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Journal of Clinical Medicine Jun 2024Neck pain is a pathology with a high impact in terms of physical disability in modern society. The position of the head is related to neck pain. The Frankfort plane...
Neck pain is a pathology with a high impact in terms of physical disability in modern society. The position of the head is related to neck pain. The Frankfort plane determines the position of the skull in space. The profile photograph of the subjects was used to determine the Frankfort plane and to study its degree of inclination. Myofascial pain syndrome is one of the most common causes of musculoskeletal pain. Trigger points are hyperirritable spots located in a palpable taut band of skeletal muscle that is painful on compression or stretch and causes a local twitch in response to snapping or palpation of the band. The aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between the Frankfort plane and the presence of myofascial trigger points causing cervical myofascial pain. : This is a cross-sectional descriptive observational study. All subjects underwent a photographic study to determine the degree of Frankfort plane inclination, and the posterior cervical musculature was palpated to find myofascial trigger points that were measured with a pressure algometer in three cervical locations on the right and left sides. Our study included 47 subjects who had suffered at least one episode of cervical pain in their lifetimes. The mean age was 22.3 ± 2.9 years. Statistically significant results were found in the first right location and sports practice ( = 0.007), in the second right location and gender ( = 0.0097), in the second right location and sports practice ( = 0.0486), in the third right location and gender ( = 0.0098), and in the first, second, and third left locations and gender ( = 0.0083; = 0.024; = 0.0016, respectively). In the correlation between the Frankfort plane and the presence of myofascial trigger points, all locations were positive, with the first right location being statistically significant ( = 0.048). A positive relationship was found between the Frankfort plane and the presence of myofascial trigger points. The greater the angle of the Frankfort plane, the less the myofascial pain.
PubMed: 38930143
DOI: 10.3390/jcm13123614 -
Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) Jun 2024Neck pain is commonly referred to an ENT specialist and can be caused by the little-known inflammatory condition of the lateral thyrohyoid ligament. The pathophysiology...
OBJECTIVE
Neck pain is commonly referred to an ENT specialist and can be caused by the little-known inflammatory condition of the lateral thyrohyoid ligament. The pathophysiology of this condition is believed to be inflammation subsequent to over-exertion or cervical trauma. Typically, patients present with chronic unilateral neck pain. Elicitation of localized tenderness over the axis of the lateral thyrohyoid ligament on palpation is a key finding for its diagnosis. We present an unusual case with an acute course and subcutaneous inflammation and discuss its management in an effort to raise awareness for this often-misdiagnosed syndrome.
METHODS
A systematic literature research on PubMed was performed selecting patients with a definitive diagnosis of thyrohyoid syndrome or lateral thyrohyoid ligament syndrome.
RESULTS
We collected 54 cases from three studies. This condition is an important differential diagnosis for acute or chronic antero-lateral or unilateral neck pain.
CONCLUSION
No specific radiological findings are defined and a CT scan is therefore not necessary for its diagnosis, but ultrasound is a useful tool to primarily assess any neck lesion. Once the diagnosis is made, a local infiltration of steroids is the most sustainable treatment option and relapse prevention.
PubMed: 38928643
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics14121227 -
Veterinary Sciences May 2024Management of breeding stallions is crucial to equine reproduction. The longevity of the breeding career is the ultimate objective, whether the stallion is used for... (Review)
Review
Management of breeding stallions is crucial to equine reproduction. The longevity of the breeding career is the ultimate objective, whether the stallion is used for natural cover or for semen collection and artificial insemination. Stud farm veterinarians should be aware of the techniques used to evaluate testicular function and the diagnostic approach to testicular disorders in cases of emergency. This paper presents the clinical methods used to evaluate testicular health, including palpation, ultrasonography, biopsy, and fine-needle aspiration. The discussion of testicular disorders is broken down into four categories: congenital disorders (cryptorchidism, monorchidism, and testicular hypoplasia), differential diagnosis of scrotal enlargement, differential diagnosis of causes of progressive testicular enlargement, and differential diagnosis of testicular asymmetry or reduction in size with an emphasis on testicular degeneration. The sudden increase in testicular size is often accompanied by severe clinical signs and is a major cause for referral of stallion for surgery. Testicular disorders are illustrated with clinical cases seen by the authors.
