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The Journal of Craniofacial Surgery Jul 2024In children with large soft tissue defects of the foot and ankle, it is difficult to cover the wound completely using a local skin flap, and skin grafting of the donor...
In children with large soft tissue defects of the foot and ankle, it is difficult to cover the wound completely using a local skin flap, and skin grafting of the donor area for repair causes secondary damage. Free skin flaps require good vascular anastomoses and are prone to vascular crises. The authors evaluated the effectiveness and safety of cross-inguinal flaps for the repair of large soft tissue defects of the foot and ankle in children. The records of 15 children who underwent cross-groin flap transplantation between June 2017 and June 2021 were analyzed retrospectively. All the flaps survived without infection, necrosis, or other complications. The flap shape was good, the donor area was sutured directly, and the damage was minimal. This surgical method is simple, effective, and safe and can replace microsurgery, making it suitable for use in primary-level hospitals that are not equipped for microscopic surgery.
PubMed: 38949509
DOI: 10.1097/SCS.0000000000010427 -
EuroIntervention : Journal of EuroPCR... Jul 2024Periprocedural stroke after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) remains a significant issue, which is associated with high morbidity, and is increasingly... (Review)
Review
Periprocedural stroke after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) remains a significant issue, which is associated with high morbidity, and is increasingly important as intervention shifts to younger and lower-risk populations. Over the last decade of clinical experience with TAVI, the incidence of periprocedural stroke has stayed largely unchanged, although it is prone to underreporting due to variation in ascertainment methods. The aetiology of stroke in TAVI patients is multifactorial, and changing risk profiles, differing study populations, and frequent device iterations have made it difficult to discern consistent risk factors. The objective of this review is to analyse and clarify the contemporary published literature on the epidemiology and mechanisms of neurological events in TAVI patients and evaluate potential preventive measures. This summary aims to improve patient risk assessment and refine case selection for cerebral embolic protection devices, while also providing a foundation for designing future trials focused on stroke prevention.
Topics: Humans; Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement; Risk Factors; Stroke; Aortic Valve Stenosis; Risk Assessment; Aortic Valve; Incidence; Treatment Outcome; Embolic Protection Devices
PubMed: 38949240
DOI: 10.4244/EIJ-D-23-01087 -
Zhonghua Kou Qiang Yi Xue Za Zhi =... Jul 2024Congenital tooth agenesis is a type of craniofacial developmental anomaly with reduced number of teeth, which is caused by disturbances in tooth germ development. If the...
Congenital tooth agenesis is a type of craniofacial developmental anomaly with reduced number of teeth, which is caused by disturbances in tooth germ development. If the number of missing teeth is less than six (excluding the third molars), it is termed as hypodontia. The second premolars are most commonly affected. When the second premolars are missing, the second primary molars are more prone to suffer from retention, infraocclusion, caries, pulpitis, or periapical periodontitis. Without timely prevention and appropriate treatment, congenital loss of second premolars may cause adverse effects on the patients' tooth arrangement, occlusal function, craniofacial development, and even future prosthetic treatment. This review summarises the aetiological and diagnostic features of the agenesis of second premolars, and discusses the clinical considerations of retaining or extracting the second primary molars without permanent tooth germs, when the absence of permanent tooth germs is fully established or not, so as to provide references for dentists.
PubMed: 38949144
DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.cn112144-20240317-00113 -
International Journal of Chronic... 2024This study conducted a pharmacovigilance analysis based on the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database to compare the infection risk of inhaled or nasal... (Comparative Study)
Comparative Study
PURPOSE
This study conducted a pharmacovigilance analysis based on the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database to compare the infection risk of inhaled or nasal Beclomethasone, Fluticasone, Budesonide, Ciclesonide, Mometasone, and Triamcinolone Acetonide.
METHODS
We used proportional imbalance analysis to evaluate the correlation between ICS /INCs and infection events. The data was extracted from the FAERS database from April 2015 to September 2023. Further analysis was conducted on the clinical characteristics, site of infection, and pathogenic bacteria of ICS and INCs infection adverse events (AEs). We used bubble charts to display their top 5 infection adverse events.
