36 research outputs found

    Scrotal cancer: Incidence, survival and second primary tumours in the Netherlands since 1989

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    Background: Since the 1970s there have been few epidemiological studies of scrotal cancer. We report on the descriptive epidemiology of scrotal cancer in the Netherlands. Methods: Data on all scrotal cancer patients were obtained from the Netherlands Cancer Registry (NCR) in the period 1989-2006 and age-standardised incidence rates were calculated also according to histology and stage. Relative survival was calculated and multiple primary tumours were studied. Results: The overall incidence rate varied around 1.5 per 1 000 000 person-years, most frequently being squamous cell carcinoma (27%), basal cell carcinoma (19%) and Bowen's disease (15%). Overall 5-year relative survival was 82%, being 77% and 95% for patients with squamous and basal cell carcinoma, respectively. In all, 18% of the patients were diagnosed with a second primary tumour. Conclusion: The incidence rate of scrotal cancer did not decrease, although this was expected; affected patients might benefit from regular checkups for possible new cancers

    LEARN 2 MOVE 0-2 years:effects of a new intervention program in infants at very high risk for cerebral palsy; a randomized controlled trial

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    Background: It is widely accepted that infants at risk for cerebral palsy need paediatric physiotherapy. However, there is little evidence for the efficacy of physiotherapeutic intervention. Recently, a new intervention program, COPCA (Coping with and Caring for infants with special needs - a family centered program), was developed. COPCA has educational and motor goals. A previous study indicated that the COPCA-approach is associated with better developmental outcomes for infants at high risk for developmental disorders. LEARN 2 MOVE 0-2 years evaluates the efficacy and the working mechanisms of the COPCA program in infants at very high risk for cerebral palsy in comparison to the efficacy of traditional infant physiotherapy in a randomized controlled trial. The objective is to evaluate the effects of both intervention programs on motor, cognitive and daily functioning of the child and the family and to get insight in the working elements of early intervention methods.Methods/design: Infants are included at the corrected age of 1 to 9 months and randomized into a group receiving COPCA and a group receiving traditional infant physiotherapy. Both interventions are given once a week during one year. Measurements are performed at baseline, during and after the intervention period and at the corrected age of 21 months. Primary outcome of the study is the Infant Motor Profile, a qualitative evaluation instrument of motor behaviour in infancy. Secondary measurements focus on activities and participation, body functions and structures, family functioning, quality of life and working mechanisms. To cope with the heterogeneity in physiotherapy, physiotherapeutic sessions are video-recorded three times (baseline, after 6 months and at the end of the intervention period). Physiotherapeutic actions will be quantified and related to outcome.Discussion: LEARN 2 MOVE 0-2 years evaluates and explores the effects of COPCA and TIP. Whatever the outcome of the project, it will improve our understanding of early intervention in children with cerebral palsy. Such knowledge is a prerequisite for tailor-made guidance of children with CP and their families.Trial registration: The trial is registered under NTR1428.</p

    Morphometric data of canine sacral nerve roots with reference to electrical sacral root stimulation

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    Experiments to investigate restoration of lower urinary tract control by electrical stimulation of the sacral nerve roots are mostly performed on dogs, yet little morphometric data (such as canine root and fiber diameter distributions) are available. The aim of this study was to acquire morphometric data of the intradural canine sacral dorsal and ventral roots (S1-S3). Cross-sections of sacral roots of two beagle dogs were analyzed using a light microscope and image processing software. The cross-sectional area of each root was measured. The diameters of the fibers and the axons in the cross-sections of the S2 and S3 roots were measured and used to construct nerve fiber diameter frequency distribution histograms. The results show a unimodal diameter distribution for the dorsal roots and a bimodal distribution for the ventral roots. In addition the average ratio g of the axon diameter to fiber diameter was calculated for each roo

    Selective sacral root stimulation for bladder control: acute experiments in an animal model

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    High bladder pressure is a potential side effect of poststimulus voiding, used to date for stimulation-induced bladder emptying in spinal cord injured patients. To prevent this side effect, selective activation of the bladder without activation of the urethral sphincter by selective stimulation of sacral roots was studied in a canine animal model. On-line registration of bladder, urethral and rectal pressure was performed, and EMG of tail muscles and urethral sphincter was recorded. After laminectomy, intradural left and right sacral root S2 were stimulated with a tripolar cuff electrode. A self-made stimulator generating adjustable pulse shapes was used. Using 200 microsec. rectangular pulses, contraction of bladder and urethral sphincter could be elicited. Selective activation of the bladder occurred with pulses of 600 to 800 microsec. due to anodal blocking of the large nerve fibers in the sacral roots. During acute animal experiments we were able to achieve selective activation of the detrusor without simultaneous activation of the external urethral sphincter, and complete, low-pressure voiding occurre

    Bladder pressure sensors in an animal model

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    Urinary incontinence due to detrusor hyperreflexia might be inhibited on demand if changes in bladder pressure could be detected by sensors and transferred into pudendal nerve electrostimulation. The aim of this study is to investigate how the bladder wall reacts on different sensor implants. Sensors were implanted in twelve goats. In group 1 (n = 8) real sensors were placed on the peritoneal surface of the bladder dome, between the peritoneum and the muscular layer, and between the cervix and bladder. In group 2 (n = 4), dummy sensors were placed between the mucosal and muscular layers. During follow-up as long as 25 months, urodynamic studies, radiographic control and urine cultures were done. In group 1, sensors placed between the peritoneum and muscular layer gave the best results. In group 2, 11 of the 12 sensors eroded. The authors conclude that implantation of sensors in the bladder wall is feasibl

    Bladder compliance after posterior sacral root rhizotomies and anterior sacral root stimulation

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    To evaluate the effects of central detrusor denervation on bladder compliance, we studied 27 patients with complete suprasacral spinal cord injury in whom intradural posterior sacral root rhizotomies from S2 to S5 in combination with implantation of an intradural Finetech-Brindley bladder stimulator were performed. All patients initially presented with detrusor hyperreflexia. A majority of these patients had a decreased bladder compliance 5 days postoperatively followed by a rapid increase in bladder compliance thereafter. All patients showed persistent detrusor areflexia after long-term followup. In 2 patients incomplete posterior sacral rhizotomies appeared to be performed. These patients had low bladder compliance, so that secondary posterior sacral root rhizotomies at the level of the conus medullaris were done. Intradural rhizotomies of all posterior sacral root components from S2 to S5 in combination with implantation of an anterior sacral root stimulator is a safe and effective procedure in spinal cord injury patient

    Selective stimulation of sacral nerve roots for bladder control: a study by computer modeling

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    The aim of this study was to investigate theoretically the conditions for the activation of the detrusor muscle without activation of the urethral sphincter and afferent fibers, when stimulating the related sacral roots. Therefore, the sensitivity of excitation and blocking thresholds of nerve fibers within a sacral root to geometric and electrical parameters in tripolar stimulation using a cuff electrode, have been stimulated by a computer model. A 3-D rotationally symmetrical model, representing the geometry and electrical conductivity of a nerve root surrounded by cerebrospinal fluid and a cuff was used, in combination with a model representing the electrical properties of a myelinated nerve fiber. The electric behavior of nerve fibers having different diameters and positions in a sacral root was analyzed and the optimal geometric and electrical parameters to be used for sacral root stimulation were determined. The model predicts that an asymmetrical tripolar cuff can generate unidirectional action potentials in small nerve fibers while blocking the large fibers bidirectionally. This result shows that selective activation of the detrusor may be possible without activation of the urethral sphincter and the afferent fiber
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