26 research outputs found

    Cartilage restoration of patellofemoral lesions: a systematic review

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    Purpose This study aimed to systematically analyze the postoperative clinical, functional, and imaging outcomes, complications, reoperations, and failures following patellofemoral cartilage restoration surgery. Methods This review was conducted according to the guidelines of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases were searched up to August 31, 2018, to identify clinical studies that assessed surgical outcomes of patellofemoral cartilage restoration surgery. The Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS) was used to assess study quality. Results Forty-two studies were included comprising 1,311 knees (mean age of 33.7 years and 56% males) and 1,309 patellofemoral defects (891 patella, 254 trochlear, 95 bipolar, and 69 multiple defects, including the patella or trochlea) at a mean follow-up of 59.2 months. Restoration techniques included autologous chondrocyte implantation (56%), particulated juvenile allograft cartilage (12%), autologous matrix-induced chondrogenesis (9%), osteochondral autologous transplantation (9%), and osteochondral allograft transplantation (7%). Significant improvement in at least one score was present in almost all studies and these surpassed the minimal clinically important difference threshold. There was a weighted 19%, 35%, and 6% rate of reported complications, reoperations, and failures, respectively. Concomitant patellofemoral surgery (51% of patients) mostly did not lead to statistically different postoperative outcomes. Conclusion Numerous patellofemoral restoration techniques result in significant functional improvement with a low rate of failure. No definitive conclusions could be made to determine the best surgical technique since comparative studies on this topic are rare, and treatment choice should be made according to specific patient and defect characteristics

    Length of hospital stay after craniotomy for tumor: a National Surgical Quality Improvement Program analysis

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    Too clean, or not too clean: the hygiene hypothesis and home hygiene.

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    The 'hygiene hypothesis' as originally formulated by Strachan, proposes that a cause of the recent rapid rise in atopic disorders could be a lower incidence of infection in early childhood, transmitted by unhygienic contact with older siblings. Use of the term 'hygiene hypothesis' has led to several interpretations, some of which are not supported by a broader survey of the evidence. The increase in allergic disorders does not correlate with the decrease in infection with pathogenic organisms, nor can it be explained by changes in domestic hygiene. A consensus is beginning to develop round the view that more fundamental changes in lifestyle have led to decreased exposure to certain microbial or other species, such as helminths, that are important for the development of immunoregulatory mechanisms. Although this review concludes that the relationship of the hypothesis to hygiene practice is not proven, it lends strong support to initiatives seeking to improve hygiene practice. It would however be helpful if the hypothesis were renamed, e.g. as the 'microbial exposure' hypothesis, or 'microbial deprivation' hypothesis, as proposed for instance by Bjorksten. Avoiding the term 'hygiene' would help focus attention on determining the true impact of microbes on atopic diseases, while minimizing risks of discouraging good hygiene practice

    Colite alérgica: características clínicas e morfológicas da mucosa retal em lactentes com enterorragia Allergic colitis: clinical and morphological aspects in infants with rectal bleeding

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    RACIONAL: Recentes estudos indicam a importância do infiltrado eosinofílico na mucosa retal que, juntamente com os dados clínicos, pode servir para estabelecer o diagnóstico de colite alérgica. OBJETIVOS: Descrever, prospectivamente, as características clínicas e a morfologia da mucosa retal em pacientes com enterorragia e suspeita diagnóstica de alergia às proteínas do leite de vaca. MATERIAL E MÉTODOS: Foram estudados 20 pacientes, menores de 6 meses para descrever suas características clínicas e a histologia da mucosa retal que foi comparada com um grupo controle, com suspeita de megacólon congênito. RESULTADOS: A idade média dos pacientes foi 97 &plusmn; 47 dias; enterorragia teve início antes dos 120 dias em 85% deles; em vigência de aleitamento materno (40%) artificial ou misto (60%). O achado histológico, estatisticamente significativo, foi o infiltrado aumentado de eosinófilos, na mucosa retal, em 18 pacientes. CONCLUSÃO: Pode-se afirmar que esses achados constituem, associados aos dados clínicos, os mais importantes elementos no diagnóstico de colite alérgica, em pacientes menores de 6 meses com enterorragia, que estejam recebendo aleitamento materno e/ou aleitamento artificial.<br>BACKGROUND: Recent studies indicate the importance of eosinophilis infiltrated in the rectal mucous which jointly with the clinical features can serve to establish the diagnostic of allergic colitis. AIM: To describe prospectively, the clinical features and morphological abnormalities of the rectal mucosa in patients with rectal bleeding and clinical diagnosis of cow's milk allergy. METHODS: Clinical features of 20 infants under 6 months of age were described. Morphological findings in rectal mucosa were compared with control group, with suspicion of congenital megacolon. RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 97 &plusmn; 47 days, rectal bleeding started before 120 days in 85% of them; 40% were breastfed, 60% cow's milk formula or both. The most striking morphological feature, in 18 patients, was eosinophilic infiltration in the rectal mucosa. There was a significant statistical difference when these values were compared with control group. CONCLUSIONS: The increased number of eosinophils in the rectal mucosa represent the most important characteristic of allergic colitis, in patients under 6 months, with rectal bleeding, when breastfed, cow's milk formula or both
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