RESULTS
We analyzed 21,837 reports of infection AEs related to ICS and INCs, with an average age of 62.12 years. Among them, 61.14% of infection reports were related to females. One-third of infections reported to occur in the lower respiratory tract with Fluticasone, Budesonide, Ciclesonidec, and Mometasone; over 40% of infections reported by Triamcinolone Acetonide were eye infections; the rate of oral infections caused by Beclomethasone were 7.39%. The reported rates of fungal and viral infections caused by beclomethasone were 21.15% and 19.2%, respectively. The mycobacterial infections caused by Budesonide and Ciclesonidec account for 3.29% and 2.03%, respectively. Bubble plots showed that the ICS group had more fungal infections, oral infections, pneumonia, tracheitis, etc. The INCs group had more eye symptoms, rhinitis, sinusitis, nasopharyngitis, etc.
CONCLUSION
Women who use ICS and INCs are more prone to infection events. Compared to Budesonide, Fluticasone seemed to have a higher risk of pneumonia and oral candidiasis. Mometasone might lead to more upper respiratory tract infections. The risk of oral infection was higher with Beclomethasone. Beclomethasone causes more fungal and viral infections, while Ciclesonide and Budesonide are more susceptible to mycobacterial infections.
Topics: Humans; Female; Middle Aged; Male; Administration, Inhalation; Pharmacovigilance; Databases, Factual; United States; Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems; Risk Factors; Aged; Administration, Intranasal; Risk Assessment; Adult; Adrenal Cortex Hormones; United States Food and Drug Administration; Respiratory Tract Infections
PubMed: 38948909
DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S466588 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Jun 2024Endothelial tissues are essential mechanosensors in the vasculature and facilitate adaptation to various blood flow-induced mechanical cues. Defects in endothelial...
Endothelial tissues are essential mechanosensors in the vasculature and facilitate adaptation to various blood flow-induced mechanical cues. Defects in endothelial mechanoresponses can perturb tissue remodelling and functions leading to cardiovascular disease progression. In this context, the precise mechanisms of endothelial mechanoresponses contributing to normal and diseased tissue functioning remain elusive. Here, we sought to uncover how flow-mediated transcriptional regulation drives endothelial mechanoresponses in healthy and atherosclerotic-prone tissues. Using bulk RNA sequencing, we identify novel mechanosensitive genes in response to healthy unidirectional flow (UF) and athero-prone disturbed flow (DF). We find that the transcription as well as protein expression of Four-and-a-half LIM protein 2 (FHL2) are enriched in athero-prone DF both and . We then demonstrate that the exogenous expression of FHL2 is necessary and sufficient to drive discontinuous adherens junction morphology and increased tissue permeability. This athero-prone phenotype requires the force-sensitive binding of FHL2 to actin. In turn, the force-dependent localisation of FHL2 to stress fibres promotes microtubule dynamics to release the RhoGEF, GEF-H1, and activate the Rho-ROCK pathway. Thus, we unravelled a novel mechanochemical feedback wherein force-dependent FHL2 localisation promotes hypercontractility. This misregulated mechanoresponse creates highly permeable tissues, depicting classic hallmarks of atherosclerosis progression. Overall, we highlight crucial functions for the FHL2 force-sensitivity in tuning multi-scale endothelial mechanoresponses.
PubMed: 38948838
DOI: 10.1101/2024.06.16.599227 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Jun 2024The extent to which live orally-administered rotavirus (RV) vaccines elicit protective immunity is highly heterogeneous. We hypothesized microbiota composition might...
BACKGROUND & AIMS
The extent to which live orally-administered rotavirus (RV) vaccines elicit protective immunity is highly heterogeneous. We hypothesized microbiota composition might influence vaccine efficacy.
METHODS
We tested this concept by examining extent to which colonizing mice with segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB) influenced RV vaccine efficacy.Influence of human microbiomes on RV vaccination was studied via administering germ-free mice fecal microbial transplants (FMT) from children with robust or minimal RV vaccine responsiveness. Post-FMT, mice were subjected to vaccination and challenge doses of RV.
