The Frank Gambale Technique Book
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Frank Gambale is one of the most distinctive guitar players on thescene. He sounds like a happy hybrid of a jazz player's love of harmoniclines, a metal player's love of arpeggios and a full singing legatotone, as if George Benson, Malmsteen and Holdsworth collaboratedon a single solo. His speed/sweep-picking technique is already legendary,so this new book is a welcome instructional publication.
The Book is an expose of how to use rather simple musical materialsto create sophisticated solos by combining them in specific ways.Without burdening the player with overly theoretical jargon, Gambaleshows how to play harmonic extensions to basic chordal sounds thatend up sounding rather "hip."Jazz players have been using these techniquesfor decades and this book explains them to the guitar player.A short and pithy appendix covers all the theory basics you need. Ifyou follow the fingering notation you will gain insight into Gambale'smastery of the fretboard.
The open abdomen technique may be used in critically ill patients to manage abdominal injury, reduce the septic complications, and prevent the abdominal compartment syndrome. Many different techniques have been proposed and multiple studies have been conducted, but the best method of temporary abdominal closure has not been determined yet. Recently, new randomized and nonrandomized controlled trials have been published on this topic. We aimed to perform an up-to-date systematic review on the management of open abdomen, including the most recent published randomized and nonrandomized controlled trials, to compare negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) with no NPWT and define if one technique has better outcomes than the other with regard to primary fascial closure, postoperative 30-day mortality and morbidity, enteroatmospheric fistulae, abdominal abscess, bleeding, and length of stay. According to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement and the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions, an online literature research (until July 1, 2015) was performed on MEDLINE, PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Cochrane Library databases. The MeSH terms and free words used "vacuum assisted closure" "vac;", "open abdomen", "damage control surgery", and "temporary abdominal closure". No language restriction was made. The initial systematic literature search yielded 452 studies. After a careful assessment of the titles and of the full text was obtained, eight articles fulfilled inclusion criteria. We analyzed 1,225 patients, of whom 723 (59%) underwent NPWT and 502 (41%) did not undergo NPWT, and performed four subgroups: VAC versus Bogota bag technique (two studies, 106 participants), VAC versus mesh-foil laparostomy (two studies, 159 participants), VAC versus laparostomy (adhesive impermeable with midline zip) (one study, 106 participants), and NPWT versus no NPWT techniques (three studies, 854 2b1af7f3a8