Femoral head fractures (FHF) are uncommon and generally caused by high-energy injuries. Surgical reduction with stable fixation of large fragments is believed to have the best outcomes. This retrospective study intended to report outcomes with surgical treatment at our institution and tried to establish treatment algorithm.
Through the 6-year period (2003-2008), 35 FHF in 35 consecutive patients (average, 30 years) were surgically treated. All FHF were caused by high-energy trauma. Patients' general condition was stabilized first and hip dislocation was manually reduced immediately. Definite fracture treatment was scheduled after admission for an average of 2.9 days (0.3-11 days). Pipkin classification was used as the treatment guide and open reduction with internal fixation was performed in all 35 FHF.
These FHF included 21 type I, 7 type II, 3 type III, and 4 type IV fractures. The hip joint had been approached by either an anterior or posterior route depending on the individual surgeon. Internal fixan reduction and screw fixation. Our results by using conventional approaches were associated with high complication rates. Further endeavor to improve the outcome should be taken.
Drug-induced-sedation endoscopy (DISE) has proved superior to awake clinical examination for diagnosis of upper-airway obstruction sites and surgical planning. Our question is does multilevel obstruction on DISE systematically entail failure for surgery limited to the upper pharynx?
We conducted a retrospective single-center study in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) treated by single-level surgery of the upper pharynx (tonsillectomy with or without pharyngoplasty). Preoperative assessment included polysomnography (PSG) and DISE. Surgical efficacy was assessed on postoperative PSG. Treatment response was defined by postoperative apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) <20 events/h with 50% reduction, and cure by AHI <10 (patients with preoperative AHI ≤10 being excluded). Efficacy was compared between groups without (group A) and with basilingual or laryngeal collapsus on DISE (group B).
We analyzed 63 patients, with mean preoperative AHI 33.8±17.9 events/h. The two groups (A, n=36; B, n=27) were clinically comparable. Postoperative PSG took place at a mean 8.5 ± 11.5 months. The success rate was 66.7% in group A (mean reduction in AHI, 57.3±36.2%) and 59.3% in group B (mean reduction, 53.9±39.2%). Cure rates were respectively 48.5% and 48.1%. There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups (P>0.1).
Oropharyngeal surgery can alleviate associated obstructive sites found on DISE in the lower pharynx, and step-by-step treatment shows efficacy equal to that of single-step multilevel surgery.
Oropharyngeal surgery can alleviate associated obstructive sites found on DISE in the lower pharynx, and step-by-step treatment shows efficacy equal to that of single-step multilevel surgery.
COVID-19 altered medical education systems worldwide as many medical schools quickly changed to online assessment systems. However, the feasibility of online assessment and how it compares to traditional examinations is unclear.
We compared 4
year medical students' online surgery clerkship assessment scores to the traditional written examinations. The percent of correct scores using online open-book examination was compared to the results of the traditional closed-book examination in the previous three rotations. Amenamevir mouse Additional correlation between grade point average(GPA) and examination performance were reviewed.
Compared with the traditional groups, medical students who took the online, open-book examination had a significantly higher mean score in both MCQ(85.21 vs. 77.36, 72.43, 83.00, p<0.001) and essay examinations (187.36 vs. 158.77, 152.17, 152.29, p<0.001), but a significantly lower mean score in short answer examination (60.09 vs. 66.79, 67.73, 64.82, p<0.001). The online open-book examination group had a significantly lower correlation between the essay score and their GPA than the previous traditional groups (z=2.81 p=0.005, z=2.23 p=0.026, z=2.19 p=0.029).
Although an online, open-book examination was feasible during the COVID-19 pandemic, this study indicates that mean scores are significantly different which has important implications regarding grading and standard setting. More research is required to assess other effects of this new assessment on long-term knowledge retention and application.
Although an online, open-book examination was feasible during the COVID-19 pandemic, this study indicates that mean scores are significantly different which has important implications regarding grading and standard setting. More research is required to assess other effects of this new assessment on long-term knowledge retention and application.Tibialis posterior tendon dislocation, a rare complication in ankle fracture-dislocations, can impede anatomical reduction of the ankle mortise. We report on a 59-year-old healthy male with an open fracture-dislocation of the right ankle. Despite multiple attempts under direct vision of the anterior syndesmosis, anatomical reduction of the ankle mortise was not possible. Soft tissue windows in a computed tomography (CT) scan revealed the dislocated tibialis posterior tendon to be the impeding structure. At the level of the fibula fracture the tendon passed through the interosseous membrane anterior to the distal tibia and was then incarcerated in the medial talocrural joint before returning to the flexor retinaculum and its insertion on the navicular bone. Understanding the trauma mechanism and the course of the dislocated tendon as well as correct interpretation of CT and magnetic resonance images of the ankle enable surgeons to early diagnose and correctly treat this condition.
This study aimed to determine the histological, biochemical, and biomechanical efficacy of fibrin clot and vitamin C in the healing of Achilles tendon ruptures (ATR) in a rat model.
52 adult Wistar-Albino rats (300-450 g) were used in the study. 12 rats were divided into four groups as Monitor (Group I), Control (Group II), Fibrin Clot (Group III), Fibrin Clot with vitamin C (Group IV). Four rats were used for fibrin clot preparation. Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) were measured on the 3rd, 7th, 14th, and 21st days. Four rats were sacrificed on the 21st day from each group for histological evaluation. The rest of the rats were sacrificed at 42nd day, half for biomechanical and a half for histological evaluation.
The 42nd-day HSS score of group IV was significantly lower than those of group I, group II and group III (p = 0.036, p = 0.019, and p = 0.036, respectively). Group IV showed a significantly higher Maximum force N value than those of group I, group II and group III (p = 0.Amenamevir mouse
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