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1 ple bonds to a linearly conjugated phenylene rotator.
2 ds at their C17 positions to a 1,4-phenylene rotator.
3 a as a function of the dihedral angle of the rotator.
4  correlated to the rotation of the phenylene rotator.
5 ks at the interface of the cell body and the rotator.
6 rthermore, we detected that US 708 is a fast rotator.
7 u3P-Pt-P(t)Bu3 stator with a spinning H-Pt-H rotator.
8  3-fold or 6-fold symmetric potential of the rotator.
9 tate molecular rotor with a large triptycene rotator.
10 which leads to an alignment of the azimuthal rotators.
11 netic stars(3), blue stragglers(4) and rapid rotators(5)), they play an important part in our interpr
12 h Verdet constants have made organic Faraday rotators a promising alternative to conventional inorgan
13 , we find an appreciable fraction of counter-rotators among blue galaxies (9 out of 489 galaxies).
14 mples prepared with a deuterated biphenylene rotator and a natural abundance stator.
15 hich contains a larger 2,3-difluorophenylene rotator and effectively acts as a monkey wrench that aff
16 r rotation around the bond that connects the rotator and the stator.
17 roscope with a p-phenylene group acting as a rotator and two m-methoxy-substituted trityl groups acti
18 tion sensitive devices, such as polarization rotators and circular polarizers.
19  steps determined by the symmetries of their rotators and rotating units.
20  of molecular rotors, which are comprised of rotators and stators.
21 been engineered to crystallize with parallel rotators and voids or other features that enable the rot
22 rate waveguide mode converters, polarization rotators and waveguide devices supporting asymmetric opt
23 ng of diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane, acting as a rotator, and a set of five fluorine-substituted iodobenz
24 al grating couplers, splitters, polarization rotators, and active section with phase shifters-are inc
25                    We create thermal cloaks, rotators, and concentrators in complex domains with clos
26                At low biases and low initial rotator angles, slight reorientations of individual roto
27 These rod-shaped molecules carrying an axial rotator are designed to interleave on an aqueous surface
28 otational barriers of methyl-sized molecular rotators are investigated theoretically using ab initio
29 on of the pyridyl head of the pseudorotaxane rotator arm between two zinc(II) porphyrin stations.
30                    Analysis reveals that the rotator arm directions are not random, but are coordinat
31 ndividual rotors can occur, resulting in the rotator arms pointing in different directions.
32 ating satellite functional groups around the rotator at a geometry that destabilizes the staggered co
33 b, and 3c), tetracene (4), and pentacene (5) rotators axially linked by triple bonds to bulky trialky
34 nee-based locomotion and hip-abductor to hip-rotator balancing mechanisms inherited by birds.
35 onstrate all-dielectric on-chip polarization rotators based on phased arrays of Mie resonators with n
36 r Waals interactions, thus making very rigid rotators become thermally activated at room temperature.
37                       By placing one Faraday rotator before and one after the specimen, rotation prod
38                                          The rotator cable can be depicted with US.
39                                          The rotator cable was identified at gross dissection.
40  dissected, assessed for the presence of the rotator cable, and imaged with 12-MHz US.
41 uated for the presence and appearance of the rotator cable.
42 t of chemical structure in thin-film Faraday rotators can be achieved, including the critical roles o
43 e to which the two flanking ethynylphenylene rotators can explore various torsion angles; this allows
44 lecular rotors based on insertion of dipolar rotator carrying shafts as guests into channels of a hos
45                              Analysis of the rotator cavity in the two co-crystals revealed subtle di
46 3 kcal/mol were found for the dichlorophenyl rotator contained within the TPP channel.
47 -order transition occurs between a hexagonal rotator crystal and a rhombic crystal.
48                        Objective analysis of rotator cuff (RC) atrophy and fatty infiltration (FI) fr
49 ee-dimensional (3D) segmentation of all four rotator cuff (RC) muscles to quantify intramuscular fat
50                                              Rotator cuff (RC) tears are a common cause of shoulder p
51                                      Massive rotator cuff (RC) tendon tears are associated with progr
52 ective care for patients suspected of having rotator cuff abnormality.
