14 research outputs found
Pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) presenting as axillary lump: Case report and review of the literature
Pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) is an uncommon benign mesenchymal breast lesion. There are extremely rare reports of PASH arising in accessory breast tissue. To date, in literature, fewer than 10 cases of PASH occurring in axillary region have been described. We report a case presenting as axillary lump in a young woman. A 20-year-old female presented to our surgical unit for a progressively growing and painful palpable mass of the right axilla for about a year. Before surgery an ultrasound was performed. The patient underwent local excision of the lesion under local anaesthesia. Through histological and immunohistochemical examination a pseudoangiomatous stromal hyperplasia (PASH) was diagnosed. At 6 months of follow-up the patient is free of disease. It is important to include PASH also in the differential diagnosis of axillary lumps. Histological examination of the surgical specimen and surgery represent, respectively, the mainstay for diagnosis and therapy
Hypocalcemia following thyroid surgery: incidence and risk factors. A longitudinal multicenter study comprising 2,631 patients.
Background
Postoperative hypocalcemia is the most frequent complication of total thyroidectomy. It may have a delayed onset, and therefore delays the discharge from the hospital,
requiring calcium replacement therapy to alleviate clinical symptoms.
Methods
During a 7-months period, 2631 consecutive patients undergoing primary or completion thyroidectomy were prospectively followed up and underwent analysis
regarding postoperative hypoparathyroidism. Data were prospectively collected by questionnaires from 39 Italian endocrine surgery units affiliated to the Italian Endocrine
Surgery Units Association (Club delle UnitĂ di EndocrinoChirurgia - UEC), where thyroid surgery is routinely performed.
Results
The incidence of hypoparathyroidism was 28,8% (757 patients), including transient hypocalcemia (27,9%) and permanent hypocalcemia (0,9%). The rate of asymptomatic
hypocalcemia was 70,80%. The incidence of permanent hypocalcemia was higher in the symptomatic hypocalcemia group (7,5%) than in asymptomatic one (1,5%). Female
patients experienced a transient postoperative hypocalcemia more frequently than male patients (29.7% and 21.2% respectively; p <.0001). The percentage developing
hypocalcemia in patients in which parathyroid glands were intraoperatively identified and preserved was higher than in the patients in which the identification of parathyroid
glands was not achived (29,2% versus 18,7%, p<0.01).
Conclusions
This prospective study confirmed the main risk factors for postoperative hypocalcemia: thyroid cancer, nodal dissection and female gender. It farther showed that identifying
parathyroids has an important role to prevent permanent hypocalcemia though with a higher risk of transient hypocalcemia. In order to a proper information of patient this issues have to be addressed in a suitable informed consent
Cephalometric findings in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy patients with obstructive sleep apneas
The purposes of the study are: (1) to establish if cephalometry and upper airway examination may provide tools for detecting facioscapulohumeral (FSHD) patients at risk for obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS); and (2) to correlate cephalometry and otorhinolaryngologic evaluation with clinical and polysomnographic features of FHSD patients with OSAS