Fluance turntables do not include built in speakers.

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If your receiver or speakers do not have a specific PHONO input or integrated preamp, RT80 and RT81 both include an internal preamp for quick and easy setup.

Bipolar disorder also bears a high economic and personal burden. One analysis estimated the per-person total lifetime costs of BD ranged from $11,720 for a single manic episode to $624,785 for chronic disease. Patients with BD often have numerous other health issues like high blood pressure and drug addiction. Their condition affects their ability to work and care often comes with a huge price tag.


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Fortunately, more people with serious mental conditions are covered by insurance. The national uninsurance rate for adults under age 65 with schizophrenia decreased by 50 percent after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2014, according to JAMA Psychiatry research. According to this report, the rate of uninsured people with schizophrenia now stands at around 4 percent.

This case report illustrates and discusses the non-operative management of a complete anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury in an English Premier League football player, his return to play within 8 weeks and problem-free follow-up at 18 months post injury. When non-operative verses surgical ACL reconstruction is considered there are many fundamental gaps in our knowledge and currently, at elite level, there are no cases in cutting sports within the literature to guide these decisions. When the norm is for all professional footballers to be recommended surgery, it will be very challenging when circumstances and patient autonomy dictate a conservative approach, where prognosis, end points and risk are unclear and assumed to be high. This case challenges current dogma and provides a starting point for much needed debate about best practice, treatment options, research direction and not just at the elite level of sport.

Quiet is a monumental pursuit for a father of three, implausible when compounded by the grueling schedule of a professional basketball player. Wright stars for Derthona Basket, in one of the world's best non-NBA leagues, in an Italian wine township at the foot of the Alps. He's halfway around the world from Bowie, Maryland, where his basketball journey began, eventually leading him to Georgetown, Europe and the NBA.

It was 2012, and Wright was in Turkey playing for the now-defunct Olin Edirne. When he first arrived, he and his coach butted heads, so Wright was determined to mend fences. Sprint drills were completed with fervor, jump shots flicked with added panache, defense executed with floor-slapping zeal. In months, he'd gone from target to talisman. So, when he felt tingling in his right foot one day, he thought it was a casualty of overuse. He'd sleep it off, he reasoned. But, by the next morning's shooting drills, it had spread to his right hand, then arm, then entire leg -- his whole right side numb.

Overnight, his livelihood and identity had been ripped away. He'd soon be diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, and doctor after doctor would tell him his career was over. Wright had every reason to turn bitter, but he refused. As he stands here now, a decade later, he remembers the decision he made then, and the resolve he found: He wouldn't retire, he would relearn how to walk and run, and he'd damn sure play basketball again.

YEARS AFTER LEAVING MARYLAND, Chris Wright is still a local legend. He was a McDonald's All American in 2007 and left St. John's College High School as the school's all-time leading scorer. While he found success at Georgetown -- he's still sixth in career assists -- a lingering hand injury hampered him during pre-draft workouts, and he went unselected. Then the NBA locked out its players, so Wright joined the same Turkish league where Hedo Trkolu, Ersan lyasova and Enes Kanter Freedom blossomed. He eventually blossomed too, playing the best basketball of his life, scoring 18-plus points in four out of his previous six games in Turkey.

As a friend drove him home, Wright's diagnosis leaked in local media. He was in a dead zone -- internet access but no cell reception -- still researching the illness wreaking havoc on the wiring of his nervous system. Once back at his apartment, his phone erupted with 500-plus texts, calls and notifications from loved ones. He still couldn't walk and certainly hadn't talked to the media. "I don't even know what I have, what it is yet," Wright recalls thinking. "I just know I physically can't do anything."

Wright quickly met with several doctors to get an assessment of his condition. They explained that multiple sclerosis, also known as MS, is an autoimmune disease that attacks the protective covering of nerve fibers called myelin, causing scar tissue or lesions. This leads to communication issues between the brain and the rest of the body.