53                                              Rotator cuff adipose stromal cells represent a new cell
54                                              Rotator cuff adipose stromal cells resist fibrotic micro
55         Rotator cuff tears cause fibrosis of rotator cuff adipose tissue; this fibrosis does not impa
56   Calcific tendinitis frequently affects the rotator cuff and may cause shoulder pain and reduction o
57 a synovial-like tissue that sits between the rotator cuff and the acromion.
58 the expected location and orientation of the rotator cuff cable.
59 le option for symptom relief associated with rotator cuff calcific deposits.
60                                              Rotator cuff calcific tendinopathy is a common condition
61                      Two radiologists graded rotator cuff contact on a three-point scale.
62                    To prospectively evaluate rotator cuff contact with the glenoid in healthy volunte
63                         In 238 patients with rotator cuff diagnoses at surgery, preoperative magnetic
64                                              Rotator cuff disease (RCD) is the most common cause of s
65 to guide the imaging evaluation of suspected rotator cuff disease in patients with a native rotator c
66 odology in a tenotomy-induced sheep model of rotator cuff disease, we tested whether mitochondrial dy
67  painful shoulders with clinically suspected rotator cuff disease.
68 se of injury, particularly in the context of rotator cuff disease.
69 luded patients aged 18 years or older with a rotator cuff disorder (new episode within the past 6 mon
70 with "all shoulder" diagnoses, including 772 rotator cuff disorder patients.
71 t corticosteroid injection, in adults with a rotator cuff disorder.
72 njection, for the treatment of patients with rotator cuff disorders (GRASP): a multicentre, pragmatic
73 ercise programmes are commonly used to treat rotator cuff disorders but the treatments' effectiveness
74 ermine their relationship to patient age and rotator cuff disorders.
75 ovided no long-term benefit in patients with rotator cuff disorders.
76 ecular, and biomechanical alterations of the rotator cuff enthesis with maturation and aging in a mou
77 nologists to astronaut operators to complete rotator cuff evaluation.
78                                              Rotator cuff grading was similar for fast SE and convent
79 endations will lead to greater uniformity in rotator cuff imaging and more cost-effective care for pa
80 lgorithm was tested on coronal images of the rotator cuff in a series of 144 patients, and the improv
81  reliable detection of calcifications in the rotator cuff in patients with calcific tendonitis by usi
82                                              Rotator cuff injuries result in more than 500,000 surger
83                       We used a rat model of rotator cuff injury in this study because the rotator cu
84                                              Rotator cuff injury is a very common pathology in patien
85 ing of bursa samples from nine patients with rotator cuff injury, we show that the bursa responds to
86 f muscle involved in muscle repair following rotator cuff injury.
87 y and specificity to MRI in the diagnosis of rotator cuff injury.
88 sterior and anterior cystic abnormalities at rotator cuff insertion site on the greater tuberosity an
89                        Distances between the rotator cuff insertion sites and the glenoid decreased i
90                 Calcific tendinopathy of the rotator cuff is a common condition caused by the deposit
91                    Adipose tissue within the rotator cuff is a novel and understudied source of thera
92 r and intertechnique agreement for detecting rotator cuff lesions were measured and compared with kap
93 rography and MR arthrography in depiction of rotator cuff lesions.
94                                     Standard rotator cuff MR sequences yielded a sensitivity of 59% (
95 er sensitivity and specificity than standard rotator cuff MR sequences.
96 otator cuff injury in this study because the rotator cuff muscle group is particularly prone to the d
97 uscle-specific cell populations derived from rotator cuff muscle involved in muscle repair following
98 APs) and satellite stem cells (SCs) from rat rotator cuff muscle tissue and analyzed the effects of F
99            For grading fatty infiltration of rotator cuff muscles, kappa and Z statistics were used.
100 e to microgravity than the joint-stabilizing rotator cuff muscles.
101 ed by the presence of calcification into the rotator cuff or in the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa.
