26 research outputs found

    Incidence et pronostic des métastases ganglionnaires dans les sarcomes des membres

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    Introduction : Bien que rares chez l'adulte, les sarcomes des tissus mous restent une maladie au pronostic très sombre. En effet, leur survie globale à 5 ans est de 50 % chez la femme et de 41 % chez l'homme. De plus, ils sont particulièrement difficiles à traiter, en raison de leur agressivité, de leur résistance face aux chimiothérapies et à la radiothérapie et d'autre part leur localisation conduit souvent à des opérations mutilantes. Pour les sarcomes des membres, il existe une opération appelée perfusion isolée du membre (ILP). Cela consiste à réaliser une chimiothérapie par voie intra-artérielle, en isolant le membre qui est perfusé par une solution Melphalan et de Tumor Necrosis Factor α à l'aide d'une circulation extra-corporelle pour son oxygénation. Ce type de traitement est à visée palliative, évitant une amputation du membre atteint. Pour accéder aux vaisseaux permettant la canulation de la pompe, un curage ganglionnaire est généralement effectué. Patients et méthode : Pour cette étude rétrospective, nous avons analysé la base de données des 278 ILP réalisées au Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV) à Lausanne depuis mai 1988. Nous avons extrait et analysé de cette étude rétrospective 57 ILP réalisées pour des sarcomes. L'étude porte sur 52 patients traités entre le 19 février 1992 et le 14 décembre 2011, après avoir exclu les patients n'ayant pas bénéficié d'un curage ganglionnaire et la seconde ILP pour 4 patients qui en ont eu 2. Pour chacun de ces patients, les protocoles opératoires, les rapports d'examens radiologiques ainsi que les rapports de pathologies ont été revus et analysés. Nous avons également effectué une revue de la littérature sur PubMed. Résultats : Il y avait 28 hommes (53.8%) et 24 femmes (46.2 %). L'âge moyen au moment de l'ILP était de 56,7 ans (écart-type 16,8). Seul 3 patients sur les 52 avaient des métastases à distance au moment du diagnostic. Le curage ganglionnaire radical a montré que 13 patients (25 %) avaient une atteinte des ganglions lymphatiques (N+). Parmi les types histologiques qui ont présenté au moins une métastase ganglionnaire, on retrouve 2 léomyosarcomes, 2 sarcomes indifférenciés (anciennement MFH), 3 sarcomes épithélioïdes, 4 angiosarcomes et 2 synoviosarcomes. Pour les patients N0, la survie globale moyenne estimée par la méthode de Kaplan et Meier a été de 95,98 mois (CI 95% 66,72-125,23 mois). Pour les patients N1 la survie globale moyenne a chuté à 28,72 mois (CI 95% 6,48-50,97). Le test du Log Rank donne un Chi2 de 9,659 (P=0,002). La moyenne de survie sans maladie a été de 38,03 mois pour le groupe (N0) et de 10,87 mois pour le groupe N1, (CI 95 % 25,75-50,3 et 1,87-19,88 respectivement) et une valeur de P= 0.006. Nous n'avons pas mis en évidence de différence de survie statistiquement significative (P=0.946) entre les types ou les grades histologiques, en raison de la taille du collectif. Conclusion : Bien que rares, les métastases ganglionnaires des sarcomes des membres ont un impact négatif sur la survie à long terme du patient. Les résultats obtenus montrent qu'un curage peut participer au traitement régional et confirme la nécessité de pratiquer systématiquement une lymphadénectomie radicale en vue d'offrir les meilleures chances de survie au patient. Il faudrait donc se poser la question si la présence de métastases ganglionnaires ne devrait pas modifier la prise en charge pour tendre vers un traitement plus agressif chez de tels patients. Ce qui n'est pas le cas à l'heure actuelle

    Coordination pattern adaptability: energy cost of degenerate behaviors.

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    This study investigated behavioral adaptability, which could be defined as a blend between stability and flexibility of the limbs movement and their inter-limb coordination, when individuals received informational constraints. Seven expert breaststroke swimmers performed three 200-m in breaststroke at constant submaximal intensity. Each trial was performed randomly in a different coordination pattern: 'freely-chosen', 'maximal glide' and 'minimal glide'. Two underwater and four aerial cameras enabled 3D movement analysis in order to assess elbow and knee angles, elbow-knee pair coordination, intra-cyclic velocity variations of the center of mass, stroke rate and stroke length and inter-limb coordination. The energy cost of locomotion was calculated from gas exchanges and blood lactate concentration. The results showed significantly higher glide, intra-cyclic velocity variations and energy cost under 'maximal glide' compared to 'freely-chosen' instructional conditions, as well as higher reorganization of limb movement and inter-limb coordination (p<0.05). In the 'minimal glide' condition, the swimmers did not show significantly shorter glide and lower energy cost, but they exhibited significantly lower deceleration of the center of mass, as well as modified limb movement and inter-limb coordination (p<0.05). These results highlight that a variety of structural adaptations can functionally satisfy the task-goal

    ERAS® protocol improves survival after radical cystectomy: A single-center cohort study.

