Eighty-two high performance young male fast bowlers (mean age 16.8 years) were tested immediately prior to the season for selected kinanthropometric and physiological data. Subjects were also filmed both laterally (200 Hz) and from above (100 Hz) while bowling so that their front foot impacted a force platform during the delivery stride. The players then completed a log book over the ensuing season that detailed their training and playing programmes. All cricket related injuries over this season were assessed by a sports physician who used computerized tomography to assist in the diagnosis of spinal injuries.At the completion of this season the players were grouped according to their injury status (Group 1-bony injury to a vertebra; Group 2-soft tissue injury to the back that caused the player to miss at least one game, and Group 3 -no injuries). A one-way analysis of variance was used to identify if any variables were significantly (P < 0.05) different between the three groups, and a Scheffe post hoc comparison was used to determine which groups were significantly different.Eleven per cent of the players sustained a stress fracture to a vertebra(e) (L4 to Si), while 27 per cent sustained a soft tissue injury to the back. Bowlers with a low longitudinal foot arch were more likely to develop a stress fracture than those with a high arch. Shoulder depression and horizontal flexion strength for the preferred limb and quadriceps power in the non-preferred limb were also significantly related to back injuries. Bowlers who rotated the trunk to re-align the shoulders by more than 400 to a more side-on position between back foot impact and front foot impact in the delivery stride were more likely to sustain back injuries. No significant relationship was determined between peak vertical (5.4 BW) or horizontal (-2.
The manner in which medium-frequency ultrasonic pulses travelling through concrete are generated, received, digitized and analysed is described. Due to the highly attenuating nature of this medium and its differential effects on the frequency composition of broad-band signals, signal analysis was performed by partitioning the signal into discrete windows in the time domain, corresponding to the emergence of individual wave phenomena within the medium. These windows were then transformed to the frequency domain for subsequent filtering and interpretation. Experimentation combined with theoretical modelling has shown that the appearance and decay of discrete frequency bands depends on both the composition of the concrete, termed the resonance phase, and its external importance with respect to the ultrasonic inspection of concrete and other such inhomogeneous materials.
We present the case of a 55-year-old man who presented with intermittent, profuse bleeding from the ear five years following radiotherapy for a nasopharyngeal carcinoma. He had developed osteoradionecrosis of the temporal bone, and the bleeding was shown to originate from an aneurysm of the internal carotid artery within his temporal bone. This has not previously been reported as a complication of radiotherapy for nasopharyngeal cancer.
A middle ear effusion is a common complication of nasopharyngeal carcinoma both before and after radiotherapy. An effusion was found in 38 per cent of patients before radiotherapy and 9 per cent developed an effusion after the start of radiotherapy. Surgical treatment by myringotomy with or without grommet insertion was associated with a high incidence of otorrhoea (26 per cent) which was often refractory to treatment. In view of the frequency of this complication and the fact that a middle ear effusion may not be of concern to an adult patient with nasopharyngeal carcinoma, a 'wait and see' policy may be appropriate in the management of a middle ear effusion in these patients.
This prospective study compares the results of pre-operative clinical examination and simple ultrasound examination of the neck in 18 patients with proven head and neck primary tumours and palpable cervical lymphadenopathy, who then underwent 21 radical neck dissections. Neck palpation and ultrasound examination were compared with histological examination. Ultrasound did not add significantly to the information obtainable by simple neck palpation in this group of patients.
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