RESULTS
SFB administration resulted in a phenotype reminiscent of RV vaccine failure, i.e. minimal generation of RV antigens and, consequently, lack of anti-RV antibodies resulting in proneness to RV challenge once SFB levels diminished. Transplant of microbiomes from children to mice recapitulated donor vaccination phenotype. Specifically, mice receiving FMT from high-responding children exhibited high levels of fecal RV antigen shedding and RV antibodies in response to RV vaccination and, concomitantly, were impervious to RV challenge. In contrast, mice receiving FMT from children who had not responded to RV vaccination exhibited only modest responses to RV challenge and, accordingly, remained prone to RV challenge. Microbiome analysis ruled out a role for SFB but suggested that RV vaccine failure might involve . Oral administration of cultured to gnotobiotic mice partially recapitulated the RV vaccine non-responder phenotype. Analysis of previously-reported microbiome data found C. perfringens abundance in children associated with RV vaccine failure.
CONCLUSION
Microbiota composition influences RV vaccine virus infection and, consequently, protective immunity. may be one, perhaps of many, bacterial species harbored in the intestine of RV-vaccine non-responders that influences RV vaccine outcomes.
PubMed: 38948828
DOI: 10.1101/2024.06.17.599343 -
Journal of Family Medicine and Primary... May 2024Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a life-threatening condition affecting individuals with diabetes characterised by hyperglycaemia, metabolic acidosis and ketonemia. The... (Review)
Review
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a life-threatening condition affecting individuals with diabetes characterised by hyperglycaemia, metabolic acidosis and ketonemia. The incidence and financial burden of DKA is still high. Thiamine deficiency is well documented in patients with DKA and could be associated with cardiac dysfunction in those patients. Thiamine deficiency leads to cardiac dysfunction, neuronal death and worsens the prognosis of DKA. There is an existing metabolic relationship between thiamine deficiency in diabetes, obesity and bariatric surgery. Careful monitoring of thiamine, along with other vitamins, is essential for diabetic patients, obese individuals and postbariatric surgery. Further research and clinical studies are urgently needed to assess the following: (1) Whether diabetes, obesity and bariatric surgery make individuals more prone to have DKA related to thiamine deficiency and (2) Whether supplementation of thiamine can protect diabetic patients, obese subjects and individuals undergoing bariatric surgery from DKA. This review summarises the biochemistry of thiamine and the existing metabolic relationships between thiamine deficiency in DKA, diabetes, obesity and bariatric surgery. Primary and family physicians have an important role in ensuring adequate replacement of thiamine in individuals with diabetes, obesity and bariatric surgery.
PubMed: 38948636
DOI: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1413_23 -
Sichuan Da Xue Xue Bao. Yi Xue Ban =... May 2024Ultrasound diagnosis and treatment is easy to perform and takes little time. It is widely used in clinical practice thanks to its non-invasive, real-time, and dynamic...
OBJECTIVE
Ultrasound diagnosis and treatment is easy to perform and takes little time. It is widely used in clinical practice thanks to its non-invasive, real-time, and dynamic characteristics. In the process of ultrasound diagnosis and treatment, the probe may come into contact with the skin, the mucous membranes, and even the sterile parts of the body. However, it is difficult to achieve effective real-time disinfection of the probes after use and the probes are often reused, leading to the possibility of the probes carrying multiple pathogenic bacteria. At present, the processing methods for probes at home and abroad mainly include probe cleaning, probe disinfection, and physical isolation (using probe covers or sheaths). Yet, each approach has its limitations and cannot completely prevent probe contamination and infections caused by ultrasound diagnosis and treatment. For example, when condoms are used as the probe sheath, the rate of condom breakage is relatively high. The cutting and fixing of cling film or freezer bags involves complicated procedures and is difficult to perform. Disposable plastic gloves are prone to falling off and causing contamination and are hence not in compliance with the principles of sterility. Furthermore, the imaging effect of disposable plastic gloves is poor. Therefore, there is an urgent need to explore new materials to make probe covers that can not only wrap tightly around the ultrasound probe, but also help achieve effective protection and rapid reuse. Based on the concept of physical barriers, we developed in this study a heat sealing system for the rapid reuse of ultrasound probes. The system uses a heat sealing device to shrink the protective film so that it wraps tightly against the surface of the ultrasound probe, allowing for the rapid reuse of the probe while reducing the risk of nosocomial infections. The purpose of this study is to design a heat sealing system for the rapid reuse of ultrasound probes and to verify its application effect on the rapid reuse of ultrasound probes.
