142 research outputs found

    Identification alone versus intraoperative neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerve during thyroid surgery: experience of 2034 consecutive patients

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    Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate the ability of intraoperative neuromonitoring in reducing the postoperative recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy rate by a comparison between patients submitted to thyroidectomy with intraoperative neuromonitoring and with routine identification alone. Methods: Between June 2007 and December 2012, 2034 consecutive patients underwent thyroidectomy by a single surgical team. We compared patients who have had neuromonitoring and patients who have undergone surgery with nerve visualization alone. Patients in which neuromonitoring was not utilized (Group A) were 993, patients in which was utilized (group B) were 1041. Results: In group A 28 recurrent laryngeal nerve injuries were observed (2.82%), 21 (2.11%) transient and 7 (0.7%) permanent. In group B 23 recurrent laryngeal nerve injuries were observed (2.21%), in 17 cases (1.63%) transient and in 6 (0.58%) permanent. Differences were not statistically significative. Conclusions: Visual nerve identification remains the gold standard of recurrent laryngeal nerve management in thyroid surgery. Neuromonitoring helps to identify the nerve, in particular in difficult cases, but it did not decrease nerve injuries compared with visualization alone. Future studies are warranted to evaluate the benefit of intraoperative neuromonitoring in thyroidectomy, especially in conditions in which the recurrent nerve is at high risk of injury. Keywords: Neuromonitoring, Recurrent laryngeal nerve, Thyroidectom

    Follicular nodules (Thy3) of the thyroid: is total thyroidectomy the best option?

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    BACKGROUND: Identification of the best management strategy for nodules with Thy3 cytology presents particular problems for clinicians. This study investigates the ability of clinical, cytological and sonographic data to predict malignancy in indeterminate nodules with the scope of determining the need for total thyroidectomy in these patients. METHODS: The study population consisted of 249 cases presenting indeterminate nodules (Thy3): 198 females (79.5%) and 51 males (20.5%) with a mean age of 52.43 ± 13.68 years. All patients underwent total thyroidectomy. RESULTS: Malignancy was diagnosed in 87/249 patients (34.9%); thyroiditis co-existed in 119/249 cases (47.79%) and was associated with cancer in 40 cases (40/87; 45.98%). Of the sonographic characteristics, only echogenicity and the presence of irregular margins were identified as being statistically significant predictors of malignancy. 52/162 benign lesions (32.1%) and 54/87 malignant were hypoechoic (62.07%); irregular margins were present in 13/162 benign lesions (8.02%), and in 60/87 malignant lesions (68.97%). None of the clinical or cytological features, on the other hand, including age, gender, nodule size, the presence of microcalcifications or type 3 vascularization, were significantly associated with malignancy. CONCLUSIONS: The rate of malignancy in cytologically indeterminate lesions was high in the present study sample compared to other reported rates, and in a significant number of cases Hashimoto’s thyroiditis was also detected. Thus, considering the fact that clinical and cytological features were found to be inaccurate predictors of malignancy, it is our opinion that surgery should always be recommended. Moreover, total thyroidectomy is advisable, being the most suitable procedure in cases of multiple lesions, hyperplastic nodular goiter, or thyroiditis; the high incidence of malignancy and the unreliability of intraoperative frozen section examination also support this preference for total over hemi-thyroidectomy

    Efficient RSA Key Generation and Threshold Paillier in the Two-Party Setting

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    The problem of generating an RSA composite in a distributed manner without leaking its factorization is particularly challenging and useful in many cryptographic protocols. Our first contribution is the first non-generic fully simulatable protocol for distributively generating an RSA composite with security against malicious behavior. Our second contribution is complete Paillier [Pai99] threshold encryption scheme in the two-party setting with security against malicious behavior. Furthermore, we describe how to extend our protocols to the multiparty setting with dishonest majority. Our RSA key generation is comprised of the following: (i) a distributed protocol for generation of an RSA composite, and (ii) a biprimality test for verifying the validity of the generated composite. Our Paillier threshold encryption scheme uses the RSA composite as public key and is comprised of: (i) a distributed generation of the corresponding secret-key shares and, (ii) a distributed decryption protocol for decrypting according to Paillier

