03068oam 2200433 450 991030007860332120190911103512.01-4614-7747-610.1007/978-1-4614-7747-1(OCoLC)864747542(MiFhGG)GVRL6VGI(EXLCZ)99267000000042802120130725d2014 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtccrEmergency musculoskeletal imaging in children /Leonard E. Swischuk, Siddharth P. Jadhav1st ed. 2014.New York :Springer,2014.1 online resource (ix, 235 pages) illustrations (some color)Gale eBooksDescription based upon print version of record.1-4614-7746-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.General Considerations -- Infection/Inflammation and Infarction -- Tumors, Cysts and Tumor Mimickers -- Types of Fractures in Children -- Shoulder and Upper Arm Injuries of the Shoulder and Upper Humerus -- Elbow and Forearm -- Wrist and Hand -- Pelvis and Sacrum -- Hip and Femur/Femoral Shaft -- Knee and Leg -- Ankle and Foot -- Battered Child Syndrome/Non-Accidental Trauma.This book is a practical guide to the radiologic evaluation of acute musculoskeletal injuries of the upper and lower extremities in children. It covers the detection of more subtle and frequently missed fractures and injuries such as buckle fractures, Salter Harris I and II fractures, and epiphyseal and metaphyseal fractures. It also emphasizes the assessment of soft tissues and periarticular fat pads, which can lead to discovery of the sites of bony injuries. Other pathologies that affect the musculoskeletal system, such as infections and tumors, are also discussed. It includes over 600 magnetic resonance, computed tomography, ultrasound, and radiographic images organized by anatomic region. Edited by Leonard Swischuk, a world-renowned expert in pediatric radiology and trauma imaging, Emergency Musculoskeletal Imaging in Children is a valuable resource for diagnostic radiologists, emergency physicians, residents, and fellows. Leonard E. Swischuk is a world-renowned expert in pediatric radiology and trauma imaging and has received numerous honors and awards throughout his career, including the American Roentgen Ray Society’s Gold Medal for Distinguished Service to Radiology, the American Board of Radiology’s Distinguished Service Award, and the Gold Medal of The Society for Pediatric Radiology. .Pediatric diagnostic imagingPediatric diagnostic imaging.618.9270754Swischuk Leonard Eauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut755817Jadhav Siddharth P.MiFhGGMiFhGGBOOK9910300078603321Emergency Musculoskeletal Imaging in Children2520147UNINA04719oam 2200769 c 450 991097826590332120251102090541.09783839467466383946746210.1515/9783839467466(MiAaPQ)EBC7286453(CKB)28162950300041(Au-PeEL)EBL7286453(DE-B1597)651782(DE-B1597)9783839467466(Perlego)3850048(transcript Verlag)9783839467466(EXLCZ)992816295030004120251102d2023 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArchitecture in Times of Multiple CrisesEmbodied Utopianisms of Care and Radical Spatial PracticeCarolina Crijns, Sabine Knierbein1st ed.Bielefeldtranscript Verlag20231 online resource (202 pages)Architekturen9783837667462 3837667464 Includes bibliographical references.Cover -- Contents -- Abstract -- Preface -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Why (Utopianism of) Care? -- Research Diary Entry, 4th March 2022 -- 1.2 Methodology and Book Structure -- 1.3 Research Questions -- 2 Imagined Worlds -- 2.1 Transformative Utopianisms: Utopia as Method -- 2.2 Social Imaginaries -- 2.3 Spatial Imaginaries -- 3 Constructed Narratives -- 3.1 Unfulfilled Promises of Modernity -- 3.2 The Crisis Narrative -- 3.3 Transformation, Multiple Crises, and Truth Regimes -- 4 Linking Utopianism, Crisis, and Architecture -- 4.1 Crisis and Architecture: The Meaning of Architecture in Crisis Society -- 4.2 Architecture and Utopianism: Space and Projectivity -- 4.3 Utopianism and Crisis: Time and Emancipation -- 5 Space‐Times of Control: Problem‐Solving Utopianisms -- 5.1 Degenerate Utopias: Utopianism and the Disavowal of Crisis -- 5.2 Junkspace: Anti‐Utopianism and Omni‐Crisis -- 5.3 Techno‐Utopias: Utopianism 'Solving' Crisis -- 6 Space‐Times of Care: Question‐Raising Utopianisms -- 6.1 Agency: Architecture's Political Dimension -- 6.2 Rethinking Architectural Education -- 6.3 Embodied Utopianisms of Care -- 7 Interpretation -- 7.1 Summary and Analysis -- Utopianism, Crisis, and Architecture: Society, Space, and Time -- Problem‐Solving Utopianisms: Utopia as Form -- Crisis in Architecture in Crisis -- Question‐Raising Utopianisms: Utopia as Method -- Final Notes -- 7.2 Conclusion -- 7.3 Revisited: Why Utopianism (of Care)? -- Research Diary Entry, 6th May 2022 -- Glossary -- Acknowledgements -- Bibliography.Under the premise that architecture makes life ›better‹, architecture is often presented as the ›solution‹ to social problems, made ›green‹ when promising sustainable futures, or fetishised as a cultural object for the creation of urban identities. Yet, what is it exactly that links architecture so closely to the pursuit of a good life? How is this link interrelated with crisis and crisis thinking? To what extent do belief systems in architecture influence its capacity to deal with crises? Carolina Crijns not only explores the transformative potential in radically rethinking architecture's central concepts but introduces a method of utopian speculation for practices ambitious of social change.With a preface by Sabine Knierbein.Architekturen (Bielefeld, Germany)Crijns, Architecture in Times of Multiple CrisesEmbodied Utopianisms of Care and Radical Spatial PracticeArchitectureCrisisTransformationPhilosophyPolitical ScienceCitySocietyUrban PlanningSocial GeographySocial PhilosophyArchitectureCrisisTransformationPhilosophyPolitical ScienceCitySocietyUrban PlanningSocial GeographySocial Philosophy720Crijns Carolina<p>Carolina Crijns, Stadtforscherin, Deutschland</p>aut1856192Knierbein Sabine<p>Sabine Knierbein, Technische Universität Wien, Österreich</p>auiÖsterreichische Forschungsgemeinschaft (ÖFG)fndhttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/fndMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910978265903321Architecture in Times of Multiple Crises4454848UNINA