METHODS
1) The heat sealing system for the rapid reuse of ultrasound probes was designed and tested by integrating medical and engineering methods. The system included a protective film (a multilayer co-extruded polyolefin thermal shrinkable film) and a heat sealing device, which included heating wire components, a blower, a photoelectric switch, temperature sensors, a control and drive circuit board, etc. According to the principle of thermal shrinkage, the ultrasound probe equipped with thermal shrinkable film was rapidly heated and the film would wrap closely around the ultrasound probe placed on the top of the heat sealing machine. The ultrasound probe was ready for use after the thermal shrinkage process finished. Temperature sensors were installed on the surface of the probe to test the thermal insulation performance of the system. The operation procedures of the system are as follows: placing the ultrasound probe covered with the protective film in a certain space above the protective air vent, which is detected by the photoelectric switch; the heating device heats the thermal shrinkable film with a constant flow of hot air at a set temperature value. Then, the probe is rotated so that the thermal shrinkable film will quickly wrap around the ultrasound probe. After the heat shrinking is completed, the probe can be used directly. 2) Using the convenience sampling method, 90 patients from the Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, the First Affiliated Hospital of Xi'an Jiaotong University were included as the research subjects. All patients were going to undergo arterial puncture under ultrasound guidance. The subjects were divided into 3 groups, with 30 patients in each group. Three measures commonly applied in clinical practice were used to process the probes in the three groups and water-soluble fluorescent labeling was applied around the puncture site before use. In the experimental group, the probes were processed with the heat sealing system. The standard operating procedures of the heat sealing system for rapid reuse of ultrasonic probes were performed to cover the ultrasonic probe and form a physical barrier to prevent probe contamination. There were two control groups. In control group 1, disinfection wipes containing double-chain quaternary ammonium salt were used to repeatedly wipe the surface of the probe for 10-15 times, and then the probe was ready for use once it dried up. In the control group 2, a disposable protective sheath was used to cover the front end of the probe and the handle end of the sheath was tied up with threads. Comparison of the water-soluble fluorescent labeling on the surface of the probe (which reflected the colony residues on the surface of the probe) before and after use and the reuse time (i.e., the lapse of time from the end of the first use to the beginning of the second use) were made between the experimental group and the two control groups.
RESULTS
1) The temperature inside the ultrasound probe was below 40 ℃ and the heat sealing system for rapid reuse did not affect the performance of the ultrasound probe. 2) The reuse time in the heat sealing system group, as represented by (median [P, P]), was (8.00 [7.00, 10.00]) s, which was significantly lower than those of the disinfection wipe group at (95.50 [8.00, 214.00]) s and the protective sleeve group at (25.00 [8.00, 51.00]) s, with the differences being statistically significant (<0.05). No fluorescence residue was found on the probe in either the heat sealing system group or the protective sheath group after use. The fluorescence residue in the heat sealing system group was significantly lower than that in the disinfection wipes group, showing statistically significant differences ( =45.882, <0.05).
CONCLUSION
The thermal shrinkable film designed and developed in this study can be cut and trimmed according to the size of the equipment. When the film is heated, it shrinks and wraps tightly around the equipment, forming a sturdy protective layer. With the heat sealing system for rapid reuse of ultrasonic probes, we have realized the semi-automatic connection between the thermal shrinkable film and the heating device, reducing the amount of time-consuming and complicated manual operation. Furthermore, the average reuse time is shortened and the system is easy to use, which contributes to improvements in the reuse and operation efficiency of ultrasound probes. The heat sealing system reduces colony residues on the surface of the probe and forms an effective physical barrier on the probe. No probes were damaged in the study. The heat sealing system for rapid reuse of ultrasonic probes can be used as a new method to process the ultrasonic probes.
