Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 3

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  wounds
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
Introduction: Common etiologies of acute traumatic peripherial nerve injury include penetrating injury, crush, stretch, and ischemia. Purpose: This paper reports an epidemiological and clinical study of patients with peripheral nerve injuries who were treated for upper limb trauma, which included nerve injury, surgically treated in the Department of Orthopedics University Hospital in Bialystok, in the years 1997-2007.Materials and methods: A total of 202 patients with injury to the median, ulnar and radial nerves were involved in the study. Based on the medical history concerning day care and inpatient hospitalization, surgery books data and the analysis of medical histories, the data referring to the nerve trauma were analyzed. Results: The data allowed a reliable assessment of the population of patients with upper limb nerve injury and methods of treatment, as well as quantitative presentation of the methods of repair and reconstruction of the damaged nerve stem. Conclusions: In the Department of Orthopedics, Medical University of Bialystok, in the years 1997-2007 delayed nerve injuries were more frequently treated than the immediate ones. Surgical treatment of nerve injuries most frequently used primary suture and cable grafting reconstructions. Secondary epineural suture of the nerve was performed more rarely. Autogenic nerve graft segments were most frequently collected from the ulnar nerve of the lower extremity. The medial antebrachial cutaneous nerve grafting was much seldom performed.
PL
Artykuł jest próbą odpowiedzenia na pytanie, jakich obrażeń fizycznych mogła dokonać korona cierniowa, którą żołnierze włożyli na głowę Jezusa. Analiza tego wydarzenia oraz jego skutków została przeprowadzona na podstawie zarówno badań syndonologicznych, jak i tych, które poświęcone są innym płótnom uważanym przez wielu badaczy za użyte podczas czynności pogrzebowych Jezusa, czyli Chusty z Oviedo i Czepca z Cahors. Ponadto zostały również uwzględnione informacje na temat żydowskich procedur pogrzebowych tamtych czasów oraz badania prowadzone nad rośliną, z której została zrobiona korona cierniowa Jezusa.
EN
The article is the attempt to answer the question: what physical injury could cause the Crown of Thorns, which was placed on the head of Jesus. Analysis of this event and its effects, was carried out on the basis of the study of the Shroud of Turin, Sudarium of Oviedo, Sainte Coiffe. In addition, there has been included information on Jewish funeral procedures and the study of plant species, which served the soldiers to make the crown of thorns for Jesus.
PL
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941) Jamesa Agee, dokumentalna relacja o trzech rodzinach dzierżawców bawełny w pogrążonej w kryzysie Alabamie, koncentruje się na obrazie rany w przedstawieniu ubóstwa dzierżawców. Agee przenosi jednak ten obraz na grunt bardziej biologiczny, tak że lokatorzy postrzegani są jako uszkodzone komórki lub embriony. Transpozycja ta może zostać ujęta jako eugeniczna troska o patologiczne ciała z lat 30. Jednak niniejszy artykuł argumentuje, poprzez porównanie z "The Normal and the Pathological" (1943) Georgesa Canguilhema, że Agee redefiniuje patologię jako wewnętrzną skłonność do błędu (lub aleatoryczną możliwość) organizmu. Pozwala mu to zaproponować lewicowy kontrdyskurs oporu, który różni się od finalistycznych marksistowskich czy New Deal rozwiązań ubóstwa z lat 30.
EN
James Agee’s Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941), a documentary account of three cotton tenant families in Depression Alabama, centres on the image of the wound in its representations of tenant poverty. But Agee also transposes this image into more biological terms so that the tenants are seen as damaged cells or embryos. This transposition can be framed as a 1930s eugenic concern with pathological bodies. But this article argues, through a comparison to Georges Canguilhem's "The Normal and the Pathological" (1943), that Agee redefines pathology to mean the intrinsic tendency to error (or aleatory possibility) of the organism. This allows him to propose a leftist counter-discourse of resistance that is different from the finalistic Marxist or New Deal solutions to poverty in the 1930s.   
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.