48 research outputs found

    Laparoscopic radical nephrectomy of angiomyolipoma with renal vein involvement

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    Indexaci贸n: Web of Science; Scielo.Objetivo: Se presenta el caso cl铆nico de un Angiomiolipoma renal con extensi贸n a vena renal, patolog铆a de muy baja frecuencia. Caso cl铆nico: Mujer de 36 a帽os, quien consulta por dolor en flanco izquierdo. En una tomograf铆a computada se encuentra una lesi贸n tumoral extensa del ri帽贸n izquierdo compatible con un Angiomiolipoma renal infiltrante e invasi贸n tumoral de la vena renal. Se realiza nefrectom铆a laparosc贸pica, con extirpaci贸n de trombo tumoral. El tiempo operatorio fue de 127 min y el sangrado estimado de 20 ml. No hubo complicaciones intra ni postoperatorias. La paciente se encuentra actualmente asintom谩tica luego de 12 meses de seguimiento. La histolog铆a mostr贸 un Angiomiolipoma renal con invasi贸n del ri帽贸n y un tumor s贸lido en el lumen de la vena renal. Conclusi贸n: La invasi贸n de vena renal por un Angiomiolipoma es extremadamente raro. Su resoluci贸n laparosc贸pica es posible, con s贸lo una comunicaci贸n previa en la literatura.Background: Angiomyolipomas associated with tuberous sclerosis may invade the renal vein and generate intramural thrombi. Case report: We report a 36-years-old woman, consulting for left flank pain. CT scan showed a large tumor in the left kidney consistent with the diagnosis of infiltrating renal angiomyolipoma with tumor invasion of the vein. Laparoscopic nephrectomy was performed, with removal of tumor thrombus. The operative time was 127 minutes and estimated bleeding 20 ml. There were no intraoperative or postoperative complications. The patient is currently asymptomatic after 12 months of follow up. The pathological study of the surgical piece showed a renal angiomyolipoma with invasion of the kidney and a solid tumor in the lumen of the renal vein.http://ref.scielo.org/7pqpx

    Bypass surgery versus stenting for the treatment of multivessel disease in patients with unstable angina compared with stable angina

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    BACKGROUND: Earlier reports have shown that the outcome of balloon angioplasty or bypass surgery in unstable angina is less favorable than in stable angina. Recent improvements in percutaneous treatment (stent implantation) and bypass surgery (arterial grafts) warrant reevaluation of the relative merits of either technique in treatment of unstable angina. Methods and Results- Seven hundred fifty-five patients with stable angina were randomly assigned to coronary stenting (374) or bypass surgery (381), and 450 patients with unstable angina were randomly assigned to coronary stenting (226) or bypass surgery (224). All patients had multivessel disease considered to be equally treatable by either technique. Freedom from major adverse events, including death, myocardial infarction, and cerebrovascular events, at 1 year was not different in unstable patients (91.2% versus 88.9%) and stable patients (90.4% versus 92.6%) treated, respectively, with coronary stenting or bypass surgery. Freedom from repeat revascularization at 1 year was similar in unstable and stable angina treated with stenting (79.2% versus 78.9%) or bypass surgery (96.3% versus 96%) but was significantly higher in both unstable and stable patients treated with stenting (16.8% versus 16.9%) compared with bypass surgery (3.6% versus 3.5%). Neither the difference in costs between stented or bypassed stable or unstable angina (2594versus2594 versus 3627) nor the cost-effectiveness was significantly different at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: There was no difference in rates of death, myocardial infarction, and cerebrovascular event at 1 year in patients with unstable angina and multivessel disease treated with either stented angioplasty or bypass surgery compared with patients with stable angina. The rate of repeat revascularization of both unstable and stable angina was significantly higher in patients with stents

    A rapid and sensitive system for recovery of nucleic acids from Mycobacteria sp. on archived glass slides

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    The field of diagnostics continues to advance rapidly with a variety of novel approaches, mainly dependent upon high technology platforms. Nonetheless much diagnosis, particularly in developing countries, still relies upon traditional methods such as microscopy. Biological material, particularly nucleic acids, on archived glass slides is a potential source of useful information both for diagnostic and epidemiological purposes. There are significant challenges faced when examining archived samples in order that an adequate amount of amplifiable DNA can be obtained. Herein, we describe a model system to detect low numbers of bacterial cells isolated from glass slides using (laser capture microscopy) LCM coupled with PCR amplification of a suitable target. Mycobacterium smegmatis was used as a model organism to provide a proof of principle for a method to recover bacteria from a stained sample on a glass slide using a laser capture system. Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) stained cells were excised and catapulted into tubes. Recovered cells were subjected to DNA extraction and pre-amplified with multiple displacement amplification (MDA). This system allowed a minimum of 30 catapulted cells to be detected following a nested real-time PCR assay, using rpoB specific primers. The combination of MDA and nested real-time PCR resulted in a 30-fold increase in sensitivity for the detection of low numbers of cells isolated using LCM. This study highlights the potential of LCM coupled with MDA as a tool to improve the recovery of amplifiable nucleic acids from archived glass slides. The inclusion of the MDA step was essential to enable downstream amplification. This platform should be broadly applicable to a variety of diagnostic applications and we have used it as a proof of principle with a Mycobacterium sp. model system

    The anisotropic beam submitted to a uniformly distributed load

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    Adding lactate to the prime solution during hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass: a quantitative acid-base analysis

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    BACKGROUND: The effect of adding lactate to the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) prime was investigated using Stewart's quantitative acid-base approach. According to this quantitative model, serum pH and bicarbonate are determined by three independent factors: the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO(2)), the total concentration of weak acids (e.g. albumin), and the strong ion difference. The apparent strong ion difference is calculated as the sum of sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium minus chloride concentrations. The pH decreases with a smaller strong ion difference and vice versa. METHODS: Twenty patients scheduled for coronary surgery were studied prospectively. All patients were treated identically, except for the prime, which either contained lactate or was lactate free. Just before bypass and before coming off bypass, haemoglobin, glucose, plasma osmolality and colloid osmotic pressure were determined; albumin, lactate, sodium, potassium, ionized calcium, magnesium, phosphate, arterial pH, PCO(2), bicarbonate, and base excess were measured for use in Stewart's analysis. RESULTS: Metabolic acidosis had resolved by the end of bypass with the lactated prime. Although the strong ion gap (apparent minus effective strong ion difference) increased significantly in both groups, its composition differed significantly between the groups. The Stewart technique detected polyanionic gelatin as a weak acid component contributing to the unidentified anion fraction. Colloid osmotic pressure was maintained in both groups. CONCLUSION: Exogenous lactate attenuates acidosis related to CPB. The oncotic and weak acid deficits produced by hypoalbuminaemia may be compensated for temporarily during CPB by polyanionic synthetic colloids such as succinylated gelati
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