Topics: Ultrasonography; Hot Temperature; Equipment Reuse; Humans; Disinfection; Equipment Design; Equipment Contamination
PubMed: 38948302
DOI: 10.12182/20240560202 -
PeerJ 2024Abnormal gait is prevalent among the elderly population, leading to reduced physical activity, increased risk of falls, and the potential development of dementia and...
BACKGROUND
Abnormal gait is prevalent among the elderly population, leading to reduced physical activity, increased risk of falls, and the potential development of dementia and disabilities, thus degrading the quality of life in later years. Numerous studies have highlighted the crucial roles of lower limb muscle strength asymmetry and static postural control in gait, and the reciprocal influence of lower limb muscle strength asymmetry on static postural control. However, research exploring the interrelationship between lower limb muscle strength asymmetry, static postural control, and gait performance has been limited.
METHODS
A total of 55 elderly participants aged 60 to 75 years were recruited. Isokinetic muscle strength testing was used to assess bilateral knee extension strength, and asymmetry values were calculated. Participants with asymmetry greater than 15% were categorized as the Asymmetry Group (AG), while those with asymmetry less than 15% were classified in the Symmetry Group (SG). Gait parameters were measured using a plantar pressure gait analysis system to evaluate gait performance, and static postural control was assessed through comfortable and narrow stance tests.
RESULTS
First, participants in the AG demonstrated inferior gait performance, characterized by slower gait speed, longer stance time and percentage of stance time in gait, and smaller swing time and percentage of swing time in gait. Spatial-temporal gait parameters of the weaker limb tended to be abnormal. Second, static postural control indices were higher in AG compared to SG in all aspects except for the area of ellipse during the comfortable stance with eyes open test. Third, abnormal gait parameters were associated with static postural control.
CONCLUSION
Firstly, elderly individuals with lower limb muscle strength asymmetry are prone to abnormal gait, with the weaker limb exhibiting poorer gait performance. Secondly, lower limb muscle strength asymmetry contributes to diminished static postural control in the elderly. Thirdly, the mechanism underlying abnormal gait in the elderly due to lower limb muscle strength asymmetry may be linked to a decline in static postural control.
Topics: Humans; Aged; Muscle Strength; Male; Female; Postural Balance; Lower Extremity; Gait; Middle Aged
PubMed: 38948226
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.17626 -
International Journal of Integrated Care 2024Complex chronic patients are prone to unplanned hospitalizations leading to a high burden on healthcare systems. To date, interventions to prevent unplanned admissions...
INTRODUCTION
Complex chronic patients are prone to unplanned hospitalizations leading to a high burden on healthcare systems. To date, interventions to prevent unplanned admissions show inconclusive results. We report a qualitative analysis performed into the EU initiative JADECARE (2020-2023) to design a digitally enabled integrated care program aiming at preventing unplanned hospitalizations.
METHODS
A two-phase process with four design thinking (DT) sessions was conducted to analyse the management of complex chronic patients in the region of Catalonia (ES). In Phase I, Discovery, two DT sessions, October 2021 and February 2022, were done using as background information: i) the results of twenty structured interviews (five patients and fifteen professionals), ii) two governmental documents on regional deployment of integrated care and on the Catalan digital health strategy, respectively, and iii) the results of a cluster analysis of 761 hospitalizations. In Phase II, Confirmation, we examined the 30- and 90-day post-discharge periods of 49,604 hospitalizations as input for two additional DT sessions conducted in November and December 2022.
DISCUSSION
The qualitative analysis identified poor personalization of the interventions, the need for organizational changes, immature digitalization, and suboptimal services evaluation as main explanatory factors of the observed efficacy-effectiveness gap. Additionally, a program for prevention of unplanned hospitalizations, to be evaluated during the period 2024-2025, was generated.
CONCLUSIONS
A digitally enabled adaptive case management approach to foster collaborative work and personalization of care, as well as organizational re-engineering, are endorsed for value-based prevention of unplanned hospitalizations.
PubMed: 38948163
DOI: 10.5334/ijic.7724