Our results are encouraging to consider the intracorporeally approach the better way to fashion the anastomosis after laparoscopic right colectomy. This study clearly provides the rationale for a randomized clinical trial, which would be useful to give definitive conclusion.
Packed-bed
experiments are conducted to examine the effects of
moisture evaporation on the global exothermicity of hazelnut shell
pyrolysis. Percentages typically reached from ambient conditioning
(9–12 wt %, dry basis) do not modify the features of the pyrolytic
runaway, with respect to bone-dry samples, apart from the obvious
temporal delay. In fact, consequent to moderate external heating,
moisture evaporation and solid decomposition take place sequentially.
Instead, higher moisture contents lower the display of the reaction
exothermicity, owing to the simultaneous occurrence of the two processes
at different spatial positions. The interaction between the two is
also highly dependent upon the thermal severity of the external heating.
Finally, induced humidification by wetting small-sized particles (versus
steaming), applied to achieve moisture contents above those of ambient
conditioning, modifies the sample chemical properties, thus giving
only a qualitative valence to the measurements.
We believe that our method is reliable and easy to perform, and it has a high success rate. The technique is indicated to correct small- to medium-size defects.
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