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    To evaluate Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS®) protocol on oncological outcomes for patients treated with radical cystectomy (RC) for urothelial carcinoma of the bladder (UCB). A prospectively maintained single-institutional database comprising 160 consecutive UCB patients who underwent open RC from 2012 to 2020 was analyzed. Patients receiving chemotherapy and those with a urinary diversion other than ileal conduit were excluded. Patients were divided into two groups according to the perioperative management (ERAS® and pre-ERAS®). The study aimed to evaluate the impact of the ERAS® protocol on survival at five years after surgery using a Kaplan-Meier log-rank test. A multivariable Cox proportional hazards model was used to identify prognostic factors for cancer-specific (CSS) and overall survival (OS). Of the 107 patients considered for the final analysis, 74 (69%) were included in the ERAS® group. Median follow-up for patients alive at last follow-up was 28 months (interquartile range [IQR] 12-48). Five-years CSS rate was 74% for ERAS® patients, compared to 48% for the control population (P = 0.02), while 5-years OS was 31% higher in the ERAS® (67% vs. 36%, P = .003). In the multivariable analysis, ERAS® protocol and tumor stage were independent factors of CSS, while ERAS®, tumor stage so as total blood loss were independent factors for OS. A dedicated ERAS® protocol for UCB patients treated with RC has a significant impact on survival. Reduction of stress after a major surgery and its potential improvement of perioperative patient's immunity may explain these data

    Occurrence and prognosis of lymph node metastases in patients selected for isolated limb perfusion with soft tissue sarcoma.

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    <b> <i>Background and Objectives:</i> </b> Extensive surgery is often required for advanced soft tissue sarcoma (STS) of the limb. In the 1980s, a new approach was developed: isolated limb perfusion (ILP). This study aimed to assess incidence and impact on patient survival based on lymph node metastasis with systematic radical lymphadenectomy during ILP. <b> <i>Methods:</i> </b> Retrospective study of 57 consecutive patients treated by ILP for limb STS with simultaneous radical lymph node dissection in our tertiary referral center between 1992 and 2015. <b> <i>Results:</i> </b> Median age was 62 years (19-87) and 30 patients were male (53%). Lymph node involvement was observed in 13 patients (N1, 23%), regarded as metastatic spreading in 4 angiosarcomas, 3 epithelioid sarcomas, 2 leiomyosarcomas, 2 undifferentiated sarcomas and 2 synovial sarcomas. For the N0 patient group, median survival was 73.9 months (CI 95% 41.9-105.9) compared to 15.1 months (CI 95% 7.4-22.6) in case of metastatic lymph node ( <i>p</i> =0.002). The median disease-free survival was 33,0 months (CI 95% 12,5-53.5) in N0 group and 8.0 months (CI 95% 4.0-11.9) in N1 ( <i>p</i> =0.006). <b> <i>Conclusions:</i> </b> Lymph node metastases of STS patients selected for ILP seemed to have a negative impact on both overall and disease-free survival. Radical lymph node dissection should be included in ILP procedure

    Towards estimation of front-crawl energy expenditure using the wearable aquatic movement analysis system (WAMAS)

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    Inertial measurement unit (IMU) is a promising tool in the quantification of energy expenditure for human on-land activities, though has never been deployed before to calculate the aquatic activities energy expenditure. Investigating the factors that influence the required energy in aquatic locomotion can help the biomecanicians to better understand the biophysics of swimming. We used a set of three waterproofed IMUs worn on the forearms and sacrum of twelve swimmers to estimate the front-crawl energy expenditure. The swimmers performed three 300-m trials at 70%, 80% and 90% of their 400-m personal best time. At the end of each 300-m the reference value of energy expenditure was measured based on indirect calorimetry and blood lactate concentration. The three IMUs were used to extract the main spatio-temporal determinants of the front-crawl energy expenditure. Extraction of these parameters using IMU was previously validated. We used a combination of a linear estimator and kernel smoother on the residuals of the linear part to derive the mapping between the spatio-temporal inputs and reference energy expenditure. The algorithm validation on test data shows a strong association between the estimated and reference energy expenditure (Spearman's rho = 0.97, p-value <0.001) and a high relative precision of 9.7%

    Front-Crawl propulsive phase detection using inertial sensors

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    Front crawl is an alternating swimming stroke technique in which different phases of arm movement induce changes in acceleration of limbs and body. This study proposes a new approach to use inertial body worn sensors to estimate main temporal phases of front crawl. Distinctive features in kinematic signals are used to detect the temporal phases. These temporal phases are key information sources of qualitative and quantitative evaluation of swimming coordination, which have been assessed previously by video analysis. The present method has been evaluated upon a wide range of coordination and showed a difference of 4.9% with video based system. The results are in line with video analysis inter-operator variability yet offering an easy-to-use system for trainers

    Is Continuous Wound Infiltration a Better Option for Postoperative Pain Management after Open Nephrectomy Compared to Thoracic Epidural Analgesia?

