43 research outputs found

    Increased Short-Term Variability of the QT Interval in Professional Soccer Players: Possible Implications for Arrhythmia Prediction

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    BACKGROUND: Sudden cardiac death in competitive athletes is rare but it is significantly more frequent than in the normal population. The exact cause is seldom established and is mostly attributed to ventricular fibrillation. Myocardial hypertrophy and slow heart rate, both characteristic changes in top athletes in response to physical conditioning, could be associated with increased propensity for ventricular arrhythmias. We investigated conventional ECG parameters and temporal short-term beat-to-beat variability of repolarization (STV(QT)), a presumptive novel parameter for arrhythmia prediction, in professional soccer players. METHODS: Five-minute 12-lead electrocardiograms were recorded from professional soccer players (n = 76, all males, age 22.0±0.61 years) and age-matched healthy volunteers who do not participate in competitive sports (n = 76, all males, age 22.0±0.54 years). The ECGs were digitized and evaluated off-line. The temporal instability of beat-to-beat heart rate and repolarization were characterized by the calculation of short-term variability of the RR and QT intervals. RESULTS: Heart rate was significantly lower in professional soccer players at rest (61±1.2 vs. 72±1.5/min in controls). The QT interval was prolonged in players at rest (419±3.1 vs. 390±3.6 in controls, p<0.001). QTc was significantly longer in players compared to controls calculated with Fridericia and Hodges correction formulas. Importantly, STV(QT) was significantly higher in players both at rest and immediately after the game compared to controls (4.8±0.14 and 4.3±0.14 vs. 3.5±0.10 ms, both p<0.001, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: STV(QT) is significantly higher in professional soccer players compared to age-matched controls, however, further studies are needed to relate this finding to increased arrhythmia propensity in this population

    Extra-axial chordomas

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    Upper eyelid defect by dog bite reconstructed by an ipsilateral advanced tarsoconjunctival flap with skin graft

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    A technique for reconstruction of a traumatic upper-eyelid marginal defect utilizing a local tarsoconjunctival advancement flap with a skin graft is presented. A 22-year-old woman was bitten by a dog, resulting in a fullthickness loss of approximately the central half of her left upper eyelid. Debridement was performed under topical anaesthesia followed by one-stage upper eyelid reconstruction. The residual tarsal plate was used as a tarsoconjunctival advancement flap to reconstruct the posterior lamella of the defect. Skin from the posterior aspect of the left ear was grafted onto the reconstructed posterior lamella with two setting tarsorrhaphy sutures. One month postoperatively, the patient had an excellent cosmetic result with appropriate upper eyelid height and curvature, although cilia were not transplanted. The technique described offers a one-stage procedure with a simple surgical method providing on appropriate cosmetic and functional result.Sameh Saad, Yasuhiro Takahashi, Lucy A. Goold and Hirohiko Kakizak

    Parosteal extra-axial chordoma of the second metacarpal bone: a case report with literature review

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    Extra-axial chordoma is a chordoma that occurs in non-axial locations. It is a very rare tumor, with 20 cases reported to date; 14 in bone and six in soft tissue. Of the 14 skeletal extra-axial chordomas, ten were intramedullary and four were intracortical. We report the first case of parosteal extra-axial chordoma arising in the second metacarpal bone, expressing brachyury on immunohistochemical analysis, and describe the pathologic and radiologic findings. We suggest that extra-axial chordoma can occur in parosteal bone lesions or the hand, without features of bone distribution or bone-specific sites
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