PubMed: 38921990
DOI: 10.3390/vetsci11060243 -
Pediatric Reports May 2024Neither radiological phenotypic characteristics nor reconstruction CT scan has been used to study the early anatomical disruption of the cranial bone in children with...
BACKGROUND
Neither radiological phenotypic characteristics nor reconstruction CT scan has been used to study the early anatomical disruption of the cranial bone in children with the so-called idiopathic type of West syndrome.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
The basic diagnostic measures and the classical antiepileptic treatments were applied to these children in accordance with the conventional protocol of investigations and treatment for children with West syndrome. Boys from three unrelated families were given the diagnosis of the idiopathic type of West syndrome, aged 7, 10 and 12 years old. Parents underwent extensive clinical examinations. Three parents (age range of 28-41 year) were included in this study. All children showed a history of intellectual disabilities, cryptogenic epileptic spasms and fragmented hypsarrhythmia. These children and their parents were referred to our orthopedic departments because of variable skeletal deformities. Variable forms of skeletal deformities were the motive for the families to seek orthopedic advice. A constellation of flat foot, torticollis and early-onset osteoarthritis were observed by the family doctor. Apparently, and from the first clinical session in our practice, we felt that all these children are manifesting variable forms of abnormal craniofacial contour. Thereby, we immediately performed detailed cranial radiological phenotypic characterization of every affected child, as well as the siblings and parents, and all were enrolled in this study. All affected children underwent whole-exome sequence analysis.
RESULTS
The craniofacial phenotype of all children revealed apparent developmental anatomical disruption of the cranial bones. Palpation of the skull bones showed unusual palpable bony ridges along different sutural locations. A 7-year-old child showed abnormal bulging over the sagittal suture, associated with bilateral bony ridges over the squamosal sutures. AP skull radiograph of a 7-year-old boy with West syndrome showed facial asymmetry with early closure of the metopic suture, and other sutures seemed ill-defined. A 3D reconstruction CT scan of the skull showed early closure of the metopic suture. Another 3D reconstruction CT scan of the skull while the patient was in flexion showed early closure of the squamosal sutures, pressing the brain contents upward, causing the development of a prominent bulge at the top of the mid-sagittal suture. A reformatted 3D reconstruction CT scan confirmed the bilateral closure of the squamosal suture. Examination of the parents revealed a similar skull radiographic abnormality in his mother. A 3D reformatted frontal cranial CT of a 35-year-old mother showed early closure of the metopic and sagittal sutures, causing a mid-sagittal bony bulge. A 10-year-old boy showed an extremely narrow frontal area, facial asymmetry and a well palpable ridge over the lambdoid sutures. A 3D axial reconstruction CT scan of a 10-year-old boy with West syndrome illustrated the asymmetry of the posterior cranial bones along the lambdoid sutures. Interestingly, his 28-year-old mother has been a client at the department of spine surgery since she was 14 years old. A 3D reconstruction CT scan of the mother showed a noticeable bony ridge extending from the metopic suture upwards to involve the sagittal suture (red arrow heads). The black arrow shows a well demarcated bony ridge over the squamosal suture. A 3D reconstruction CT scan of the skull and spine showed the thick bony ridge of the metopic and the anterior sagittal as well as bilateral involvement of the squamosal, causing apparent anterior narrowing of the craniofacial contour. Note the lumbar scoliosis. A 12-year-old boy showed brachycephaly. A lateral skull radiograph of a 12-year-old boy with West syndrome showed premature sutural fusion, begetting an abnormal growth pattern, resulting in cranial deformity. The nature of the deformity depends on which sutures are involved, the time of onset and the sequence in which individual sutures fuse. In this child, brachycephalic secondary to craniosynostosis, which occurred because of bilateral early ossification of the coronal sutures, led to bi-coronal craniosynostosis. Thickened frontal bones and an ossified interclinoid ligament of the sella turcica were encountered. The lateral skull radiograph of a 38-year-old mother with a history of poor schooling achievements showed a very similar cranial contour of brachycephaly, thickening of the frontal bones and massive ossification of the clinoid ligament of the sella turcica. Maternal history revealed a history of multiple spontaneous miscarriages in the first trimester of more than five times. Investigating his parents revealed a brachycephalic mother with borderline intelligence. We affirm that the pattern of inheritance in the three boys was compatible with the X-linked recessive pattern of inheritance. Whole-exome sequencing showed non-definite phenotype/genotype correlation.
