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1.
Aust Vet J ; 100(9): 440-445, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35615962

ABSTRACT

The tube cricothyrotomy (CTT) has recently been introduced to small animal medicine as a viable surgical airway access procedure; however, there are no reports documenting its clinical use. The author's objective is to describe the clinical application, complications, and management of an elective CTT in a dog. Furthermore, the characteristics of CTT that may be clinically advantageous over temporary tube tracheostomy (TT) will be discussed. A 2-year-old female spayed German shepherd dog required mechanical ventilation (MV) due to unsustainable work of breathing as a result of tick paralysis and aspiration pneumonia. After successful weaning from MV, the dog was diagnosed with laryngeal paralysis. A surgical airway was performed using CTT to allow extubation and patient management whilst conscious. Complications included frequent tube suctioning due to accumulation of airway secretions in the tube and a single dislodgement event. The dog made an uneventful recovery with complete stoma healing by the second intention within 15 days. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first clinical report of an elective CTT performed to successfully manage upper airway obstruction in the dog. Its efficacy, clinical management and patient outcome are described.


Subject(s)
Dog Diseases , Ixodes , Tick Paralysis , Vocal Cord Paralysis , Animals , Australia , Dog Diseases/etiology , Dog Diseases/surgery , Dogs , Female , Tick Paralysis/complications , Tick Paralysis/surgery , Tick Paralysis/veterinary , Vocal Cord Paralysis/etiology , Vocal Cord Paralysis/surgery , Vocal Cord Paralysis/veterinary
2.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 80(9): 094702, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19791954

ABSTRACT

Experiments have been performed on the UM/L-3 (6-vane, L-band) relativistic magnetron to test a new microwave window configuration designed to limit vacuum side breakdown. In the baseline case, acrylic microwave windows were mounted between three of the waveguide coupling cavities in the anode block vacuum housing and the output waveguides. Each of the six 3 cm deep coupling cavities is separated from its corresponding anode cavity by a 1.75 cm wide aperture. In the baseline case, vacuum side window breakdown was observed to initiate at single waveguide output powers close to 20 MW. In the new window configuration, three Air Force Research Laboratory-designed, vacuum-rated directional coupler waveguide segments were mounted between the coupling cavities and the microwave windows. The inclusion of the vacuum side power couplers moved the microwave windows an additional 30 cm away from the anode apertures. Additionally, the Lucite microwave windows were replaced with polycarbonate windows and the microwave window mounts were redesigned to better maintain waveguide continuity in the region around the microwave windows. No vacuum side window breakdown was observed in the new window configuration at single waveguide output powers of 120+MW (a factor of 3 increase in measured microwave pulse duration and factor of 3 increase in measured peak power over the baseline case). Simulations were performed to investigate likely causes for the window breakdown in the original configuration. Results from these simulations have shown that in the original configuration, at typical operating voltage and magnetic field ranges, electrons emitted from the anode block microwave apertures strike the windows with a mean kinetic energy of 33 keV with a standard deviation of 14 keV. Calculations performed using electron impact angle and energy data predict a first generation secondary electron yield of 65% of the primary electron population. The effects of the primary aperture electron impacts, combined with multiplication of the secondary populations, were determined to be the likely causes of the poor microwave window performance in the original configuration.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 98(1): 015002, 2007 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17358481

ABSTRACT

The effect of ions in a magnetically insulated crossed-field gap is studied using a single particle orbit model, shear flow model, and particle-in-cell simulation. It is found that, in general, the presence of ions in a crossed-field gap always increases the electrons' excursion toward the anode region, regardless of the location of the ions. Thus, the rate at which the electrons migrate toward the anode, which is a measure of the diode closure rate, is related to the rate at which ions are introduced into the crossed-field gap. This anode migration of electrons is unrelated to crossed-field ambipolar diffusion. The implications of these findings are explored, such as pulse shortening in relativistic magnetrons and bipolar flows in pulsed-power systems.

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