38 research outputs found
Assessment of power spectral density of microvascular hemodynamics in skeletal muscles at very low and low-frequency via near-infrared diffuse optical spectroscopies
In this work, we used a hybrid time domain near-infrared spectroscopy (TD-NIRS) and diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) device to retrieve hemoglobin and blood flow oscillations of skeletal muscle microvasculature. We focused on very low (VLF) and low-frequency (LF) oscillations (i.e., frequency lower than 0.145 Hz), that are related to myogenic, neurogenic and endothelial activities. We measured power spectral density (PSD) of blood flow and hemoglobin concentration in four muscles (thenar eminence, plantar fascia, sternocleidomastoid and forearm) of 14 healthy volunteers to highlight possible differences in microvascular hemodynamic oscillations. We observed larger PSDs for blood flow compared to hemoglobin concentration, in particular in case of distal muscles (i.e., thenar eminence and plantar fascia). Finally, we compared the PSDs measured on the thenar eminence of healthy subjects with the ones measured on a septic patient in the intensive care unit: lower power in the endothelial-dependent frequency band, and larger power in the myogenic ones were observed in the septic patient, in accordance with previous works based on laser doppler flowmetry
Current Treatment of Endolymphatic Sac Tumor of the Temporal Bone
An endolymphatic sac tumor (ELST) is a rare, indolent but locally aggressive tumor arising in the posterior petrous ridge. Patients present with sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus. As the tumor progresses, patients may experience vertigo, ataxia, facial nerve paresis, pain and otorrhea. Most patients present in their 4th or 5th decade with a wide age range. Patients with von Hippel–Lindau disease have an increased likelihood of developing ELST. Histologically, ELST is a low-grade adenocarcinoma. As it progresses, it destroys bone and extends into adjacent tissues. The likelihood of regional or distant metastases is remote. The optimal treatment is resection with negative margins. Patients with positive margins, gross residual disease, or unresectable tumor are treated with radiotherapy or radiosurgery. Late recurrences are common, so long follow-up is necessary to assess efficacy. The likelihood of cure depends on tumor extent and is probably in the range of 50–75%
How reliable is assessment of true vocal cord-arytenoid unit mobility in patients affected by laryngeal cancer? a multi-institutional study on 366 patients from the ARYFIX collaborative group
Purpose: In clinical practice the assessment of the “vocal cord-arytenoid unit” (VCAU) mobility is crucial in the staging, prognosis, and choice of treatment of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC). The aim of the present study was to measure repeatability and reliability of clinical assessment of VCAU mobility and radiologic analysis of posterior laryngeal extension. Methods: In this multi-institutional retrospective study, patients with LSCC-induced impairment of VCAU mobility who received curative treatment were included; pre-treatment endoscopy and contrast-enhanced imaging were collected and evaluated by raters. According to their evaluations, concordance, number of assigned categories, and inter- and intra-rater agreement were calculated. Results: Twenty-two otorhinolaryngologists evaluated 366 videolaryngoscopies (total evaluations: 2170) and 6 radiologists evaluated 237 imaging studies (total evaluations: 477). The concordance of clinical rating was excellent in only 22.7% of cases. Overall, inter- and intra-rater agreement was weak. Supraglottic cancers and transoral endoscopy were associated with the lowest inter-observer reliability values. Radiologic inter-rater agreement was low and did not vary with imaging technique. Intra-rater reliability of radiologic evaluation was optimal. Conclusions: The current methods to assess VCAU mobility and posterior extension of LSCC are flawed by weak inter-observer agreement and reliability. Radiologic evaluation was characterized by very high intra-rater agreement, but weak inter-observer reliability. The relevance of VCAU mobility assessment in laryngeal oncology should be re-weighted. Patients affected by LSCC requiring imaging should be referred to dedicated radiologists with experience in head and neck oncology
How reliable is assessment of true vocal cord-arytenoid unit mobility in patients affected by laryngeal cancer? a multi-institutional study on 366 patients from the ARYFIX collaborative group
Purpose: In clinical practice the assessment of the "vocal cord-arytenoid unit" (VCAU) mobility is crucial in the staging, prognosis, and choice of treatment of laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC). The aim of the present study was to measure repeatability and reliability of clinical assessment of VCAU mobility and radiologic analysis of posterior laryngeal extension. Methods: In this multi-institutional retrospective study, patients with LSCC-induced impairment of VCAU mobility who received curative treatment were included; pre-treatment endoscopy and contrast-enhanced imaging were collected and evaluated by raters. According to their evaluations, concordance, number of assigned categories, and inter- and intra-rater agreement were calculated. Results: Twenty-two otorhinolaryngologists evaluated 366 videolaryngoscopies (total evaluations: 2170) and 6 radiologists evaluated 237 imaging studies (total evaluations: 477). The concordance of clinical rating was excellent in only 22.7% of cases. Overall, inter- and intra-rater agreement was weak. Supraglottic cancers and transoral endoscopy were associated with the lowest inter-observer reliability values. Radiologic inter-rater agreement was low and did not vary with imaging technique. Intra-rater reliability of radiologic evaluation was optimal. Conclusions: The current methods to assess VCAU mobility and posterior extension of LSCC are flawed by weak inter-observer agreement and reliability. Radiologic evaluation was characterized by very high intra-rater agreement, but weak inter-observer reliability. The relevance of VCAU mobility assessment in laryngeal oncology should be re-weighted. Patients affected by LSCC requiring imaging should be referred to dedicated radiologists with experience in head and neck oncology
