treatment is a ratio of the emitted ultrasound power and the effective radiating area, it is essential to be able to measure parameters like the effective radiating area. In this study ERA and BNR measurements for commercially available devices were performed with a hydrophone scanning technique.

2011 ◽  
Vol 130-134 ◽  
pp. 3392-3395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Chen ◽  
Peng Wu ◽  
Song Bai ◽  
Zhe Yang Li ◽  
Yun Li ◽  
...  

. Silicon carbide (SiC) SITs were fabricated using home-grown epi structures. The gate is a recessed gate - bottom contact (RG - B). We designed that the mesa space 2.7μm and the gate channel is 1.2μm. One cell has 400 source fingers and each source finger width is 100μm. 1mm SiC SIT yielded a current density of 123mA/mm of drain current at a drain voltage of 20V. A maximum current density of 150 mA/mm was achieved with Vd=40V. The device blocking voltage with a gate bias of-16 V was 200 V. Packaged 24-cm devices were evaluated using amplifier circuits designed for class AB operations. A total power output in excess of 213 W was obtained with a power density of 8.5 W/cm and gain of 8.5 dB at 500 MHz under pulse operation.


Author(s):  
André Luis Araujo Minari ◽  
Ronaldo V. Thomatieli-Santos

Macrophages are one of the top players when considering immune cells involved with tissue homeostasis. Recently, increasing evidence has demonstrated that these macrophages could also present two major subsets during tissue healing; proliferative macrophages (M1-like), which are responsible for increasing myogenic cell proliferation, and restorative macrophages (M2-like), which are accountable for the end of the mature muscle myogenesis. The participation and characterization of these macrophage subsets is critical during myogenesis, not only to understand the inflammatory role of macrophages during muscle recovery but also to create supportive strategies that can improve mass muscle maintenance. Indeed, most of our knowledge about macrophage subsets comes from skeletal muscle damage protocols, and we still do not know how these subsets can contribute to skeletal muscle adaptation. This narrative review aims to collect and discuss studies demonstrating the involvement of different macrophage subsets during the skeletal muscle damage/regeneration process, showcasing an essential role of these macrophage subsets during muscle adaptation induced by acute and chronic exercise programs.


2000 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 1912-1918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Ferguson ◽  
Per Aagaard ◽  
Derek Ball ◽  
Anthony J. Sargeant ◽  
Jens Bangsbo

A novel approach has been developed for the quantification of total mechanical power output produced by an isolated, well-defined muscle group during dynamic exercise in humans at different contraction frequencies. The calculation of total power output comprises the external power delivered to the ergometer (i.e., the external power output setting of the ergometer) and the “internal” power generated to overcome inertial and gravitational forces related to movement of the lower limb. Total power output was determined at contraction frequencies of 60 and 100 rpm. At 60 rpm, the internal power was 18 ± 1 W (range: 16–19 W) at external power outputs that ranged between 0 and 50 W. This was less ( P < 0.05) than the internal power of 33 ± 2 W (27–38 W) at 100 rpm at 0–50 W. Moreover, at 100 rpm, internal power was lower ( P < 0.05) at the higher external power outputs. Pulmonary oxygen uptake was observed to be greater ( P< 0.05) at 100 than at 60 rpm at comparable total power outputs, suggesting that mechanical efficiency is lower at 100 rpm. Thus a method was developed that allowed accurate determination of the total power output during exercise generated by an isolated muscle group at different contraction frequencies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (5) ◽  
pp. 670-686
Author(s):  
Rory O’Connell

AbstractElizabeth Anscombe introduced the notion of “practical knowledge” into contemporary philosophy. Philosophers of action have criticized Anscombe’s negative characterization of such knowledge as “non-observational,” but have recently come to pay more attention to her positive characterization of practical knowledge as “the cause of what it understands.” I argue that two recent Anscombean accounts of practical knowledge, “Formalism” and “Normativism,” each fail to explain the productive character of practical knowledge in a way that secures its status as non-observational. I argue that to do this, we must appreciate the role of know-how or skill in practical knowledge.


