-
Kyobu Geka. the Japanese Journal of... May 2024A 59-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with left hemiplegia. A computed tomography( CT) scan and echocardiography revealed a cerebral infarction in the right...
A 59-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with left hemiplegia. A computed tomography( CT) scan and echocardiography revealed a cerebral infarction in the right middle cerebral artery's territory, as well as a large pseudoaneurysm (4×3 cm) of the lateral left ventricular wall. The patient agreed to undergo cardiac surgery because of the high risk of rupture and recurrent cerebral infarctions. Owing to the high probability of damaging the posterior papillary muscle and coronary arteries, an extracardiac approach was used, and the pseudoaneurysm cavity was closed using double-patch repair. The patient was discharged from the hospital on the 12th postoperative day without any complications. Both postoperative CT and echocardiography showed closure of the cavity.
Topics: Humans; Male; Aneurysm, False; Middle Aged; Cerebral Infarction; Heart Ventricles; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Heart Aneurysm
PubMed: 38720606
DOI: No ID Found -
Kidney & Blood Pressure Research 2024To improve the clinical evaluation of the prognosis of papillary renal cell carcinoma (PRCC), we screened a model to predict the survival of patients with mutations in...
BACKGROUND
To improve the clinical evaluation of the prognosis of papillary renal cell carcinoma (PRCC), we screened a model to predict the survival of patients with mutations in related genes.
METHODS
We downloaded RNA sequencing information from all patients with PRCC in TCGA. We first analyzed the differences in genes and the enrichment of these differences. Then, by selecting mutant genes, constructing a protein-protein interaction network, least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression, and multivariable Cox regression, a prognosis model was constructed. Additionally, the model was validated using external data sets. We analyzed the immune infiltration of PRCC and the correlation between the model and popular targets. Finally, we performed tissue microarray analysis and immunohistochemistry to verify the expression levels of the three genes.
RESULTS
We constructed a three-gene (never in mitosis gene A-related kinase 2 [NEK2], centromere protein A [CENPA], and GINS complex subunit 2 [GINS2]) model. The verification results indicated that the model had a good prediction effect. We also developed a visual nomogram. Enrichment analysis revealed the major pathways involved in muscle system processes. Immunoassays showed that the expression level of CENPA was positively correlated with PD-1 and CTLA4 expression levels. Immunohistochemical and tissue microarray results showed that these three genes were highly expressed in PRCC, which was consistent with the predicted results in the database.
CONCLUSION
We constructed and verified a three-gene model to predict the patient survival. The results show that the model has a good prediction effect.
Topics: Humans; Carcinoma, Renal Cell; Kidney Neoplasms; Mutation; Prognosis; Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone; Protein Interaction Maps; Male; CTLA-4 Antigen; Nomograms; Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor; Female
PubMed: 38714185
DOI: 10.1159/000539096 -
Cureus Apr 2024The mucous membrane fold, which facilitates the attachment of the gingiva, alveolar mucosa, and the periosteum surrounding the lips and cheek, is known as the frenum....
The mucous membrane fold, which facilitates the attachment of the gingiva, alveolar mucosa, and the periosteum surrounding the lips and cheek, is known as the frenum. The frenal attachment at the gingival or papillary level may comprise periodontal health due to difficulty with plaque adherence or muscle pull. The management of such aberrant frenal attachment becomes necessary to avoid the associated future problems, such as midline diastema and periodontal attachment loss, which might lead to aesthetic problems and tooth mobility. The treatment modalities involve frenectomy using Miller's technique, conventional technique, Z-plasty, and V-Y plasty types of frenectomy procedures. The patient's requirements, specific indications, and intended results determine the method. This case report illustrates the utilisation of the V-Y plasty technique for the frenectomy of a papillary-type labial frenal attachment in a 19-year-old female patient. V-Y plasty proved to be an efficient technique for removing the aberrant labial frenum attachment, and the results were highly satisfactory, with less scar formation. V-Y plasty is reliable for covering defects and elongating the frenum area, giving desired clinical outcomes.
PubMed: 38707118
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.57663 -
Cureus Mar 2024Perioperative management of patients with myopathies can be challenging due to the increased risk of malignant hyperthermia (MH) and anesthesia-induced rhabdomyolysis...
