8 research outputs found
Development of the descending colon during the human foetal period
The growth, changes in shape, topography and relation to the peritoneum of
the descending colon were assessed on the basis of material taken from 178
foetuses of both sexes, aged from 72 to 236 days of pregnancy. The statistical
analysis method demonstrated that the descending colon growth process occurs
about a month earlier in female foetuses as compared to male ones. From
the statistical point of view, the longitudinal growth of the descending colon
significantly slows down in the 7th and 8th months of pregnancy, while the
width of this part of the large intestine increases sharply towards the end of the
foetal development period. The statistically important process of the descending
colon rising over the surface of the left kidney and adrenal gland was noticed
in male foetuses. This occurs approximately one month earlier in female
foetuses as compared to males. The ascent of this part of the colon is accompanied
by a change in its shape from straight, to curved and, finally, to wavy in the
oldest age group of male foetuses. The changes in relation to the peritoneum
are manifest in a gradual change in the position of this section of the intestine
from the intraperitoneal, where more than 40% of the cases examined had a fully
movable mesentery, to the extraperitoneal, with 14% of foetuses having a mesentery
in the 8th month of pregnancy
Anatomical analysis of preangular mandibular notch in humans
The authors have analysed in detail the mandibular preangular notch on the
basis of 273 human cadaver mandibles. They have revealed that the pregonial
notch is present in almost 90% of cases and that it is generally asymmetric and
elliptical in shape. The depth and length of the anterior part of the notch is
greater in males. Moreover, the preangular notch depth is greater on the right
side (regardless of sex). Knowledge of the preangular notch anatomy can be
useful for surgeons during reconstructive and plastic procedures on the mandibular
shaft
Typology of the antegonial notch in the human mandible
Background: Surgical treatment for serious malocclusions and fractures of the organ of mastication is a golden standard in medicine. Procedures performed on the mandible require detailed knowledge of the anatomy of the organ. Antegonial notching constitutes a serious technical challenge for surgeons. Therefore, a detailed anatomical description of this structure, which is the subject of this paper, is essential.
Materials and methods: We analysed 251 human Caucasian mandibles of identified sex and took measurements of all sections describing the mandibular antegonial notch. Depending on the proportion between sections we classified the shape of the antegonial notch into three types. The surface area of the notch was calculated. We analysed the dimorphic and bilateral differences for each of the three types of notch. We used variance analysis for the assessment of statistical difference.
Results: The analysis revealed that in both men and women, regardless of body side, the type 3 antegonial notch was the most frequent. Type 3 occurred with a frequency of between 38% in men on the right side and 55.9% in women on the left side of the body. Type 1 was the least frequent. Dimorphic differences in the presence of individual types of antegonial notch were statistically significant only for the left side of the body. The symmetrical type (type 2) occurred more frequently in men (by 11%) than in women. Type 3 was found more frequently in women (by 10%) than in men. Bilateral differences in men were revealed for the frequencies of types 1 and 3. On the right side type 1 was more frequent (by 8%), and on the left side type 3 was also more frequent (by 8%). The greatest surface area was found for the asymmetrical posterior type (type 1). The smallest surface area was found for the asymmetrical anterior type 3. This difference was statistically significant with respect to the surface area of types 1 and type 2 and found for both sexes for both sides of the body. However, no statistically significant differences were found between the surface areas of types 1 or 2.
Conclusions: Knowledge of the preangular notch anatomy can be useful for surgeons during reconstructive and plastic procedures on the body of the mandible
Clinical replicability of rehabilitation interventions in randomized controlled trials reported in main journals is inadequate
Objective: The objective of this study was to study if randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in rehabilitation (a field where complex interventions prevail) published in main journals include all the details needed to replicate the intervention in clinical practice (clinical replicability). Study Design and Setting: Forty-seven rehabilitation clinicians of 5 professions from 7 teams (Belgium, Italy, Malaysia, Pakistan, Poland, Puerto Rico, the USA) reviewed 76 RCTs published by main rehabilitation journals exploring 14 domains chosen through consensus and piloting. Results: The response rate was 99%. Inter-rater agreement was moderate/good. All clinicians considered unanimously 12 (16%) RCTs clinically replicable and none not replicable. At least one \u201cabsent\u201d information was found by all participants in 60 RCTs (79%), and by a minimum of 85% in the remaining 16 (21%). Information considered to be less well described (8\u201319% \u201cperfect\u201d information) included two providers (skills, experience) and two delivery (cautions, relationships) items. The best described (50\u201379% \u201cperfect\u201d) were the classic methodological items included in CONSORT (descending order: participants, materials, procedures, setting, and intervention). Conclusion: Clinical replicability must be considered in RCTs reporting, particularly for complex interventions. Classical methodological checklists such as CONSORT are not enough, and also Template for Intervention Description and Clinical replication do not cover all the requirements. This study supports the need for field-specific checklists