    Predictivity of clinical, laboratory and imaging findings in diagnostic definition of palpable thyroid nodules. A multicenter prospective study

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    Abstract PURPOSE: To assess the role of clinical, biochemical, and morphological parameters, as added to cytology, for improving pre-surgical diagnosis of palpable thyroid nodules. METHODS: Patients with a palpable thyroid nodule were eligible if surgical intervention was indicated after a positive or suspicious for malignancy FNAC (TIR 4-5 according to the 2007 Italian SIAPEC-IAP classification), or two inconclusive FNAC at a 653 months interval, or a negative FNAC associated with one or more risk factor. Reference standard was histological malignancy diagnosis. Likelihood ratios of malignancy, sensitivity, specificity, negative (NPV), and positive predictive value (PPV) were described. Multiple correspondence analysis (MCA) and logistic regression were applied. RESULTS: Cancer was found in 433/902 (48%) patients. Considering TIR4-5 only as positive cytology, specificity, and PPV were high (94 and 91%) but sensitivity and NPV were low (61 and 72%); conversely, including TIR3 among positive, sensitivity and NPV were higher (88 and 82%) while specificity and PPV decreased (52 and 63%). Ultrasonographic size 653\u2009cm was independently associated with benignity among TIR2 cases (OR of malignancy 0.37, 95% CI 0.18-0.78). In TIR3 cases the hard consistency of small nodules was associated with malignity (OR: 3.51, 95% CI 1.84-6.70, p\u2009<\u20090.001), while size alone, irrespective of consistency, was not diagnostically informative. No other significant association was found in TIR2 and TIR3. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of cytology with clinical and ultrasonographic parameters may improve diagnostic definition of palpable thyroid nodules. However, the need for innovative diagnostic tools is still high

    Changes in Liver Stiffness and Markers of Liver Synthesis and Portal Hypertension Following Hepatitis C Virus Eradication in Cirrhotic Individuals

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    SIMPLE SUMMARY: Liver cirrhosis is a dynamic process that may display improvements when the etiological factor is removed. In this retrospective study of HCV-cured cirrhotic patients, we evaluated changes in liver synthesis, surrogate markers of portal hypertension as well as liver stiffness before starting the antiviral treatment and following successful viral eradication. ABSTRACT: The advent of direct antiviral agents (DAAs) has radically changed the natural history of hepatitis C virus (HCV) chronic liver disease. Even patients with cirrhosis may display improvements in liver function or features of portal hypertension following viral eradication. The aim of this study was to assess whether a HCV cure would lead to improvements in cirrhotic patients using simple, readily available tools in clinical practice, together with liver stiffness (LS) measurement. This is a retrospective study of cirrhotic patients with cured HCV infection, with or without previous decompensation. Clinical and biochemical parameters as well as LS measurements were collected before antiviral treatment with DAAs and after 6 months following sustained virological response. Hepatic synthesis was assessed by serum albumin levels. Portal hypertension was indirectly assessed by platelet count. Liver function was determined by the CHILD score. A total of 373 cirrhotic patients with successful HCV eradication were retrospectively included. After 6 months of follow-up, a significantly higher proportion of patients showed improved liver function, shifting from the CHILD B/C to CHILD A group, (71.4%, p < 0.001). Similarly, LS improved from a median of 19.3 kPa (14.7–27) at the baseline vs. a median of 11.6 (7.7–16.8 kPa) at follow-up (p < 0.001). The proportion of patients who showed improved hepatic synthesis was 66.0%, which was statistically different when compared to that of patients who had a worsened condition (0.3%) (p < 0.001). Moreover, when classifying the cohort according to the RESIST-HCV score, we found that a significant proportion of patients shifted into the “low risk” group following DAA treatment (52% baseline vs. 45.6% at follow-up, p = 0.004). Even in the decompensated patients, LS improved from 1.6 to 2-fold from the baseline. Antiviral treatment is effective in improving indirect signs of hepatic synthesis and portal hypertension. Similarly, the LS values displayed significant improvements, even in decompensated patients