1955 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 833 ◽  
Author(s):  
FW Dry

The recessive N gene, nr, is demonstrated by monogenic ratios. For the most part nr/nr characters are intermediate between those of N/N and N/+. About a sixth of nr/nr lambs have no shoulder patch, and in certain fibre type details, and in hairiness, nr/nr animals tend to be intermediate between the two dominant-N genotypes. On the other hand, all nr/nr ewes have been hornless; a few have had horn-lumps, one scum By contrast, about one N/+ ewe in 10 grows horns. All the nr/nr rams reared to 1 year, except one with scurs, have grown horns. Carrier (+/nr) sheep have birthcoats which we do not know how to distinguish from those of ordinary Romneys, though there is evidence that one dose of nr increases halo-abundance on the back slightly. A few +/nr lambs have been grade VI. Just a few +/nr sheep have fleeces as hairy as the average N/+. A quarter or more of the +/nr rams have had horns, mostly small, at 4 months, and nearly all the others have had scurs. The genes N and nr are not allelic, but may be linked. Because the sheep has 26 pairs of autosomes free assortment seems more probable. In general the characterization of sheep deemed N/+.+/nr is intermediate between that of N/N.+/+ and N/+.+/+. The noticeable difference between N/+.+/nr and +/+ nr/nr is the more powerful growth of horns in the double heterozygotes. An analysis of breeding results from N/+.+/nr sheep indicates that the great majority of N/+.nr/nr animals of both sexes have the horn and halocoverage characters of homozygous dominant-N's. In N/+.+/nr, some ewes have horns, and the shoulder patch is absent about as often as in nr/nr. The frequencies of these characters in N/+.+/nr are applied in showing that the genetic basis of horns in ewes, and the genetic basis of full halo-coverage, in heterozygotes of the dominant-N stock are different; and that it is not the gene nr which makes horns grow in the dominant-N heterozygous ewes; and one piece of evidence suggests that it is not the nr gene that determines absence of shoulder patch in the birthcoats of the dominant-N stock. It is concluded that if the dominant-N stock is not completely free from nr, that gene has only the same sort of frequency as in the Romney breed. Matings made as +/+.nr/nr X +/+.+/+, the latter no-halo ewes, from flocks outside the College, or if bred at the College unrelated to any N-type sheep, have given a small proportion of N-grade lambs. It now appears that at least most of these lambs, called 'dominoes', have received one dose of a dominant gene for N-grade, probably the gene N, from the no-halo parent. One no-halo ewe from an outside source had an N-grade son, proved nr/nr, by a domino ram, the dam thus being shown to carry the gene nr.


1974 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 637-648 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Price

Recent studies of high latitude brightness have shown that in several regions a significant proportion of it is due to loop features. The largest of these are now thought to be local (within a few hundred parsecs) and perhaps to be due to supernova events.Aperture synthesis maps of 45 external spiral galaxies have shown large-scale continuum nonthermal features in the disks of some and, in general, an absence of spherical halos around the galaxies. This supports the view that the radio emission from our Galaxy can best be described as coming from a thick disk. Any large-scale spherical component could not have a volume emissivity greater than 1.5% of the average volume emissivity of the disk at meter wavelengths.A comparison of the disk radiation with new disk models suggests that the galactic plane radiation has two components: a base disk and a spiral component. Each of these contributes ~50% of the total power output of the disk at 150 MHz.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Pluchon ◽  
Nolwenn Huby ◽  
Alain Moréac ◽  
Pascal Panizza ◽  
Bruno Bêche

This paper introduces a preview of targeted current research on organic optofluidic materials and devices devoted to 3D photonics microresonators (MRs). First, such an approach takes advantage from a significant know-how on optical simulations of 3D spherical MRs by complementary and coupled ways based on electromagnetism and quantum mechanics principle. Such simulations have allowed to preset the quantization of whispering gallery modes (WGMs) and to define a new formulation of optical caustics in global 3D MRs cavities. Leaning from these simulations, an interdisciplinary approach has been achieved by combining microfluidics techniques and thin layer processes that allowed with flow rates control the realization of 3D droplets MRs of several tens of micrometers in radii. Finally, free-space optical characterizations have been performed on such 3D polymeric MRs by judicious protocols based, respectively, on a modified Raman spectroscopy laser excitation and an adequate direct beam waist optical coupling. Spectral analysis on such 3D MRs of various sizes confirms the excitation of the expected WGMs revealing free spectral range (FSR) and caustics values close to the analytical ones.


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