45 research outputs found
Endocrinologic, neurologic, and visual morbidity after treatment for craniopharyngioma
Craniopharyngiomas are locally aggressive tumors which typically are focused in the sellar and suprasellar region near a number of critical neural and vascular structures mediating endocrinologic, behavioral, and visual functions. The present study aims to summarize and compare the published literature regarding morbidity resulting from treatment of craniopharyngioma. We performed a comprehensive search of the published English language literature to identify studies publishing outcome data of patients undergoing surgery for craniopharyngioma. Comparisons of the rates of endocrine, vascular, neurological, and visual complications were performed using Pearson’s chi-squared test, and covariates of interest were fitted into a multivariate logistic regression model. In our data set, 540 patients underwent surgical resection of their tumor. 138 patients received biopsy alone followed by some form of radiotherapy. Mean overall follow-up for all patients in these studies was 54 ± 1.8 months. The overall rate of new endocrinopathy for all patients undergoing surgical resection of their mass was 37% (95% CI = 33–41). Patients receiving GTR had over 2.5 times the rate of developing at least one endocrinopathy compared to patients receiving STR alone or STR + XRT (52 vs. 19 vs. 20%, χ2P < 0.00001). On multivariate analysis, GTR conferred a significant increase in the risk of endocrinopathy compared to STR + XRT (OR = 3.45, 95% CI = 2.05–5.81, P < 0.00001), after controlling for study size and the presence of significant hypothalamic involvement. There was a statistical trend towards worse visual outcomes in patients receiving XRT after STR compared to GTR or STR alone (GTR = 3.5% vs. STR 2.1% vs. STR + XRT 6.4%, P = 0.11). Given the difficulty in obtaining class 1 data regarding the treatment of this tumor, this study can serve as an estimate of expected outcomes for these patients, and guide decision making until these data are available
Human Genetic Diversity and Comparative Economic Development
This research contributes to the understanding of human genetic diversity within a society as a significant determinant of its economic development. The hypothesis advanced and empirically examined in this paper suggests that there are socioeconomic trade-offs associated with genetic diversity within a given society. The investigation exploits an exogenous source of cross-country variation in genetic diversity by appealing to the 'out of Africa' hypothesis of human origins to empirically establish a highly statistically significant and robust non-monotonic effect of genetic diversity on development outcomes in the pre-colonial era. Contrary to theories that reject a possible role for human genetics in influencing economic development, this study demonstrates the economic significance of diversity in genetic traits, while abstaining entirely from conceptual frameworks that posit a hierarchy of such traits in terms of their conduciveness to the process of economic development
Population and Progress in the Middle Ages: A Review Essay
Book reviewed in this Article: Copyright 2001 by The Population Council, Inc..
Angiographic and histological results following implantation of a novel stent-on-a-wire in the animal model
Aims: The Svelte Stent-On-A-Wire (SOAW) is a thin strut novel device consisting of a balloon-expandable cobalt-chromium stent premounted onto a single lumen fixed-wire delivery catheter platform. We evaluated the performance of the novel Svelte SOAW in comparison with the MultiLink Vision (ML Vision) balloon-expandable stent, in porcine coronary arteries. Methods and results: Eight Yorkshire swine (30-day follow-up cohort) and eight Yucatan mini-swine (90-day follow-up cohort) were implanted with either Svelte or control ML Vision. Acute performance characteristics were graded by interventionalists during implantation. Angiographic assessments were performed at the index procedure and at 30 or at 90 days post implantation. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), histological and histomorphometric analysis of
Clinical and angiographic outcomes following first-in-man implantation of a novel thin-strut low-profile fixed-wire stent: The Svelte Coronary Stent Integrated Delivery System first-in-man trial
Aims: The Svelte Stent Integrated Delivery System (IDS) is a novel fixed-wire thin-strut cobalt-chromium stent characterised by a very low entry profile. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the safety and the feasibility of the Svelte stent IDS implantation in humans. Methods and results: The present investigation is a prospective, multicentre non-randomised single-arm study. The primary endpoint was freedom from major adverse cardiac events (MACE) at 30 days post-procedure. Invasive follow-up was scheduled at six months post implantation. A total of 47 patients were enrolled and serial OCT imaging was performed in a subgroup of 18 patients. At the index procedure the lesion success rate was 97.9% (46 patients), the mean acute gain was 1.56±0.43 mm with a mean minimum lumen diameter of 2.48±0.43 mm. Post-implantation OCT imaging revealed a minimal mean prolapse area (0.10±0.06 mm2), mean incomplete stent apposition area (0.12±0.13 mm2) and mean intraluminal mass area (0.05±0.03 mm