Perioperative management of patients with myopathies can be challenging due to the increased risk of malignant hyperthermia (MH) and anesthesia-induced rhabdomyolysis (AIR). However, currently, there is no evidence regarding the optimal anesthetic management for paraneoplastic necrotizing myopathy (PNM) (total intravenous anesthetic vs. volatile anesthetics). Here, I report a case where anesthesia was administered safely using volatile anesthetics. A 63-year-old female presented with PNM associated with papillary thyroid carcinoma, necessitating urgent thyroidectomy. The patient, previously diagnosed with anti-3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR) antibody-associated myopathy, exhibited progressive weakness and dysphagia, prompting suspicion of PNM. The patient's compromised respiratory status, attributed to tracheal compression by a large goiter, necessitated an urgent thyroidectomy. Anesthetic management considerations included the potential effect of HMGCR-M on respiratory muscles and the need for careful planning to mitigate postoperative complications. The patient underwent total thyroidectomy, left central compartment clearance, and tracheostomy. The surgery proceeded uneventfully, with meticulous monitoring and adjustment of anesthetic agents to maintain hemodynamic stability. Postoperatively, the patient recovered well, demonstrating complete resolution of neurological symptoms during a three-month follow-up. The case underscores the importance of recognizing paraneoplastic syndromes in the context of thyroid surgery and highlights potential challenges faced by anesthesiologists. Despite the lack of established safety data for anesthetic drugs in HMGCR-M necrotizing myopathy, the case demonstrates the successful use of sevoflurane and rocuronium.
PubMed: 38694410
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.57351 -
Journal of the American College of... May 2024Severe acute mitral regurgitation after myocardial infarction includes partial and complete papillary muscle rupture or functional mitral regurgitation. Although its... (Review)
Review
Severe acute mitral regurgitation after myocardial infarction includes partial and complete papillary muscle rupture or functional mitral regurgitation. Although its incidence is <1%, mitral regurgitation after acute myocardial infarction frequently causes hemodynamic instability, pulmonary edema, and cardiogenic shock. Medical management has the worst prognosis, and mortality has not changed in decades. Surgery represents the gold standard, but it is associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality. Recently, transcatheter interventions have opened a new door for management that may improve survival. Mechanical circulatory support restores vital organ perfusion and offers the opportunity for a steadier surgical repair. This review focuses on the diagnosis and the interventional management, both surgical and transcatheter, with a glance on future perspectives to enhance patient management and eventually decrease mortality.
Topics: Humans; Mitral Valve Insufficiency; Myocardial Infarction; Severity of Illness Index; Cardiac Catheterization; Disease Management
PubMed: 38692830
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2023.09.840 -
Medical Engineering & Physics May 2024Early detection of cardiovascular diseases is based on accurate quantification of the left ventricle (LV) function parameters. In this paper, we propose a fully...
OBJECTIVE
Early detection of cardiovascular diseases is based on accurate quantification of the left ventricle (LV) function parameters. In this paper, we propose a fully automatic framework for LV volume and mass quantification from 2D-cine MR images already segmented using U-Net.
METHODS
The general framework consists of three main steps: Data preparation including automatic LV localization using a convolution neural network (CNN) and application of morphological operations to exclude papillary muscles from the LV cavity. The second step consists in automatically extracting the LV contours using U-Net architecture. Finally, by integrating temporal information which is manifested by a spatial motion of myocytes as a third dimension, we calculated LV volume, LV ejection fraction (LVEF) and left ventricle mass (LVM). Based on these parameters, we detected and quantified cardiac contraction abnormalities using Python software.
RESULTS
CNN was trained with 35 patients and tested on 15 patients from the ACDC database with an accuracy of 99,15 %. U-Net architecture was trained using ACDC database and evaluated using local dataset with a Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) of 99,78 % and a Hausdorff Distance (HD) of 4.468 mm (p < 0,001). Quantification results showed a strong correlation with physiological measures with a Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC) of 0,991 for LV volume, 0.962 for LVEF, 0.98 for stroke volume (SV) and 0.923 for LVM after pillars' elimination. Clinically, our method allows regional and accurate identification of pathological myocardial segments and can serve as a diagnostic aid tool of cardiac contraction abnormalities.
