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Frontiers in Neurology 2024This study aimed to emphasize the importance of cranial nerve (CN) palsies in spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCeAD). (Review)
Review
INTRODUCTION
This study aimed to emphasize the importance of cranial nerve (CN) palsies in spontaneous cervical artery dissection (sCeAD).
METHODS
A search term-based literature review was conducted on "cervical artery dissection" and "cranial nerve palsy." English and German articles published until October 2023 were considered.
RESULTS
Cranial nerve (CN) palsy in sCeAD is evident in approximately 10% of cases. In the literature, isolated palsies of CN II, III, VII, IX, X, and XII have been reported, while CN XI palsy only occurs in combination with other lower cranial nerve palsies. Dissection type and mural hematoma localization are specific to affected CN as CN palsies of II or III are solely evident in those with steno-occlusive vessel pathologies located at more proximal segments of ICA, while those with CN palsies of IX, X, XI, and XII occur in expansive sCeAD at more distal segments. This dichotomization emphasizes the hypothesis of a different pathomechanism in CN palsy associated with sCeAD, one being hypoperfusion or microembolism (CN II, III, and VII) and the other being a local mass effect on surrounding tissue (CN IX, X, XI, and XII). Clinically, the distinction between peripheral palsies and those caused by brainstem infarction is difficult. This differentiation is key, as, according to the reviewed cases, peripheral cranial nerve palsies in sCeAD patients mostly resolve completely over time, while those due to brainstem stroke do not, making cerebrovascular imaging appraisal essential.
DISCUSSION
It is important to consider dissections as a potential cause of peripheral CN palsies and to be aware of the appropriate diagnostic pathways. This awareness can help clinicians make an early diagnosis, offering the opportunity for primary stroke prevention.
PubMed: 38699055
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1364218 -
Scientific Reports Sep 2023Splenic hilar (no.10) lymph node dissection during total gastrectomy is no longer recommended for advanced proximal gastric cancer. However, the treatment efficacy of...
Splenic hilar (no.10) lymph node dissection during total gastrectomy is no longer recommended for advanced proximal gastric cancer. However, the treatment efficacy of no.10 lymph node dissection in Borrmann type 4 tumors remains unclear. We enrolled 539 patients who underwent total gastrectomy for Borrmann type 4 tumors between 2006 and 2016 in four major institutions in Korea. We compared the long-term survival of the no.10 lymph node dissection (n = 309) and no-dissection groups (n = 230) using the propensity score (inverse probability of treatment weighting). The treatment effects of no.10 lymph node dissection were estimated in the weighted sample using the Cox proportional hazards regression model with a robust sandwich-type variance estimator. After inverse probability of treatment weighting, there were 540.4 patients in the no.10 lymph node dissection group and 532.7 in the no-dissection group. The two groups showed well-balanced baseline characteristics, including tumor node metastasis stage. The 5-year survival rates in the no.10 lymph node dissection and no-dissection groups were 45.7% and 38.6%, respectively (log-rank p = 0.036, hazard ratio 0.786, 95% confidence interval 0.630-0.982). Multivariate analysis revealed that no.10 lymph node dissection was an independent favorable prognostic factor (adjusted hazard ratio 0.747, 95% confidence interval 0.593-0.940) after adjusting for other prognostic factors. Sensitivity analyses in other inverse probability of treatment weighting models and the propensity score matching model showed similar results. Patients undergoing no.10 lymph node dissection showed improved survival compared to those without. No.10 lymph node dissection is recommended during total gastrectomy for patients with Borrmann type 4 gastric cancer.
