130 research outputs found

    End-stage head and neck cancer: coping mechanism

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    Coping mechanisms are patients’ means of adapting to stressful situations and involve psychological and physical changes in behavior. Patients adapt to head and neck cancer in a variety of ways. Head and neck cancers are extremely debilitating, especially in advanced stages of the disease or in end-of-life situations. While an oncology team needs to address the needs of all oncology patients, the advanced terminal patients require special attention. Most of these patients do not cope well with their situation and have a tendency to cease social interactions. Pain is the most frequentlyexperienced medical disability in patients having an end-stage illness experience, and thus an important medical endeavor is to afford dignity to the dying patient facingan incurable disease. In such cases, the medical community should never refuse therapy or to assist a dying patient.In some instances, the patient and family may derive benefit from their religious beliefs

    Psychological profile of laryngectomized patients

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    Larynx cancer is one of the most susceptible form of cancer susceptible to induce alteration of the patient’s psychological profile due to the social role that the larynx has in communication. Oral communication is severely impaired even after voice rehabilitation of the laryngectomized patients, so that the social rehabilitation is somewhat not only a medical but also a social problem. The psychological profile of these patients is altered in a way that dealing with the disease is sometimes neglected and the interaction with the outside world in terms of oral communication is totally abandoned. The starting point for depression in these cases is the acknowledgement of the disease and is, in some cases, the entire medical environment. Facial scarring, the inability to verbally interact with other human, as well as the presence of the tracheostoma, are all deciding factors in the presence of a low self-esteem for these particular patients. Psychological counseling is a mandatory approach for laryngectomized patients, in order to improve their ability to cope with cancer and providing better recovery chances

    Differences Between Men and Women with Total Laryngectomy

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    The larynx is one of the organs that is usually involved in the tumor growth in the head and neck region and it is the second site of malignant neoplasia of the respiratory tract after the lungs. It is a well-known fact that larynx cancer is more often present in male population, with a ratio of 3:1 male/female because of the higher rate of tobacco and alcohol use. The issues related to total laryngectomy are the loss of voice, swallowing rehabilitation, reeducation of breathing through the tracheostomy, psychological alterations and social pressure. Women tend to be more affected by the presence of the tracheostomy, since general physical aspect is a major concern for modern women. Also, the emotional status of women is a plays a major role for the adherence to the therapy plan. The response to total laryngectomy by men and women is similar with slight differences in physical aspect and social reinsertion

    Schwannoma of the Lower Leg with Malignant Transformation. A Case Report

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    Background: Peripheral nerve sheath tumours are benign or malignant. Schwannoma is a benign peripheral nerve sheath tumour originating from Schwann cells that slowly grows eccentrically to the nerve axis. Malignant transformation of a schwannoma is rare. Case presentation: A 73-year-old woman who presented to our medical service with other medical problems was diagnosed with a tumour of the lower leg (a small mass neglected by the patient for about 10 years). The ultrasound features of the tumour suggested it was a schwannoma. The tumour was resected and histopathological assessment revealed a schwannoma with areas of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumour transformation

    Natural Compounds for Wound Healing

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    Many plants or plant-derived compounds with high levels of antioxidants and anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, and antimicrobial properties could be of great benefit for wound healing. Several studies have documented the use of plant extracts for the development of bioactive wound dressings. The purpose of this chapter is to give an update about the vegetal and bee products, which can be used as bioactive substances in wound dressings or in other formulations for wound healing. The adverse effects of plant and bee extracts, such as contact allergies, are also presented. In order to better exploit the huge reservoir of pharmacologically active plant-derived compounds and extracts, standardized methodology and clinical trials are necessary to give more concrete evidence supporting the use of traditional medicine in wound management

    The place of CEUS in distinguishing benign from malignant cervical lymph nodes: a prospective study

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    Abstract Aims: The aim of the study was to evaluate the ability of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) compared to grayscale B-mode and color Doppler ultrasound in differentiate benign versus malign superficial cervical lymph nodes. Material and methods: In a prospective study ultrasonography (gray scale, color and spectral Dopller, and CEUS) was performed in 61 patients (33 men, 28 women; mean age of 51.2 years, range: 18-81 years), with cervical lymphadenopathy. The nodes were examined and biopsied or surgically removed. CEUS was performed with 2.4 ml intravenous bolus of contrast agent Sono Vue and the results were registered with a special software. Results: Of all the nodes, 32 were benign and 29 were malignant (metastases). Solbiati index was higher in benign nodes (2.23 ± 0.84 vs 1.50 ± 0.48, p<0.05). Doppler parameters (vessel location, vascular pattern, pedicullum number, resistivity index, and pulsatility index) were significantly lower in benign nodes (p<0.001), and ROC analysis returned excellent results. For CEUS, derived peak intensity (DPI %) was higher in benign nodes (17.72 ± 5.43 vs 11.76 ± 4.88, p<0.05); regional blood volume (RBV) was also higher (849.8 ± 467.1 vs 458.3 ± 283.3, p<0.05). The time to peak (TTP, s) and area under the curve (AUC, cm2) were similar in both benign and malignant nodes. Enhancement pattern was the most accurate to characterize benign versus malignant nodes. Sensitivity and specificity were higher for DPI, RBV and enhancement pattern from CEUS, according to ROC analysis, compared to gray scale ultrasound, but lower than color Doppler. Analyzing the place of CEUS in lymph node evaluation we found that CEUS is most useful for the evaluation of the lymph nodes with uncertain aspect at gray scale and Doppler evaluation. Conclusions: ROC analysis confirmed the higher degree of diagnostic accuracy of CEUS in comparison with conventional techniques for some parameters such as enhancement pattern. Evaluation of nodal perfusion with this method can be helpful in the differentiation of benign from malignant nodes but requires further confirmation