CONCLUSION
Experimental results prove the usefulness of the proposed method for LV volume and function quantification and verify its potential clinical applicability.
Topics: Humans; Heart Ventricles; Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine; Automation; Papillary Muscles; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Organ Size; Male; Middle Aged; Neural Networks, Computer; Female; Stroke Volume
PubMed: 38692762
DOI: 10.1016/j.medengphy.2024.104162 -
The Journal of Thoracic and... Apr 2024The study objective was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a transaortic approach to midventricular and apical septal myectomy in patients with hypertrophic...
OBJECTIVE
The study objective was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a transaortic approach to midventricular and apical septal myectomy in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular outflow tract or midventricular obstruction.
METHODS
From January 2018 to August 2023, 940 patients underwent transaortic septal myectomy at the Cleveland Clinic, of whom 682 (73%) had midventricular or apical resection. Patients who underwent isolated basal myectomies were excluded. Templated operative reports designated septal regions resected as basal (opposition to mitral valve up to the leaflet tips), midventricular (leaflet tips to just beyond the papillary muscle heads), and apical (apical third of the ventricle). Myocardial resection specimen weights, intraventricular gradients, and clinical outcomes were assessed.
RESULTS
Of the 682 patients, 582 (85%) had basal plus midventricular resection and 78 (11%) had basal, midventricular, and apical resection. Mean preoperative intraventricular gradient was 102 ± 41 mm Hg. Median resection weight was 10 g (15th, 85th percentiles: 7, 15), and mean postoperative intraventricular gradient was 16 ± 10 mm Hg, with 625 (96%) patients achieving gradients 36 mm Hg or less. There were no iatrogenic mitral or aortic valve injuries. Permanent pacemaker placement was required in 38 patients (5.6%), of whom 8 (1.2%) had normal preoperative conduction. Operative mortality occurred in 1 patient (0.1%) after an intraoperative ventricular septal defect.
CONCLUSIONS
Most patients undergoing septal myectomy for relief of obstruction required resection beyond the basal septum. With specialized instrumentation, detailed imaging and knowledge of variable septal anatomy, resecting midventricular and apical septal muscle can be safely and effectively achieved through a transaortic approach.
PubMed: 38692479
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2024.04.016 -
Thoracic Cancer Jun 2024Solitary pulmonary papillomas (SPPs) are rare lung neoplasms. Histologically, SPP is classified into three subtypes, and mixed squamous and glandular papilloma (MP) is...
Solitary pulmonary papillomas (SPPs) are rare lung neoplasms. Histologically, SPP is classified into three subtypes, and mixed squamous and glandular papilloma (MP) is the rarest subtype. Although SPPs are considered benign tumors, there have been several reports on the synchronous malignant transformation in SPPs. An 82-year-old asymptomatic man was referred to our hospital for further examination of a 2.2 cm-sized left lung tumor. Pathology of bronchoscopic specimens showed the possibility of pulmonary papilloma but did not reveal any malignancy. The patient complained of bloody sputum during the eighth month after the initial visit. The size of the lesion had increased to 4.3 cm. These data suggested the existence of malignancy, and the patient underwent an operation. Histologically, the tumor was composed of fibrovascular cores and papillomatous fronds lined by pseudostratified columnar cells and mucin-filled goblet cells. Keratinizing squamous epithelium was also observed. Overall, the diagnosis of MP was obtained by fundamental histology. In addition, a solid part beneath mild atypical squamous epithelia, which was composed of malignant-appearing squamous cells and spindle-shaped atypical cells, was observed. The spindle portion was positive for cytokeratin AE1/AE3 and vimentin, and focally positive for alpha-smooth muscle actin (αSMA). The final diagnosis was pulmonary pleomorphic carcinoma (PPC) arising in the MP. Only two cases have been reported for atypical spindle tumor cells that are found in MP or bronchiolar adenoma/ciliated muconodular papillary tumor (BA/CMPT), which has histologically similar features to MP. This is the second case report of PPC arising in MP.
