TREATMENT OF THE COMMON WART BY X‐RAY THERAPY

1954 ◽  
Vol 1 (23) ◽  
pp. 880-880
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  
1952 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 553 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN G. THOMSEN
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  

Author(s):  
Pratama Istiadi Guntoro ◽  
Yousef Ghorbani ◽  
Jan Rosenkranz

AbstractCurrent advances and developments in automated mineralogy have made it a crucial key technology in the field of process mineralogy, allowing better understanding and connection between mineralogy and the beneficiation process. The latest developments in X‑ray micro-computed tomography (µCT) have shown a great potential to let it become the next-generation automated mineralogy technique. µCT’s main benefit lies in its capability to allow 3D monitoring of the internal structure of the ore sample at resolutions down to a few hundred nanometers, thus excluding the common stereological error in conventional 2D analysis. Driven by the technological and computational progress, µCT is constantly developing as an analysis tool and successively it will become an essential technique in the field of process mineralogy. This study aims to assess the potential application of µCT systems, for 3D ore characterization through relevant case studies. The opportunities and platforms that µCT 3D ore characterization provides for process design and simulation in mineral processing are presented.


2015 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. e5-e8
Author(s):  
M. Simon ◽  
M. D. Stockholm
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  

1992 ◽  
Vol 275 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R. Riley ◽  
Ji-Ping Zhou ◽  
A. Manthiram ◽  
John T. McDevitt

ABSTRACTMany of the high temperature superconductor phases degrade rapidly when in the presence of water, acids, carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide. In order to foster more rapid developments in the area of high-Tc research, it will be necessary to acquire a more complete understanding of the surface chemistry of these superconducting materials. In this paper, the relative reactivity of the common cuprate phases toward water is reported. X-ray powder diffraction and scanning electron microscopy measurements are utilized here to establish the reactivity trends.


2005 ◽  
Vol 133 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 138-141
Author(s):  
Radoje Colovic ◽  
Vladimir Radak ◽  
Nikica Grubor ◽  
Slavko Matic

Complications related to the T tube drainage of the common bile duct are not uncommon. Some, like dislocations of the T tube out of the common bile duct, could be very serious, particularly if developed during the first few days after surgery, when the abdominal drain in the subhepatic space had been already removed. Then, an emergency reoperation might be necessary. The slip of the T tube upwards or downwards inside the common bile duct is not so rare. Fortunately, it is less dangerous and can usually be resolved without reoperation. It takes place several days after surgery, followed by the right subcostal pain, occasionally with temperature, rise of the bilirubin and with decrease or complete cessation of the bile drainage through the T tube. The diagnosis can be made only on the basis of T tube cholangiography. The re-establishment of the proper T tube position must be done under X-ray visualization. Seven cases of the T tube slip within the common bile duct, its clinical presentation, diagnosis and method of repositioning were presented. Possible mechanism of complication was described. As far as we know, the complications have not been described by other authors.


Author(s):  
O. I. Okhotnikov ◽  
M. V. Yakovleva ◽  
S. N. Grigoriev ◽  
V. I. Pakhomov ◽  
N. I. Shevchenko ◽  
...  

Objective. To analyze safety and efficacy of X-ray surgical treatment of choledocholithiasis in case of failed endoscopic procedures. Material and methods. A retrospective analysis included 195 patients with choledocholithiasis who underwent X-ray surgical treatment. Primary X-ray surgical intervention was antegrade cholangiostomy. Data of antegrade cholangiography were used to determine type of endobiliary intervention. Antegrade mechanical and pneumatic choledocholithotripsy and lithoextraction, balloon dislocation of stones of the common bile duct into duodenum or jejunum, lithoextraction using rendezvous technique after endoscopic papillotomy through transpapillary drainage tube or a wire were applied. Results. Puncture and drainage of non-dilated bile ducts were successfully performed in 30 (15.4%) patients. There were 212 procedires of cholangiostomy in 195 patients including redo interventions. Complications after cholangiostomy were absent in 92.9% of cases. Minor complications occurred in 7.1% of cases. Antegrade mechanical and pneumatic choledocholithotripsy and lithoextraction was performed in 118 (98.3%) patients. Balloon dislocation of stones of the common bile duct into duodenum was applied in 52 (81.3%) patients. Lithoextraction using rendezvous technique after previous endoscopic papillosphincterotomy was performed in 12 (60%) patients. Six patients underwent transpapillary external-internal drainage of common bile duct. Five patients had stricture of biliodigestive anastomosis complicated by cholelithiasis. Lithotripsy and lithoextraction through antegrade approach or dislocation of stones into jejunum after previous balloon dilatation were performed in these patients. Postoperative mortality was 1.5%. Minimally invasive techniques were absolutely effective for choledocholithiasis in 187 (98.9%) patients. Conclusion. Antegrade X-ray surgical management is effective and safe in patients with choledocholithiasis and unsuccessful previous endoscopic procedures. Integral efficiency of antegrade management of cholelithiasis was 88.8%.


Author(s):  
H. Catherine W. Skinner ◽  
Malcolm Ross ◽  
Clifford Frondel

A mineral is a naturally occurring, crystalline inorganic compound with a specific chemical composition and crystal structure. Minerals are commonly named to honor a person, to indicate the geographic area where the mineral was discovered, or to highlight some distinctive chemical, crystallographic, or physical characteristic of the substance. Each mineral sample has some obvious properties: color, shape, texture, and perhaps odor or taste. However, to determine the precise composition and crystal structure necessary to accurately identify the species, one or several of the following techniques must be employed: optical, x-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and diffraction, and chemical and spectral analyses. The long history of bestowing names on minerals has provided some confusing legacies. Many mineral names end with the suffix “ite,” although not most of the common species; no standard naming practice has ever been adopted. Occasionally different names have been applied to samples of the same mineral that differ only in color or shape, but are identical to each other in chemical composition and crystal structure. These names, usually of the common rock-forming minerals, are often encountered and are therefore accepted as synonyms or as varieties of bona fide mineral species. The Fibrous Minerals list (Appendix 1) includes synonyms. A formal description of a mineral presents all the physical and chemical properties of the species. In particular, distinctive attributes that might facilitate identification are noted, and usually a chemical analysis of the first or “type” specimen on which the name was originally bestowed is included. As an example, the complete description of the mineral brucite (Mg(OH)2), as it appears in Dana’s System of Mineralogy, is presented as Appendix 3. Note the complexity of this chemically simple species and the range of information available. In the section on Habit (meaning shape or morphology) both acicular and fibrous forms are noted. The fibrous variety, which has the same composition as brucite, is commonly encountered (see Fig. 1.1D) and is known by a separate name, “nemalite.” Tables to assist in the systematic determination of a mineral species are usually based on quantitative measurements of optical properties (using either transmitted or reflected light, as appropriate) or on x-ray diffraction data.


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