    ACUTE SPINAL EPIDURAL HEMATOMA, CLINICAL AND ETIOPATHOGENIC DIAGNOSTIC DIFFICULTIES – CASE PRESENTATION AND SYNTHESIS OF THE LITERATURE

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    Introduction: Epidural hematoma has a double anatomopathological topography: intracranial and/ or spinal. Its etiology is complex: post-traumatic (spinal trauma, or lumbar puncture), iatrogenic (secondary to an inadequate anticoagulation or antiplatelet treatment), congenital or acquired disorders of coagulation (leukemia, hepatic cirrhosis), secondary to intense Valsalva maneuvers (e.g. during labor, or an intense physical effort), and idiopathic. The purpose of this article is to present a clinical case of acute spinal epidural hematoma (SEDH) with atypical clinical picture and a puzzled pathophysiological mechanism, and also a brief review of the relevant literature. Case presentation: An 80-years-old male patient, with locomotor disability (bilateral congenital foot deformity), and multiple cardiovascular comorbidities (chronic atrial fibrillation (AF), dilated cardiomyopathy and contractile dysfunction (chronic heart failure, with left ventricle ejection fraction 40 %), chronically anticoagulated with a vitamin K antagonist (acenocumarol). The elderly submitted a body-level fall without cranial trauma, event followed by a short loss of consciousness (without convulsions or sphincter relaxation). He suffered a low-energy cervical fracture (C7 vertebral injury) and a posterolateral acute SEDH at C3-Th2 vertebral levels. Decompressive hemilaminectomy at the C4-Th2 levels and evacuation of the SEDH, was performed during the early sub-acute phase. The patient was transferred in our rehabilitation clinic as C4 AIS-C tetraplegia (global motor score 50/100), neurogenic bladder and bowel, with post surgical wound dehiscence (healed per secundam). The subject had a favorable neurological evolution and was discharged as C7 AIS-D tetraplegia (global motor score 81/100). Discussion: The case particularity consists in a puzzled etiopathogenetic mechanisms and difficulty to accurately indicate the chronological chain of events generating the acute SEDH. An overdosed anticoagulant therapy might be incriminated as an iatrogenic cause for a “spontaneous” SEDH, but most probably its etiology is complex, probably traumatic, consequence of the cervical spine fracture due the low-intensity biomechanical impact. The complex predisposing circumstances to accidental fall in our elderly patient were due to the: - impaired, unstable locomotor function, secondary to his bilateral congenital clubfoot deformity / disability - chronic AF, contractile dysfunction and hypodiastolic phenomena, with cardiogenic syncope and global brain ischemia or transient ischemic cerebral attack. Despite the good immediate outcomes, his future functional prognosis might be poor, due to the advanced age, severe cardiovascular pathology and the complex disturbances of the neuro-myo-artro-kinetic apparatus (major impediments of the somatic / body functions and structure). This health-related condition had severe repercussions on the subject`s activity (related to tasks and basic activities of daily living) and participation, affecting the outcome of rehabilitation, and his quality of life. Conclusions: Clinicians should consider the remote risk of SEDH (even with atypical clinical presentation) in patients with AF and anticoagulant medication. Despite a postponed decompressive intervention (imposed by the severe comorbidities), our patient neurologically improved without recurrence, following a complex neurorehabilitation program

    The place of CEUS in distinguishing benign from malignant cervical lymph nodes: a prospective study