CONCLUSIONS
The aim of this study was sixfold: firstly, to refute the common usage of the term idiopathic; secondly, we feel that it could be possible that West syndrome is a symptom complex rather than a separate diagnostic entity; thirdly, to further detect the genetic carrier, we explored the connection between the cranial bones in children with West syndrome with what has been clinically observed in their parents; fourthly, the early life anatomical disruptions of the cranial bones among these children seem to be heterogeneous; fifthly, it shows that the progressive deceleration in the development of this group of children is highly connected to the progressive closure of the cranial sutures; sixthly, we affirm that our findings are novel.
PubMed: 38921700
DOI: 10.3390/pediatric16020035 -
PloS One 2024This observational study aimed to evaluate the intra- and inter-operator reliability of a digital palpation device in measuring compressive stiffness of the patellar... (Observational Study)
Observational Study
This observational study aimed to evaluate the intra- and inter-operator reliability of a digital palpation device in measuring compressive stiffness of the patellar tendon at different knee angles in talent and elite volleyball players. Second aim was to examine differences in reliability when measuring at different knee angles, between dominant and non-dominant knees, between sexes, and with age. Two operators measured stiffness at the midpoint of the patellar tendon in 45 Dutch volleyball players at 0°, 45° and 90° knee flexion, on both the dominant and non-dominant side. We found excellent intra-operator reliability (ICC>0.979). For inter-operator reliability, significant differences were found in stiffness measured between operators (p<0.007). The coefficient of variance significantly decreased with increasing knee flexion (2.27% at 0°, 1.65% at 45° and 1.20% at 90°, p<0.001). In conclusion, the device appeared to be reliable when measuring compressive stiffness of the patellar tendon in elite volleyball players, especially at 90° knee flexion. Inter-operator reliability appeared to be questionable. More standardized positioning and measurement protocols seem necessary.
Topics: Humans; Volleyball; Male; Female; Patellar Ligament; Palpation; Reproducibility of Results; Young Adult; Adult; Range of Motion, Articular; Knee Joint; Adolescent; Biomechanical Phenomena; Observer Variation
PubMed: 38917106
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304743 -
Anatomy & Cell Biology Jun 2024The 7th cervical vertebra (C7) is described as having the most prominent spinous process (SP) and is characterized as the "vertebra prominens" (VP) of the cervical spine...
The 7th cervical vertebra (C7) is described as having the most prominent spinous process (SP) and is characterized as the "vertebra prominens" (VP) of the cervical spine in anatomy textbooks. The VP is an important anatomical landmark of the neck for clinical examination and therapeutic intervention. The present study identifies the level of the most prominent SP of the cervical and uppermost thoracic vertebrae in a cadaveric cohort. Thirty-nine (23 female and 16 male) cadavers of a mean age of 77.5 years were investigated in a prone position and a certain cervical kyphotic bending. The most prominent SP, at the base of the neck, was palpated and marked with a wedging nail into the SP of the vertebra. The cervical region was dissected, and a blind investigator examined whether the nail was placed into the SP of C7 or the SP of another upper or lower vertebra. In 19 out of 39 cadavers (48.7%), the C7 was identified as the VP (typical anatomy), followed by the C6 (in 14 cadavers, 35.9%), C5 (in 4 cadavers, 10.3%). In 2 cadavers (5.1%) the first thoracic vertebra was identified as having the most prominent SP. Although C7 is described as the VP, in the present study the SP of C7 was the most prominent in less than 50%. The high variable projection level of the most prominent SP of the cervical vertebra holds great clinical significance for spine examination, neck surgery, and spinal anesthesia.
PubMed: 38916082
DOI: 10.5115/acb.24.061 -
Cureus May 2024Lumbar strain originating from the quadratus lumborum (QL) is an important cause of low back pain; however, its diagnosis is often missed, and treatment is often...
INTRODUCTION
Lumbar strain originating from the quadratus lumborum (QL) is an important cause of low back pain; however, its diagnosis is often missed, and treatment is often inadequate. This leads to unnecessary diagnostic investigations and chronicization of pain. Therefore, it is important to treat it effectively and safely. In this study, we aimed to find out the effect of ultrasound (US)-guided QL block in acute-subacute low back pain caused by a strain of QL.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Our study was retrospective, and the changes in the visual analog scale (VAS) and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) scores within one week in 50 patients with acute-subacute localized low back pain, unilateral lumbar strain, palpation tenderness, paravertebral spasm, and decreased lumbar range of motion in the QL muscle, in whom we applied US-guided block to the QL muscle, were analyzed.