102 elping identify abnormalities that may mimic rotator cuff or labral abnormalities at clinical examina
103 fect on image quality or on the depiction of rotator cuff or labral tears.
104 re was no difference in the detectability of rotator cuff or labral tears.
105 evice use and shorter pain chronicity, while rotator cuff outcomes were equivalent to all shoulder co
106 The subacromial bursa has been implicated in rotator cuff pathogenesis and healing.
107           Some tears are traumatic, but most rotator cuff problems are degenerative.
108 management sufficient for most patients with rotator cuff problems.
109  1111 patients at risk, but was higher after rotator cuff repair (0.2%, 0.2% to 0.2%), with one in 52
110 nstrate the powerful potential of FGF-8b for rotator cuff repair by altering the fate of muscle under
111  relevant device that substantially enhances rotator cuff repair by distributing stresses over the at
112 rmation regarding clinical outcome following rotator cuff repair has been limited.
113                                              Rotator cuff repair surgeries fail frequently, with 20 t
114 o surgical procedures (open and arthroscopic rotator cuff repair).
115 were grouped into subacromial decompression, rotator cuff repair, acromioclavicular joint excision, g
116 oplasty, partial knee meniscectomy, shoulder rotator cuff repair, wrist arthroscopy, or ankle arthros
117 degree of residual pain and disability after rotator cuff repair.
118 ay reduce the risk of tendon retearing after rotator cuff repair.
119 e worse clinical outcome scores 1 year after rotator cuff repair.
120 was associated with impingement syndrome and rotator cuff rupture (n = 2).
121 r shoulder models developed for arthroscopic rotator cuff simulation was presented.
122 er joint, suggesting that its removal during rotator cuff surgery should be reconsidered.
123 oth-inspired device as an adjunct to current rotator cuff suture repair and found that it nearly doub
124 n the two groups in terms of the size of the rotator cuff tear (p > 0.05).
125 ity; and partial-thickness or full-thickness rotator cuff tear and labral tear detectability.
126              Here we use massive irreparable rotator cuff tear as a model to study the impact of chro
127 nderwent surgical repair of a full-thickness rotator cuff tear at a single institution between April
128 in, did not demonstrate an increased risk of rotator cuff tear based on their MRI compared to patient
129 ck of similarity between the impingement and rotator cuff tear groups.
130 r width and medial-lateral retraction of the rotator cuff tear on the preoperative MRI and assessed t
131                             The frequency of rotator cuff tear was found to be significantly higher i
132                                           If rotator cuff tear was present, tendon retraction and loc
133                          Massive irreparable rotator cuff tear was used as a model to study the impac
134 en the localisation of calcification and the rotator cuff tear, and only in 4.4% of the participants
135                     Out the 68 patients with rotator cuff tear, supraspinatus was the most commonly a
136  arthrography had 100% accuracy in depicting rotator cuff tear, whereas both indirect MR arthrography
137              Participants had an irreparable rotator cuff tear, which had not resolved with conservat
138 t accurate for diagnosis of a full-thickness rotator cuff tear.
139 determined between calcific tendinopathy and rotator cuff tear.
140     AT and AI have a direct correlation with rotator cuff tear.
141 confirm the presence or absence of labral or rotator cuff tear.
142 t labral tear and 88% in depicting recurrent rotator cuff tear.
143 e presence or absence of recurrent labral or rotator cuff tear.
144 g rotator cuff tenotomy - a model of chronic rotator cuff tear.
145 llular processes that are dysregulated after rotator cuff tear.
146 romiale ( OR odds ratio = 138, P < .001) and rotator cuff tears ( OR odds ratio = 5.4, P = .015) afte
147 roups: those without shoulder impingement or rotator cuff tears (31 patients), those with shoulder im
148 er impingement (22 patients), and those with rotator cuff tears (31 patients).
149 erformed well with respect to full thickness rotator cuff tears (FTT).