Topics: Humans; Stomach Neoplasms; Lymph Nodes; Dissection; Lymph Node Excision; Propensity Score
PubMed: 37717100
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-42707-9 -
Risk Management and Healthcare Policy 2023Providing adequate Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in Health Care Facilities (HCFs) has many benefits, including achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and... (Review)
Review
Providing adequate Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in Health Care Facilities (HCFs) has many benefits, including achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC). However, there is a significant shortage of statistics on the status of WASH in Healthcare Facilities (WinHCF), resulting in roadblocks in developing improvement strategies. Further, there is a lack of detailed comparison of WASH components covered in available tools against the standards. The present study aims to dissect the national and international tools for WASH assessment in HCFs to suggest comprehensive WASH indicators. The databases like PubMed, Scopus, ScopeMed, Cochrane and Google Scholar were used to extract the available tools. The assessment process, methodology, and components of national and various international tools were compared and synthesized. A total of seven tools, namely WASH FIT 2, Facet, SARA, SPA, TOOL BOX-II, CDC and Kayakalp, were compared on eight components: water, sanitation, hand hygiene, healthcare waste, environmental cleaning and hygiene, infrastructure, workforce management, policy and protocols. Although most tools have covered the same indicators, the methodology and definitions differ. Few of the tools fail to capture the basic indicators defined by Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP). The critical indicators of policy and protocols are only covered in WASH FIT 2, Kayakalp, and TOOL BOX-II. Likewise, most tools fail to capture the indicator of cleaning, IPC practices and climate resilience. The present review also highlighted the limitations of selected tools regarding definitions, methodology and implementation. Hence, based on the review findings, a comprehensive short tool has been developed to monitor WASH in HCF of India. It comprises all the essential fundamental indicators identified from various tools, and recommended by the JMP service ladder with proper definitions. This tool can be helpful for hospital staff and managers for the routine monitoring of WASH in HCFs and improve the quality of care and IPC practices in HCFs.
PubMed: 37614962
DOI: 10.2147/RMHP.S376866 -
Gland Surgery Jul 2023Increased surgeon volume is associated with decreased complications for many surgeries, including thyroidectomy. We sought to use two national databases to assess for...
BACKGROUND
Increased surgeon volume is associated with decreased complications for many surgeries, including thyroidectomy. We sought to use two national databases to assess for associations between surgeon volume and complications in patients undergoing lateral neck dissection for thyroid or parathyroid malignancy.
METHODS
Lateral neck dissections for thyroid and parathyroid cancer from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample and State Inpatient Database were analyzed. The primary outcome was any inpatient complication common to thyroidectomy, parathyroidectomy, or lateral neck dissection. The principle independent variable was surgeon volume. Multivariable analysis was then performed on this retrospective cohort study.
RESULTS
The 1,094 Nationwide Inpatient Sample discharges had a 28% (305/1,094) complication rate. After adjustment, surgeons with volumes between 3-34 neck dissections/year demonstrated a surgeon volume-complication rate association [adjusted odds ratio: 1.03; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.01-1.05]. The 1,235 State inpatient Database discharges had a 21% (258/1,235) overall complication rate, and no association between surgeon volume and complication rates (P=0.25).
CONCLUSIONS
This retrospective review of 2,329 discharges for patients undergoing lateral neck dissection for thyroid or parathyroidectomy demonstrated somewhat conflicting results. The Nationwide Inpatient Sample demonstrated increasing complication rates for increasing surgeon volume among intermediate volume surgeons, while the State Inpatient Database demonstrated no surgeon volume-complication association. Given these disparate results, and further limitations with these databases, conclusions regarding surgical volume and clinical decision making based on these data should be assessed cautiously.
PubMed: 37727340
DOI: 10.21037/gs-22-385 -
The British Journal of Surgery Oct 2023Surgical errors are acts or omissions resulting in negative consequences and/or increased operating time. This study describes surgeon-reported errors in laparoscopic...
BACKGROUND
Surgical errors are acts or omissions resulting in negative consequences and/or increased operating time. This study describes surgeon-reported errors in laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
METHODS
Intraoperative videos were uploaded and annotated on Touch SurgeryTM Enterprise. Participants evaluated videos for severity using a 10-point intraoperative cholecystitis grading score, and errors using Observational Clinical Human Reliability Assessment, which includes skill, consequence, and mechanism classifications.
