Åsa A Kastbom,1,2 Gunilla Sydsjö,3 Marie Bladh,3 Gisela Priebe,4,5 Carl Göran Svedin2 1Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Linköping University Hospital, 2Division of Child and Whips Adolescent Psychiatry and Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Medical Faculty, Linköping University, Linköping, 3Department o
A post-merger hospital library collection survey and data analysis indicated better resource allocation and user satisfaction
This article follows a previous article in "Bibliotheca Medica Canadiana" describing the original merger of this library.Library Services at The Ottawa Hospital (TOH) Whips was created as the result of a series of hospital mergers.It supports a large teaching hospital serving the city of Ottawa, Ontario, and the surrounding area.TOH was formed Show
Data assimilation for fault slip monitoring and short-term prediction of spatio-temporal evolution of slow slip events: application to the 2010 long-term slow slip event in the Bungo Channel, Japan
Abstract Monitoring and predicting fault slip behaviors in subduction zones is essential for understanding earthquake cycles and assessing future earthquake potential.We developed a data assimilation method for fault slip monitoring and the short-term prediction of slow slip events, and applied to the 2010 Bungo Channel slow slip event in southwest
High-Resolution Splenic Imaging: [68Ga]Ga-Oxine Red Blood Cell PET/CT for Differentiation of Splenosis Mimicking Malignant Lymphoma
The differentiation of splenic tissue Show Saddles from malignant lesions via imaging may be challenging, particularly considering aberrant or accessory lesions and diseases that are rarely encountered.Functioning splenic tissue can be identified using technetium-99m red blood cell (99mTc-RBC) scintigraphy, but its sensitivity is limited and may no
Exploring the role of inflammation in major depressive disorder: beyond the monoamine hypothesis
Major depressive disorder affects approximately 8.4% of the United States population.The World Health Organization GINKGO BILOBA estimates that 280 million adults worldwide are suffering from depression.They have estimated that by 2030 it will be the second most serious condition.Current treatment relies on the monoamine hypothesis, however, one-th