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1.
JPRAS Open ; 39: 101-105, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38186383

ABSTRACT

Our case report involved a 36-year-old man who sustained injury during manual labor caused by a machine press. The patient had extensive fourth-degree burns in the right dorsal hand with total loss of extensor tendons in zones V and VI of the index, middle, and ring finger. We performed a reverse radial forearm tendinocutaneous flap (the radial artery flap permits the inclusion of three "strips" of vascularized tendons: brachioradialis, flexor carpi radialis, and palmaris longus) to cover his hand defects. Six months after the operation, the active extension of the index, middle, and ring metacarpophalangeal joints had recovered well. The patient is satisfied with the outcome.

2.
Nature ; 586(7831): 697-701, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33116289

ABSTRACT

On 12 November 2014, the Philae lander descended towards comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, bounced twice off the surface, then arrived under an overhanging cliff in the Abydos region. The landing process provided insights into the properties of a cometary nucleus1-3. Here we report an investigation of the previously undiscovered site of the second touchdown, where Philae spent almost two minutes of its cross-comet journey, producing four distinct surface contacts on two adjoining cometary boulders. It exposed primitive water ice-that is, water ice from the time of the comet's formation 4.5 billion years ago-in their interiors while travelling through a crevice between the boulders. Our multi-instrument observations made 19 months later found that this water ice, mixed with ubiquitous dark organic-rich material, has a local dust/ice mass ratio of [Formula: see text], matching values previously observed in freshly exposed water ice from outbursts4 and water ice in shadow5,6. At the end of the crevice, Philae made a 0.25-metre-deep impression in the boulder ice, providing in situ measurements confirming that primitive ice has a very low compressive strength (less than 12 pascals, softer than freshly fallen light snow) and allowing a key estimation to be made of the porosity (75 ± 7 per cent) of the boulders' icy interiors. Our results provide constraints for cometary landers seeking access to a volatile-rich ice sample.

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