150                                      Massive rotator cuff tears (MRCTs) of the shoulder cause disabil
151 ultrasound (USG) and MRI in the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears (RCT) and to determine if high resolu
152                                              Rotator cuff tears (RCT) are the common aetiology of sho
153                                              Rotator cuff tears (RCTs) represent a significant propor
154               Symptomatic, partial-thickness rotator cuff tears (sPTRCT) are problematic.
155 (SGHL), presence of biceps tendinopathy, and rotator cuff tears adjacent to the rotator interval.
156 nt to the development of an os acromiale and rotator cuff tears after age 25 years.
157 r and intertechnique agreement for measuring rotator cuff tears and grading muscle fatty infiltration
158                       A higher prevalence of rotator cuff tears and impingement associated with low l
159  shows promising results in the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears and in differentiating partial from c
160 comes have been linked to fatty expansion in rotator cuff tears and repairs.
161                            Partial-thickness rotator cuff tears are a common cause of pain and disabi
162                                              Rotator cuff tears are the most common upper extremity c
163                                              Rotator cuff tears are the most common upper extremity o
164                                              Rotator cuff tears begin as degenerative changes within
165                                              Rotator cuff tears cause fibrosis of rotator cuff adipos
166 skeletal pain caused, among other things, by rotator cuff tears due to narrowing of subacromial space
167                   Here, we detail the impact rotator cuff tears have on adipose tissue within the sho
168 luate the prevalence of partial and complete rotator cuff tears in magnetic resonance images of patie
169                       The pathophysiology of rotator cuff tears is complex and encompasses an interpl
170                    However, the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears is controversial.
171  with the development of an os acromiale and rotator cuff tears later in life was assessed with follo
172 ifference between US and MRI in detection of rotator cuff tears of any type (RCT) or FTT.
173  determine whether patients with more severe rotator cuff tears of the shoulder at preoperative MRI h
174 lues were matched, were compared in terms of rotator cuff tears on their shoulder MRI images.
175 otal of 40 patients were diagnosed as having rotator cuff tears on ultrasound (USG) and MRI.
176 s, 31 patients who had positive findings for rotator cuff tears on ultrasound and/or MRI were finally
177 ve surgical device used to treat people with rotator cuff tears that cannot be repaired.
178 study, 40 patients with clinically suspected rotator cuff tears underwent both ultrasound and MRI of
179               We assessed the association of rotator cuff tears with commonly used radiographic param
180 ing degenerative changes in animal models of rotator cuff tears, but reports of their impact on clini
181 e radiographic acromial characteristics with rotator cuff tears, but the results have not been conclu
182              Conclusion Patients with larger rotator cuff tears, more tendon retraction, and more sev
183 ery good/absent]) as well as the presence of rotator cuff tears, superior and anteroinferior labral t
184 s performed to assess for joint subluxation, rotator cuff tears, tendinosis, subacromial-subdeltoid b
185                          In the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears, the strength of agreement between ul
186 ry cause of shoulder impingement syndrome or rotator cuff tears.
187 and are central to developing full-thickness rotator cuff tears.
188  InSpace balloon for people with irreparable rotator cuff tears.
189 ace balloon for the treatment of irreparable rotator cuff tears.
190 s the investigation of choice for diagnosing rotator cuff tears.
191 it a modality of first choice for evaluating rotator cuff tears.
192 ess the accuracy of US and MRI in diagnosing rotator cuff tears.
193 terature on the causes and classification of rotator cuff tears.
194 st consistent positive treatment effects for rotator cuff tendinitis were achieved by ultrasound-guid
195 ded fibrillar structure perpendicular to the rotator cuff tendon (average thickness and width, 1.2 mm
196 young time period; (2) the increased risk of rotator cuff tendon injuries in the elderly population i
197                                              Rotator cuff tendon injuries often occur at the tendon-t
198 isolated from patients with chronic shoulder rotator cuff tendon tears have dysregulated resolution r
199 diagnostic performance for the evaluation of rotator cuff tendon tears.
200 st common overuse tendinopathies involve the rotator cuff tendon, medial and lateral elbow epicondyle
201 se but no alteration in the depiction of the rotator cuff tendons or glenoid labrum.