    Clustering of risk factors in hypertensive insulin-dependent diabetics with high sodium-lithium countertransport

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    Clustering of risk factors in hypertensive insulin-dependent diabetics with high sodium-lithium countertransport. Diabetic nephropathy is more common in patients with a positive family history of hypertension and with elevated red blood cell sodium-lithium countertransport, a marker of risk for essential hypertension. To evaluate whether there is a relationship between this cation transport system and indicators of risk of renal and cardiovascular complications in diabetic patients before the development of clinical proteinuria, we studied 31 type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients with arterial hypertension, without clinical proteinuria and 12 normotensive normoalbuminuric diabetic patients. Sodium-lithium countertransport activity was significantly higher in hypertensive patients (0.43 ± 0.03 mmol/1 RBC x hr) than in normotensive patients (0.23 ± 0.03; P < 0.001). To better explore the nature of the association between this transport system and arterial hypertension, hypertensive patients were divided in two groups, with high (>0.41 mmol/1 RBC x hr) or normal (<0.41) sodium-lithium countertransport activity. The two groups of hypertensive diabetics were similar in age, sex, body mass index and blood pressure levels. Hypertensive patients with elevated rates of sodium-lithium counter-transport compared with those with normal sodium-lithium counter-transport activity showed elevated glomerular filtration rate (130 ± 4 ml/min/1.73 m2 vs. 122 ± 3; P < 0.05), albumin excretion rate (median 26 /Lcg/min vs. 11; P < 0.001), higher fractional proximal sodium reabsorption (74 ± 1.2% vs. 71.6 ± 0.9; P < 0.01), exchangeable sodium pool (2937 ± 62 mmol/1.73 m2 vs. 2767 ± 56; P < 0.01), larger kidney volume (317 ± 7 ml/1.73 m2 vs. 270 ± 8; P < 0.05) and left ventricular mass index (122 ± 4 g/m2 vs. 107 ± 5; P < 0.05). Hypertensive patients with normal sodium-lithium countertransport activity had renal parameters similar to normotensive diabetic patients, except higher left ventricular mass index and kidney volume. Hypertensive diabetic patients with elevated sodium-lithium countertransport activity also had higher levels of plasma triglycerides, lower plasma HDL-cholesterol and impaired insulin sensitivity (assessed by euglyce-mic insulin-glucose clamp) compared with the other two groups. In conclusion, renal, cardiac and metabolic abnormalities are prominent in hypertensive type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients with higher sodium-lithium countertransport

    Investigating the impact of pedoclimatic conditions on the oenological performance of two red cultivars grown throughout southern Italy

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    The cultivated grapevine, Vitis vinifera subsp. vinifera, possesses a rich biodiversity with numerous varieties. Each variety adapts differently to varying pedoclimatic conditions, which greatly influence the terroir expression of wine regions. These conditions impact vine growth, physiology, and berry composition, ultimately shaping the unique characteristics and typicity of the wines produced. Nowadays, the potential of the different adaptation capacities of grape varieties has not yet been thoroughly investigated. We addressed this issue by studying two grape varieties, Aglianico and Cabernet Sauvignon, in two different pedoclimatic conditions of Southern Italy. We evaluated and compared the effect of different pedoclimatic conditions on plant physiology, the microbial quality of grapes using Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology, the expression trends of key genes in ripe berries and the concentration of phenolic compounds in grapes and wines by HPLC-MS, HPLC-DAD, NMR and spectrophotometric analyses. Metabolomic and microbiome data were integrated with quantitative gene expression analyses to examine varietal differences and plasticity of genes involved in important oenological pathways. The data collected showed that the phenotypic response of studied grapes in terms of vigor, production, and fruit quality is strongly influenced by the pedoclimatic conditions and, in particular, by soil physical properties. Furthermore, Aglianico grape variety was more influenced than the Cabernet Sauvignon by environmental conditions. In conclusion, the obtained findings not only reinforce the terroir concept and our comprehension of grape’s ability to adapt to climate variations but can also have implications for the future usage of grape genetic resources
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