RESULTS
Nine videos were assessed by 8 participants (3 junior (specialist trainee (ST) 3-5), 2 senior trainees (ST6-8), and 3 consultants). Participants identified 550 errors. Positive relationships were seen between total operating time and error count (r2 = 0.284, P < 0.001), intraoperative grade score and error count (r2 = 0.578, P = 0.001), and intraoperative grade score and total operating time (r2 = 0.157, P < 0.001). Error counts differed significantly across intraoperative phases (H(6) = 47.06, P < 0.001), most frequently at dissection of the hepatocystic triangle (total 282; median 33.5 (i.q.r. 23.5-47.8, range 15-63)), ligation/division of cystic structures (total 124; median 13.5 (i.q.r. 12-19.3, range 10-26)), and gallbladder dissection (total 117; median 14.5 (i.q.r. 10.3-18.8, range 6-26)). There were no significant differences in error counts between juniors, seniors, and consultants (H(2) = 0.03, P = 0.987). Errors were classified differently. For dissection of the hepatocystic triangle, thermal injuries (50 in total) were frequently classified as executional, consequential errors; trainees classified thermal injuries as step done with excessive force, speed, depth, distance, time or rotation (29 out of 50), whereas consultants classified them as incorrect orientation (6 out of 50). For ligation/division of cystic structures, inappropriate clipping (60 errors in total), procedural errors were reported by junior trainees (6 out of 60), but not consultants. For gallbladder dissection, inappropriate dissection (20 errors in total) was reported in incorrect planes by consultants and seniors (6 out of 20), but not by juniors. Poor economy of movement (11 errors in total) was reported more by consultants (8 out of 11) than trainees (3 out of 11).
CONCLUSION
This study suggests that surgical experience influences error interpretation, but the benefits for surgical training are currently unclear.
Topics: Humans; Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic; Dissection; Gallbladder; Ligation; Reproducibility of Results
PubMed: 37611141
DOI: 10.1093/bjs/znad256 -
Current Opinion in Genetics &... Dec 2023How functional organisms arise from a single cell is a fundamental question in biology with direct relevance to understanding developmental defects and diseases.... (Review)
Review
How functional organisms arise from a single cell is a fundamental question in biology with direct relevance to understanding developmental defects and diseases. Dissecting developmental processes provides the basic, critical framework for understanding disease progression and treatment. Bottom-up approaches to recapitulate formation of various components of the embryo have been effective to probe symmetry-breaking, self-organisation, tissue patterning and morphogenesis. However, these studies have been mostly concerned with axial patterning, which is essentially longitudinal. Can these models generate the appendicular axes? If so, how far can self-organisation take these? Will experimentally induced organisers be required? This short review explores these questions, highlighting how minimal models are essential for understanding patterning and morphogenetic processes.
Topics: Body Patterning; Morphogenesis; Embryo, Mammalian
PubMed: 37897953
DOI: 10.1016/j.gde.2023.102130 -
Archives of Plastic Surgery Nov 2023In the first half of the third century B.C., Herophilus and Erasistratus performed the first systematic dissection of the human body. For subsequent centuries, these...
In the first half of the third century B.C., Herophilus and Erasistratus performed the first systematic dissection of the human body. For subsequent centuries, these cadaveric dissections were key to the advancement of anatomical knowledge and surgical techniques. To this day, despite various instructional methods, cadaver dissection remained the best way for surgical training. To improve the quality of education and research through cadaveric dissection, our institution has developed a unique method of perforator-preserving cadaver injection, allowing us to achieve high-fidelity perforator visualization for dissection studies, at low cost and high efficacy. Ten full body cadavers were sectioned through the base of neck, bilateral shoulder, and hip joints. The key was to dissect multiple perfusing arteries and draining veins for each section, to increase "capture" of vascular territories. The vessels were carefully flushed, insufflated, and then filled with latex dye. Our injection dye comprised of liquid latex, formalin, and acrylic paint in the ratio of 1:2:1. Different endpoints were used to assess adequacy of injection, such as reconstitution of eyeball volume, skin turgor, visible dye in subcutaneous veins, and seepage of dye through stab incisions in digital pulps. Dissections demonstrated the effectiveness of the dye, outlining even the small osseous perforators of the medial femoral condyle flap and subconjunctival plexuses. Our technique emphasized atraumatic preparation, recreation of luminal space through insufflation, and finally careful injection of latex dye with adequate curing. This has allowed high-fidelity perforator visualization for dissection studies.
PubMed: 38143833
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1771272 -
STAR Protocols Dec 2023In vitro embryonic analogue models, such as gastruloids, trunk-like structures and embryoids, have been developed to understand principles of early development and...