202 hematoxylin-eosin stain) from three resected rotator cuff tendons were inspected for fibers in the ex
203 omial pain for at least 3 months with intact rotator cuff tendons, were eligible for arthroscopic sur
204 ears or older with osteoarthritis and intact rotator cuff tendons.
205 r than in conjunction with injuries to other rotator cuff tendons.
206 role of NFkappaB in muscle atrophy following rotator cuff tenotomy - a model of chronic rotator cuff
207 e, and potentially superior, cell source for rotator cuff therapies.
208 cell type that can be impactful in advancing rotator cuff therapies.
209 6 patients with calcific tendinopathy of the rotator cuff treated with ultrasound-guided puncture and
210 spected of having calcific tendonitis of the rotator cuff were included.
211                             Partial tears of rotator cuff were more common than complete tears.
212 n in cases of partial-thickness tears of the rotator cuff with a horizontal component.
213    Two radiologists independently graded the rotator cuff with separate and side-by-side assessment o
214 ative rotator cuff, patients with a repaired rotator cuff, and patients who have undergone shoulder r
215                                    Keywords: Rotator Cuff, Artificial Intelligence, Segmentation, Fat
216              Common injury sites include the rotator cuff, glenohumeral joint, acromioclavicular join
217 n; extraarticular contrast material leakage; rotator cuff, glenoid labrum, and anterior capsule consp
218 tator cuff disease in patients with a native rotator cuff, patients with a repaired rotator cuff, and
219 r was present in the anterior portion of the rotator cuff.
220 h tendon tears in the anterior aspect of the rotator cuff.
221 nventional SE sequence for evaluation of the rotator cuff.
222 on of calcium crystals in the tendons of the rotator cuff.
223  United States resulting in retearing of the rotator cuff.
224 plete- and 12 partial-thickness tears of the rotator cuff.
225 sion criteria included a full-thickness torn rotator cuff.
226 ith tendon tears, SAF ASCs sourced from torn rotator cuffs were equally effective at resisting fibrob
227     Despite a fibrotic signature in SAF from rotator cuffs with tendon tears, SAF ASCs sourced from t
228 nd promoting myogenesis as those from intact rotator cuffs, further supporting autologous clinical us
229  in helical arrays with the central aromatic rotators disordered over two sites related by 85 degrees
230                                      Faraday rotators find applications in optical isolators and magn
231 o (2)H NMR studies have shown that phenylene rotator flipping has an activation energy of 9.0 kcal/mo
232 y, it functions as a 90 degrees polarization rotator for the incident LP wave.
233                                        Three rotator-forming linkers were cyclized to form a rigid cy
234 ion of its axis, which prevents the attached rotator from contributing to the stopping action.
235 t the (13)C signals of the natural abundance rotator group can be selectively observed with short con
236 ne whether the carbon signals of the central rotator group could be selectively enhanced and studied
237 ees bent angle linked to a central phenylene rotator has an ideal structure to examine aromatic CH/pi
238                               Two triptycene rotators have been covalently linked to the backbone of
239                Despite this, organic Faraday rotators have not been developed to address near-infrare
240 set of crystalline molecular gyroscopes with rotators having axial symmetry that ranges from two- to
241 these studies it was determined that the BCO rotator in 3 has an activation energy of only 1.15 kcal
242 ld motion of the 1,4-diethynylphenylene-d(4) rotator in the kHz regime.
243                          While the phenylene rotator in the SR diastereomer remains static even at 37
244 ely 3 kcal mol(-1), for the roughly 3 A long rotator in trans-H2Pt(P(t)Bu3)2.
245 we were able to assign two types of Brownian rotators in [nBu(4)N(+)](2)[BABCO][BABCO(-)](2).