Wright wasn't walking properly and his tingling had morphed into excruciating pain. Ten days of steroid shots allowed him to begin an aggressive treatment plan after bloodwork. Patients who go on TYSABRI need to be screened for the John Cunningham virus, or JCV, which is harmless in others but problematic for MS patients. Being above a certain threshold, when combined with TYSABRI, could lead to a rare brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), long-term disability and even death.

On March 13, 2013, his persistence was rewarded when the Dallas Mavericks signed him to a 10-day contract. Two days later, he made his debut, becoming the first-known NBA player with multiple sclerosis. In a year, Wright went from nearly paralyzed to sharing a court with Dirk Nowitzki and Vince Carter.

The stint with the Mavericks, on top of being named a D-League all-star, had given Wright back his basketball life. After CJ was born, a team in France called, then Italy. Then it was off to Puerto Rico, then Israel, before Italy called them back.

"My wife loved that city, my kids are in school, we were immersed in the community," Wright says. "[Then] the owner" -- Luigi Scavone, eventually implicated in large-scale tax evasion -- "was found fleeing the country with 10 million euros in a Gucci bag."

In March 2020, the Wrights were in Poland when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down borders. Two hours after his season ended, one in which Wright averaged 18.6 PPG on 51.7% shooting with 6.7 APG in the Basketball Champions League, his family frantically packed up and fled as the country closed down around them.

Later that year, a deal materialized, in Turkey of all places. Wright had barely been back since 2012. This time, Erin and her relentless optimism, not to mention their kids, were with him. "They kept calling and I had to conquer that," Wright says. "When I got off the plane, I broke down."

"I knew he would play for a long time," says Thompson, now the VP of player engagement for Monumental Basketball, which includes the NBA's Washington Wizards and WNBA's Mystics. "The basketball gods still smile on him."

IT'S JUST BEFORE CHRISTMAS and presents and holiday decor fill Wright's Zoom backdrop. Erin's parents are visiting and, off-screen, they fuss with their grandchildren riding a yuletide high. Extra hands or not, Wright seems at peace.

The HDMI input on your MBP is for outputting HDMI signals. It sounds like you're trying to use it for inputting signals from the DVD player, which won't work. The MBP cannot be used as a display for your DVD player.

Thank you for your reply. Unfortunately my Philips DVD player doesn't have a USB connection. I assumed HDMI would work, but I guess it doesn't. I'll have to find a compatible DVD/CD player for my MacBook Pro. I need one that will play PAL DVD's from Europe as well as USA's NTSC DVD's. My Philips DVD player plays both formats so I was really hoping I could use it with my laptop too.

Shamelessly taking advantage of your expertise, can you suggest an external optical drive that's both compatible with MacBook Pro's AND is able to play European format DVD's (PAL) as well as USA DVD's (NTSC)? My new, simple, little Philips DVP2880 player plays both formats on my HDTV, but I'd like to watch some language learning European DVD's on my MBP (a hilarious Spanish sitcom series). Thanks!

Hello, this is my second day with Ignite TV and internet. Questions: How do I play a DVD using my DVD player, which is not smart and not connected to the internet and doesn't have a HDMI outlet, ditto for my VCR. The sound on my TV is awful. Before Ignite, I played the sound through my stereo (Technics SA-EX-140) using my NextBox. My stereo has no HDMI. So, I bought an HDMI to RCA adapter, but that doesn't work either. I have a second HDMI outlet on the Samsung 240HD 1080p TV, but when I plug the HDMI to RCA converter into the second HDMI outlet on my TV, the TV gets confused and ask me a question, which I forget now. If anyone has the answer to any of my questions-or all-that would be very much appreciated.

2. For the DVD player you connect it to the TV as you had before using component video (red/green/blue) or composite video (Yellow)? and connect the analogue audio cables (Red/white) from the DVD player to the stereo (using perhaps the CD input) and switching the stereo to that input. This assumes that the DVD player has composite or component video outputs and the TV has the same inputs. Please provide exact make and model of DVD player if you can't get it working as described above. 2351a5e196

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