RESULTS
There was a significant decrease in the mean VAS and ODI scores of the patients after the procedure. There was a negative correlation between improvement rates in VAS and ODI scores and age and body mass index (BMI). Recovery rates were higher in female patients than in male patients.
CONCLUSION
It can be said that US-guided QL block is an effective treatment method for QL-induced lumbar strains, and younger age, female gender, and lower BMI are associated with better responses after injection.
PubMed: 38915966
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.61014 -
The Canadian Journal of Urology Jun 2024
Topics: Humans; Digital Rectal Examination; Male; Prostatic Neoplasms
PubMed: 38912935
DOI: No ID Found -
Resuscitation Plus Sep 2024To examine speed and accuracy of newborn heart rate measurement by various assessment methods employed at birth. (Review)
Review
AIM
To examine speed and accuracy of newborn heart rate measurement by various assessment methods employed at birth.
METHODS
A search of Medline, SCOPUS, CINAHL and Cochrane was conducted between January 1, 1946, to until August 16, 2023. (CRD 42021283364) Study selection was based on predetermined criteria. Reviewers independently extracted data, appraised risk of bias and assessed certainty of evidence.
RESULTS
Pulse oximetry is slower and less precise than ECG for heart rate assessment. Both auscultation and palpation are imprecise for heart rate assessment. Other devices such as digital stethoscope, Doppler ultrasound, an ECG device using dry electrodes incorporated in a belt, photoplethysmography and electromyography are studied in small numbers of newborns and data are not available for extremely preterm or bradycardic newborns receiving resuscitation. Digital stethoscope is fast and accurate. Doppler ultrasound and dry electrode ECG in a belt are fast, accurate and precise when compared to conventional ECG with gel adhesive electrodes.
LIMITATIONS
Certainty of evidence was low or very low for most comparisons.
CONCLUSION
If resources permit, ECG should be used for fast and accurate heart rate assessment at birth. Pulse oximetry and auscultation may be reasonable alternatives but have limitations. Digital stethoscope, doppler ultrasound and dry electrode ECG show promise but need further study.
PubMed: 38912532
DOI: 10.1016/j.resplu.2024.100668 -
BMC Medical Informatics and Decision... Jun 2024Patient-reported outcome (PRO) is a distinct and indispensable dimension of clinical characteristics and recent advances have made remote PRO measurement possible. Sex...
BACKGROUND
Patient-reported outcome (PRO) is a distinct and indispensable dimension of clinical characteristics and recent advances have made remote PRO measurement possible. Sex difference in PRO of Parkinson's disease (PD) is hardly extensively researched.
METHODS
A smartphone-based self-management platform, offering remote PRO measurement for PD patients, has been developed. A total of 1828 PD patients, including 1001 male patients and 827 female patients, were enrolled and completed their PRO submission through this platform.
RESULTS
Sex differences in PROs have been identified. The female group had a significantly lower height, weight, and body mass index (BMI) than the male group (P < 0.001). For motor symptoms, a higher proportion of patients reporting dyskinesia was observed in the female group. For non-motor symptoms, there is a higher percentage (P < 0.001) as well as severity (P = 0.016) of depression in the female group. More male patients reported hyposmia, lisp, drooling, dysuria, frequent urination, hypersexuality, impotence, daytime sleepiness, and apathy than females (P < 0.05). In contrast, more female patients reported headache, palpation, body pain, anorexia, nausea, urinal incontinence, anxiety, insomnia (P < 0.05) than males.
CONCLUSIONS
We provide evidence for sex differences in PD through the data collected from our platform. These results highlighted the importance of gender in clinical decision-making, and also support the feasibility of remote PRO measurement through a smartphone-based self-management platform in patients with PD.
Topics: Humans; Parkinson Disease; Male; Female; Smartphone; Pilot Projects; Self-Management; Cross-Sectional Studies; Middle Aged; Aged; Patient Reported Outcome Measures; Sex Factors; Mobile Applications
PubMed: 38907208
DOI: 10.1186/s12911-024-02569-1