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    Abstract Aims: The aim of the study was to evaluate the ability of contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) compared to grayscale B-mode and color Doppler ultrasound in differentiate benign versus malign superficial cervical lymph nodes. Material and methods: In a prospective study ultrasonography (gray scale, color and spectral Dopller, and CEUS) was performed in 61 patients (33 men, 28 women; mean age of 51.2 years, range: 18-81 years), with cervical lymphadenopathy. The nodes were examined and biopsied or surgically removed. CEUS was performed with 2.4 ml intravenous bolus of contrast agent Sono Vue and the results were registered with a special software. Results: Of all the nodes, 32 were benign and 29 were malignant (metastases). Solbiati index was higher in benign nodes (2.23 ± 0.84 vs 1.50 ± 0.48, p<0.05). Doppler parameters (vessel location, vascular pattern, pedicullum number, resistivity index, and pulsatility index) were significantly lower in benign nodes (p<0.001), and ROC analysis returned excellent results. For CEUS, derived peak intensity (DPI %) was higher in benign nodes (17.72 ± 5.43 vs 11.76 ± 4.88, p<0.05); regional blood volume (RBV) was also higher (849.8 ± 467.1 vs 458.3 ± 283.3, p<0.05). The time to peak (TTP, s) and area under the curve (AUC, cm2) were similar in both benign and malignant nodes. Enhancement pattern was the most accurate to characterize benign versus malignant nodes. Sensitivity and specificity were higher for DPI, RBV and enhancement pattern from CEUS, according to ROC analysis, compared to gray scale ultrasound, but lower than color Doppler. Analyzing the place of CEUS in lymph node evaluation we found that CEUS is most useful for the evaluation of the lymph nodes with uncertain aspect at gray scale and Doppler evaluation. Conclusions: ROC analysis confirmed the higher degree of diagnostic accuracy of CEUS in comparison with conventional techniques for some parameters such as enhancement pattern. Evaluation of nodal perfusion with this method can be helpful in the differentiation of benign from malignant nodes but requires further confirmation

    Validation of a New Prognostic Score in Patients with Ovarian Adenocarcinoma

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    Background and Objectives: This study aimed to assess the impact of clinical prognostic factors and propose a prognostic score that aids the clinician’s decision in estimating the risk for patients in clinical practice. Materials and Methods: The study included 195 patients diagnosed with ovarian adenocarcinoma. The therapeutic strategy involved multidisciplinary decisions: surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy (80%), neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery (16.4%), and only chemotherapy in selected cases (3.6%). Results: After a median follow-up of 68 months, in terms of progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 1 and 2 vs. 0 (hazard ratio—HR = 2.71, 95% confidence interval—CI, 1.96–3.73, p < 0.001 for PFS and HR = 3.19, 95%CI, 2.20–4.64, p < 0.001 for OS), menopausal vs. premenopausal status (HR = 2.02, 95%CI, 1.35–3,0 p < 0.001 and HR = 2.25, 95%CI = 1.41–3.59, p < 0.001), ascites (HR = 1.95, 95%CI 1.35–2.80, p = 0.03, HR = 2.31, 95%CI = 1.52–3.5, p < 0.007), residual disease (HR = 5.12, 95%CI 3.43–7.65, p < 0.0001 and HR = 4.07, 95%CI = 2.59–6.39, p < 0.0001), and thrombocytosis (HR = 2.48 95%CI = 1.72–3.58, p < 0.0001, HR = 3.33, 95%CI = 2.16–5.13, p < 0.0001) were associated with a poor prognosis. An original prognostic score including these characteristics was validated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves (area under the curve—AUC = 0.799 for PFS and AUC = 0.726 for OS, p < 0.001). The median PFS for patients with none, one, two, three, or four (or more) prognostic factors was not reached, 70, 36, 20, and 12 months, respectively. The corresponding median overall survival (OS) was not reached, 108, 77, 60, and 34 months, respectively. Conclusions: Several negative prognostic factors were identified: ECOG performance status ≄ 1, the presence of ascites and residual disease after surgery, thrombocytosis, and menopausal status. These led to the development of an original prognostic score that can be helpful in clinical practice

    Robotically driven construction of buildings: Exploring on-demand building components production

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    Robotically Driven Construction of Buildings (RDCB) is an exploration into design to production solutions for robotically driven construction of buildings initiated by the faculties of Civil Engineering and Architecture, TU Delft and Architecture, TU Eindhoven and implemented 2014 within the 3TU Lighthouse framework. The aim of was to involve the disciplines of architecture, robotics, materials science, and structural design in order to integrate knowledge from the individual disciplines and develop new numerically controlled manufacturing techniques and building-design optimisation methods for adding creative value to buildings in a cost-effective and sustainable way.RDCB builds up on expertise developed at Hyperbody with respect to applications of robotics in architecture and this paper presents the contribution of the Robotic Building team from Hyperbody, Faculty of Architecture, TU Delft to the RDCB project. The contribution is in line with Europe’s aim to improve material and energy efficiency of buildings and efficiency of construction processes. Robotically driven construction and customised building materials have the potential to realise this in a cost-effective way and at the same time reduce accidents and health hazards for workers in the building sector. In order to achieve this RDCB is distributing materials as needed and where needed. This requires exploration of a variety of techniques and implies working with customised materials and techniques while finding the best methods of applying materials in the logic of specific force flows or thermal dissipation patterns.RDCB advances multi- and trans-disciplinary knowledge in robotically driven construction by designing and engineering new building systems for the on-demand production of customisable building components (Bier, 2014). The main consideration is that in architecture and building construction the factory of the future employs building materials and components that can be on site robotically processed and assembled
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