VASCOVID: hybrid diffuse optical platform combined with a pulse-oximeter and an automatized inflatable tourniquet for the assessment of metabolism and endothelial health in the intensive care
VASCOVID project is developing and testing a hybrid diffuse optical monitor for evaluating endothelial function and metabolism in intensive care including COVID-19
Acoustic Emission Monitoring to Evaluate the Detection of Adhesion of Reinforcing Rebar in the Concrete Beams
Acoustic Emission is a Non-destructive Testing method, widely used for monitoring the mechanical behaviour of steel and concrete structures. In particular, the method can be characterized and evaluate cracks or other defects under the stress of the structures. The present research aims to investigate the feasibility to evaluate the adhesion of the rebar to concrete using the Acoustic Emission Technique. For this purpose, the Active Acoustic Emission technique has been used for rebar-reinforced concrete beams. An acoustic Emission test has been made on both conditions of rebars, with/without adhesion. The fundamental parameter to distinguish adhesion and non-adhesion rebar has been the attenuation of acoustic energy, generated by the acoustic sensors, activated as ultrasonic transducers. The results have been very promising; the difference of attenuation between adhesion and non-adhesion rebar showed high enough to evaluate the condition of rebars
Temporal bone carcinoma: a first glance beyond the conventional clinical and pathological prognostic factors.
Abstract Temporal bone squamous cell carcinoma (TBSCC) is an uncommon, aggressive malignancy with a poor prognosis in advanced cases. The dismal outcome is
partially related to: the lack of reliable clinical or pathological prognostic factors and the largely unstandardized surgical and integrated treatments adopted. There is an
undeniable need for novel diagnostic/therapeutic strategies to improve the prognosis. The purpose of this critical review was to explore the level of available knowledge
concerning the molecular markers involved in the biology of TBSCC that have a prognostic potential. The Pub-Med and Scopus electronic databases were searched without
publication date limits for studies investigating molecular markers in cohorts of patients with primary TBSCC. The search terms used were: \u2018\u2018temporal bone cancer\u2019\u2019, \u2018\u2018temporal
bone carcinoma\u2019\u2019, \u2018\u2018temporal bone malignancy\u2019\u2019, \u2018\u2018ear cancer\u2019\u2019, \u2018\u2018ear carcinoma\u2019\u2019, and \u2018\u2018ear malignancy\u2019\u2019. We decided preliminarily not to consider series with less than five cases. Nine retrospective case series of TBSCC were found in which different analytical techniques had been used to study the role of several biomarkers (HPV, vimentin, transforming growth factor b, CD105, RECK, matrix metalloproteinase-9, MASPIN, EBV, p16, TP53 mutation, pSTAT3, relaxin-2). CD105 expression (in tumor vessel endothelial cells) and MASPIN cytoplasmic
expression (in carcinoma cells) were, respectively, found directly and inversely related with the neoplasm\u2019s recurrence rate. CD105 expression was also inversely
related with disease-free survival in TBSCC. A future goal of such analyses should be to ascertain the radio- and chemo-sensitivity profiles of individual TBSCCs, enabling
truly personalized therapies. A further, more ambitious goal will be to find targets for therapeutic agents that might prove crucial in improving the disease-specific survival for
patients with advanced TBSCC
Primary temporal bone squamous cell carcinoma: Comparing the prognostic value of the American Joint Committee on Cancer TNM classification (8th edition) with the revised Pittsburgh staging system
Background: Retrospectively considering a temporal bone squamous cell car-
cinomas (TBSCCs) series, our aim was to compare the predictive power of the
American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging system (8th edition)
with the revised Pittsburgh staging system (rPSS) in terms of disease-free sur-
vival (DFS), disease-specific survival (DSS), and overall survival (OS).
Methods: Forty-three TBSCCs consecutively treated surgically were reviewed.
The prognostic performance of AJCC and rPSS was compared.
Results: The areas under the curves for the prediction of DFS, DSS, and OS
did not differ significantly between both staging systems (p = 0.518, p = 0.940,
and p = 0.910, respectively). Harrel's C-indexes for respectively the AJCC and
rPSS were 0.76 and 0.70 for DFS, 0.73 and 0.76 for DSS, 0.66 and 0.63 for OS.
Conclusion: Comparable prognostic accuracy was observed between AJCC
and rPSS. Levels of prognostic performance were only acceptable for both sys-
tems, according to Hosmer–Lemeshow scale. Further efforts are needed to
define new TBSCC staging modalities with higher prognostic reliability