In vitro embryonic analogue models, such as gastruloids, trunk-like structures and embryoids, have been developed to understand principles of early development and morphogenesis. However, models that can fully mimic head formation are still missing. Here, we present a protocol for generating the head-like structure (HLS) in zebrafish embryonic explants. We describe steps for dissection and constructing cell and patterning landscapes. We then detail assessment of this structure through axis induction. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Cheng et al. (2023)..
Topics: Animals; Zebrafish; Dissection; Morphogenesis
PubMed: 37729057
DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2023.102553 -
Oncogene Oct 2023Checkpoint inhibitor pneumonitis (CIP) is the most common fatal immune-related adverse event; however, its pathophysiology remains largely unknown. Comprehensively...
Checkpoint inhibitor pneumonitis (CIP) is the most common fatal immune-related adverse event; however, its pathophysiology remains largely unknown. Comprehensively dissecting the key cellular players and molecular pathways associated with CIP pathobiology is critical for precision diagnosis and develop novel therapy strategy of CIP. Herein, we performed a comprehensive single-cell transcriptome analysis to dissect the complexity of the immunological response in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) microenvironment. CIP was characterized by a dramatic accumulation of CXCL13+ T cells and hyperinflammatory CXCL9+ monocytes. T-cell receptor (TCR) analysis revealed that CXCL13+ T cells exhibited hyperexpanded- TCR clonotypes, and pseudotime analysis revealed a potential differentiation trajectory from naïve to cytotoxic effector status. Monocyte trajectories showed that LAMP3+ DCs derived from CXCL9+ monocytes possessed the potential to migrate from tumors to the BALF, whereas the differentiation trajectory to anti-inflammatory macrophages was blocked. Intercellular crosstalk analysis revealed the signaling pathways such as CXCL9/10/11-CXCR3, FASLG-FAS, and IFNGR1/2-IFNG were activated in CIP+ samples. We also proposed a novel immune signature with high diagnostic power to distinguish CIP+ from CIP- samples (AUC = 0.755). Our data highlighted key cellular players, signatures, and interactions involved in CIP pathogenesis.
Topics: Humans; Pneumonia; Neoplasms; Signal Transduction; Macrophages; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell; Lung Neoplasms; Tumor Microenvironment
PubMed: 37653115
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-023-02805-4 -
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery May 2024The exact anatomical entity behind the term superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS) remains poorly understood. The different interpretations of the term SMAS by... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
The exact anatomical entity behind the term superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS) remains poorly understood. The different interpretations of the term SMAS by anatomists, surgeons, and histologists have caused confusion. This article aims to provide clarity regarding this term and the relevant anatomy.
METHODS
A literature review was conducted to uncover the variety of descriptions of the term SMAS. A feasibility study, followed by a conclusive series of standardized layered dissections complemented by histologic analysis and sheet plastination, was performed on 50 cadaver heads (16 embalmed and 34 fresh; mean age, 75 years).
RESULTS
Most literature considers the SMAS as layer 3, that is, a musculoaponeurotic layer that separates the subcutaneous fat of the superficial fascia from the deep fat of the deep fascia. The authors' dissections, histologic analysis, and sheet plastination demonstrated that layer 3 is present only where there are flat mimetic muscles and platysma-auricular fascia over the posterior part of the parotid gland as the evolutionary remnant of the platysma, but not between the flat mimetic muscles. Here, the subcutaneous fat is in direct contact with the deep fat without the interposition of a musculoaponeurotic layer 3.
CONCLUSIONS
Because of the absence of a distinct and complete layer 3 connecting the flat mimetic muscles, the authors conclude that the SMAS as originally described does not exist as a specific anatomical entity. In retrospect, the surgically created compound layered flap composed of a variable thickness of subcutaneous fat, mimetic muscles (eg, platysma, orbicularis oculi), and a thin layer of deep fascia is what is known as the "SMAS."
Topics: Humans; Superficial Musculoaponeurotic System; Cadaver; Aged; Female; Male; Subcutaneous Fat; Dissection; Feasibility Studies; Aged, 80 and over; Fascia
PubMed: 37039509
DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000010557