Topics: Humans; Male; Papilloma; Lung Neoplasms; Aged, 80 and over; Carcinoma, Squamous Cell
PubMed: 38690654
DOI: 10.1111/1759-7714.15322 -
International Journal of Surgical... Apr 2024Papillary urothelial carcinomas are currently graded as either low- or high-grade tumors based on World Health Organization (WHO) 2022 guidelines for genitourinary...
Papillary urothelial carcinomas are currently graded as either low- or high-grade tumors based on World Health Organization (WHO) 2022 guidelines for genitourinary tumors. However, a minority of tumors are mixed-grade tumors, composed predominantly of low-grade cancer with a minor high-grade component. In the 2022 WHO these cancers are recognized as having outcomes comparable to low-grade cancers, although data to date has been limited. The pathology records of a large academic institution were searched for mixed-grade, non-muscle invasive papillary carcinomas of the bladder and ureter in order to characterize prognosis of these cancers. . Of 136 cancers, the majority (n = 104, 76.5%) were solitary, mixed-grade tumors, while 21 (15.4%) had a concurrent low-grade cancer and 11 (8.1%) had multiple mixed-grade tumors at the time of diagnosis. At follow-up (median 48.3 months, range = 1.3 months-18.1 years), 71 cancers recurred (52.2%): 52 (38.2%) as low- or mixed-grade cancers and 18 (13.2%) as high-grade cancers. There were no instances of stage-progression to T2. . The clinical outcome of mixed-grade carcinomas was similar to what has been reported for low-grade carcinomas. Based on our results, and prior congruent studies of mixed-grade lesions, these lesions may be regarded as a distinct sub-category with a better prognosis than high-grade tumors.
PubMed: 38689480
DOI: 10.1177/10668969241246492 -
The Journal of Physiology Apr 2024Mechanical load is a potent regulator of cardiac structure and function. Although high workload during heart failure is associated with disruption of cardiomyocyte...
Mechanical load is a potent regulator of cardiac structure and function. Although high workload during heart failure is associated with disruption of cardiomyocyte t-tubules and Ca homeostasis, it remains unclear whether changes in preload and afterload may promote adaptive t-tubule remodelling. We examined this issue by first investigating isolated effects of stepwise increases in load in cultured rat papillary muscles. Both preload and afterload increases produced a biphasic response, with the highest t-tubule densities observed at moderate loads, whereas excessively low and high loads resulted in low t-tubule levels. To determine the baseline position of the heart on this bell-shaped curve, mice were subjected to mildly elevated preload or afterload (1 week of aortic shunt or banding). Both interventions resulted in compensated cardiac function linked to increased t-tubule density, consistent with ascension up the rising limb of the curve. Similar t-tubule proliferation was observed in human patients with moderately increased preload or afterload (mitral valve regurgitation, aortic stenosis). T-tubule growth was associated with larger Ca transients, linked to upregulation of L-type Ca channels, Na-Ca exchanger, mechanosensors and regulators of t-tubule structure. By contrast, marked elevation of cardiac load in rodents and patients advanced the heart down the declining limb of the t-tubule-load relationship. This bell-shaped relationship was lost in the absence of electrical stimulation, indicating a key role of systolic stress in controlling t-tubule plasticity. In conclusion, modest augmentation of workload promotes compensatory increases in t-tubule density and Ca cycling, whereas this adaptation is reversed in overloaded hearts during heart failure progression. KEY POINTS: Excised papillary muscle experiments demonstrated a bell-shaped relationship between cardiomyocyte t-tubule density and workload (preload or afterload), which was only present when muscles were electrically stimulated. The in vivo heart at baseline is positioned on the rising phase of this curve because moderate increases in preload (mice with brief aortic shunt surgery, patients with mitral valve regurgitation) resulted in t-tubule growth. Moderate increases in afterload (mice and patients with mild aortic banding/stenosis) similarly increased t-tubule density. T-tubule proliferation was associated with larger Ca transients, with upregulation of the L-type Ca channel, Na-Ca exchanger, mechanosensors and regulators of t-tubule structure. By contrast, marked elevation of cardiac load in rodents and patients placed the heart on the declining phase of the t-tubule-load relationship, promoting heart failure progression. The dependence of t-tubule structure on preload and afterload thus enables both compensatory and maladaptive remodelling, in rodents and humans.
PubMed: 38686538
DOI: 10.1113/JP284566