246 s we verified that nearly barrierless cubane rotators in CUB-5 display rotational dynamics that trans
247 ory studies of polar phenylenes installed as rotators in pillared paddle-wheel metal organic framewor
248                          The behavior of the rotators in the preceding complexes is probed by VT NMR.
249 aterials-shield, concentrator, diffuser, and rotator-in both simulation and experimental verification
250       Clinical and arthroscopic diagnoses of rotator interval abnormalities and subtle instability pa
251                                          The rotator interval and the LHB tendon are closely associat
252                                          The rotator interval and the long head of the biceps brachii
253                         Abnormalities of the rotator interval may be acquired or congenital and are a
254 head of the biceps (LHB) and diseases of the rotator interval structures may contribute to shoulder i
255                            The prevalence of rotator interval synovitis in the mesotenon group was gr
256 iding the contracted anterior capsule in the rotator interval, followed by manipulation, with optiona
257 athy, and rotator cuff tears adjacent to the rotator interval.
258 entification and characterization of LHB and rotators interval.
259 f molecular rotors with transversely dipolar rotators into TPP channels is followed by solid-state nu
260 imen, rotation produced by the first Faraday rotator is cancelled by the second.
261 or categories include (1) systems in which a rotator is embedded in a cage-like stator reminiscent of
262 on from orientationally ordered to hexagonal rotator lattices.
263 ively cylindrical bicyclo[2.2.2]octane (BCO) rotator linked to mestranol fragments were investigated
264  central 1,4-diethynyl-2,3-difluorophenylene rotator linked to two gold(I) nodes, crystalizes as infi
265 lecular rotor 1 with a central 1,4-phenylene rotator linked to two molecules of the steroid mestranol
266 is(ethynyl)bicyclo[2.2.2]octane (BCO) chiral rotators linked by a diyne fragment and self-assembles i
267 aturing two diethynylbenzene (DEB) molecular rotators linked to tetraphenylethylene (TPE), a fluoroph
268 ive to knee extensors', and medial long-axis rotator moment arms for the hip increased (trading off w
269 identified gyration of the three p-phenylene rotators on the millisecond time scale at -93 degrees C,
270 reaking, however, generally requires Faraday rotators or nanofabricated polarization-preserving mirro
271 ely at room temperature without the need for rotators or other specialized equipment.
272 phases with crystalline, liquid crystalline, rotator, or noncrystalline phases with both long-range p
273                       A transient metastable rotator phase occurring on crystallization of hexadecane
274  pass through a series of metastable plastic rotator phases before freezing.
275 d 3 times larger than those of the phenylene rotators previously studied in the solid state, it is ex
276          The central regions of blue counter-rotators show younger stellar populations and more inten
277 cing geometry can also be found in molecular rotators surface mounted on graphite surfaces or carbon
278 d dynamics and depends on the ability of the rotator surroundings to distort and create transient cav
279 suggesting that the Sun may be a much faster rotator than previously thought, and that large-scale co
280 tive, the most advanced molecular motors are rotators that are activated by light wherein a molecular
281 riptycene and dialkynylphenylene barrierless rotators that operate as NMR sensors for solvent viscosi
282 plored the creation of free space around the rotator, the advantages of volume-conserving rotational
283 stabilizes the staggered conformation of the rotator through van der Waals repulsive interactions and
284  and voids or other features that enable the rotator to rotate in the solid state (amphidynamic cryst
285 rotors was devised from a set of stators and rotators to gain simple access to a large number of stru
286 trument has been developed using two Faraday rotators under computer control to change the angle of p
287 oluminous stators that may accommodate large rotator units and speed rotational dynamics in the solid
288                     As a result, the dipolar rotators were distributed equally in two planes parallel
289  This enables its investigation as a Faraday rotator where it displayed a remarkable Verdet constant
290 osts whose upper decks carry a biphenyl-like rotator with a dipole moment perpendicular to the rotati
291 ne representing the stator and the other the rotator with DABCO as an interconnecting axle and copper
292               Our propeller is composed of a rotator with three molecular blades linked via a rutheni
293 we were able to assign two types of Brownian rotators with different activation energies, 1.85 and 6.
294 or controlling the direction and coupling of rotators within molecular systems.
295 cture and properties of multiple p-phenylene rotators within one molecule.
296 es in the field of thin-film organic Faraday rotators within the well-established theoretical framewo

 
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