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    Despite increasingly advanced minimally invasive percutaneous ablation techniques, surgery remains the only evidence-based therapy in curative intent for larger (&gt;3-4 cm) renal tumors. Although minimally invasive surgery using (robotic-assisted) laparoscopic or retroperitoneoscopic approaches has gained popularity, open nephrectomy (ON) is still performed in 25% of cases, especially in tumors with central localization (partial ON) or large tumors with/without cava thrombus (total ON). As postoperative pain is one of the drawbacks of ON, our study aims to assess recovery and post-operative pain management using continuous wound infiltration (CWI) compared to thoracic epidural analgesia (TEA). Since 2012, all patients undergoing ON at our tertiary cancer center at CHUV have been included in our prospective ERAS &lt;sup&gt;®&lt;/sup&gt; (enhanced recovery after surgery) registry that is centrally stored in ERAS &lt;sup&gt;®&lt;/sup&gt; Interactive Audit System (EIAS) secured server. This study represents an analysis of all patients operated on with partial or total ON at our center between 2012 and 2022. An additional analysis was performed for the estimations of the total cost of CWI and TEA, based on the diagnosis-related group method. 92 patients were included and analyzed in this analysis (n = 64 (70%) with CWI; n = 28 (30%) with TEA). Adequate oral pain control was earlier achieved in the CWI group compared to the TEA group (median 3 vs. 4 days; p = 0.001), whereas immediate postoperative pain relief was better in the TEA group (p = 0.002). Consequently, opioid use was higher in the CWI group (p = 0.004). Still, reported nausea was lower in the CWI group (p = 0.002). Median time to bowel recovery was similar in both groups (p = 0.03). A shorter LOS (0.5 days) was observed in patients managed with CWI, although this was not statistically significant (p = 0.06). The use of CWI has reduced total hospital costs by nearly 40%. TEA has better results in terms of postoperative pain management compared to CWI following ON. However, CWI is better tolerated, and causes less nausea and earlier recovery, which leads to a shorter length of stay. Given its simplicity and cost-effectiveness, CWI should be encouraged for ON

    Automatic front-crawl temporal phase detection using adaptive filtering of inertial signals

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    This study introduces a novel approach for automatic temporal phase detection and inter-arm coordination estimation in front-crawl swimming using inertial measurement units (IMUs). We examined the validity of our method by comparison against a video-based system. Three waterproofed IMUs (composed of 3D accelerometer, 3D gyroscope) were placed on both forearms and the sacrum of the swimmer. We used two underwater video cameras in side and frontal views as our reference system. Two independent operators performed the video analysis. To test our methodology, seven well-trained swimmers performed three 300 m trials in a 50 m indoor pool. Each trial was in a different coordination mode quantified by the index of coordination. We detected different phases of the arm stroke by employing orientation estimation techniques and a new adaptive change detection algorithm on inertial signals. The difference of 0.2 +/- 3.9% between our estimation and video-based system in assessment of the index of coordination was comparable to experienced operators' difference (1.1 +/- 3.6%). The 95% limits of agreement of the difference between the two systems in estimation of the temporal phases were always less than 7.9% of the cycle duration. The inertial system offers an automatic easy-to-use system with timely feedback for the study of swimming

    Inter-limb coordination and energy cost in swimming.

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    OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the relationship between inter-arm coordination and the energy cost of locomotion in front crawl and breaststroke and explored swimmers' flexibility in adapting their motor organization away from their preferred movement pattern. DESIGN: Nine front-crawlers performed three 300-m in front crawl and 8 breaststrokers performed three 200-m in breaststroke at constant submaximal intensity and with 5-min rests. Each trial was performed randomly in a different coordination pattern: freely chosen, 'maximal glide' and 'minimal glide'. Two underwater cameras videotaped frontal and side views to analyze speed, stroke rate, stroke length and inter-limb coordination. METHODS: In front crawl, inter-arm coordination was quantified by the index of coordination (IdC) and the leg beat kicks were counted. In breaststroke, four time gaps quantified the arm to leg coordination (i.e., time between leg and arm propulsions; time between beginning, 90° flexion and end of arm and leg recoveries). The energy cost of locomotion was calculated from gas exchanges and blood lactate concentration. RESULTS: In both front crawl and breaststroke, the freely chosen coordination corresponded to glide pattern and showed the lowest energy cost (12.8 and 17.1Jkg(-1)m(-1), respectively). Both front-crawlers and breaststrokers were able to reach 'maximal glide' condition (respectively, +35% and +28%) but not 'minimal glide' condition for front crawl. CONCLUSIONS: The freely chosen pattern appeared more economic because more trained. When coordination was constrained, the swimmers had higher coordination flexibility in breaststroke than in front crawl, suggesting that breaststroke coordination was easier to regulate by changing glide time
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