1,720,968 research outputs found
An Adipocitolitic Aqueous Micro-Gelatinous Solution for Buffalo Hump Deformity Reduction
Buffalo hump is a manifestation of HIV related lipodistrophy, it is characterized by an enlargment of dorsocervical fat pad and is distressing for patients. Surgical correction until a few years ago was the only option for treatment, however in last years non surgical corrections was carried out with minimally invasive techniques. Authors report this case that describe a longer follow up of an already published study were this deformity was treated with the injection of an adipocitolitic aqueous micro-gelatinous solution and during all the follow up no relapse was observed
A new method of skin erythrosis evaluation in digital images.
In the clinical field, reproducible and comparable assessments of skin color are needed for objective evaluation of lesions and efficacy of treatments. In order to provide objective, quantitative color information in skin lesions, devices such as reflectance spectrophotometer and reflectance colorimeter have been successfully used during the past decade, though they are too expensive and technically complex to be handled in routine clinical situations. Reflectance skin color measurements require direct contact of the probe with the skin, and the compression significantly influences readings. Color measurements obtained from digitized images have been proposed as a simple and cost-effective way to evaluate skin color and promote efficacy of treatments. The disadvantage is its direct and close relation to the ambient light: even if an accurate control of subject illumination is provided, readings vary between different laboratories. We propose a standard system for computerized color image analysis of skin erythrosis modification after Intense Pulsed Light (IPL) treatments, making it possible to compare readings taken by different observers in different environmental light conditions. The goal of our study is the introduction of fixed color internal controls in digital imaging in order to calculate a normalization factor of measurements, resulting not in a method of absolute quantification of erythema or erythrosis but in a method that provides the possibility of translation and comparison of the red values between systems in different environmental conditions. Between December 2004 and May 2005 we evaluated 30 patients at the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the University "La Sapienza" of Rome. Three points of standard colored paper (Red Green Blue) were applied with a plastic pattern (standard intersection lines) and white point in non involved area for skin control. For every patient we took a series of pictures pre-treatment and after a standard cycle of 5/6 IPL. We evaluate the grade of reproducibility of our procedure with a careful analysis of pre-treatment digital images obtained in different environmental conditions. The statistic analysis of the standard deviation between the values of R obtained (using different light conditions), and the respective normalized valor (normalized to the referent image), did not show any significant statistical difference and allows us to achieve our goal: the reproducibility of the results
A facial marker in facial wasting rehabilitation
Background: Facial lipoatrophy is one of the most distressing manifestation for HIV patients. It can be stigmatizing, severely affecting quality of life and self-esteem, and it may result in reduced antiretroviral adherence. Several filling techniques have been proposed in facial wasting restoration, with different outcomes. The aim of this study is to present a triangular area that is useful to fill in facial wasting rehabilitation. Methods: Twenty-eight HIV patients rehabilitated for facial wasting were enrolled in this study. Sixteen were rehabilitated with a nonresorbable filler and twelve with structural fat graft harvested from lipohypertrophied areas. A photographic pre-operative and postoperative evaluation was performed by the patients and by two plastic surgeons who were "blinded." The filled area, in both patients rehabilitated with structural fat grafts or non-resorbable filler, was a triangular area of depression identified between the nasolabial fold, the malar arch, and the line that connects these two anatomical landmarks. Results: The cosmetic result was evaluated after three months after the last filling procedure in the non-resorbable filler group and after three months post-surgery in the structural fat graft group. The mean patient satisfaction score was 8.7 as assessed with a visual analogue scale. The mean score for blinded evaluators was 7.6. Conclusion: In this study the authors describe a triangular area of the face, between the nasolabial fold, the malar arch, and the line that connects these two anatomical landmarks, where a good aesthetic facial restoration in HIV patients with facial wasting may be achieved regardless of which filling technique is used. Copyright © 2012 Journal of Drugs in Dermatology.Background: Facial lipoatrophy is one of the most distressing manifestation for HIV patients. It can be stigmatizing, severely affecting quality of life and self-esteem, and it may result in reduced antiretroviral adherence. Several filling techniques have been proposed in facial wasting restoration, with different outcomes. The aim of this study is to present a triangular area that is useful to fill in facial wasting rehabilitation. Methods: Twenty-eight HIV patients rehabilitated for facial wasting were enrolled in this study. Sixteen were rehabilitated with a nonresorbable filler and twelve with structural fat graft harvested from lipohypertrophied areas. A photographic pre-operative and postoperative evaluation was performed by the patients and by two plastic surgeons who were "blinded." The filled area, in both patients rehabilitated with structural fat grafts or non-resorbable filler, was a triangular area of depression identified between the nasolabial fold, the malar arch, and the line that connects these two anatomical landmarks. Results: The cosmetic result was evaluated after three months after the last filling procedure in the non-resorbable filler group and after three months post-surgery in the structural fat graft group. The mean patient satisfaction score was 8.7 as assessed with a visual analogue scale. The mean score for blinded evaluators was 7.6. Conclusion: In this study the authors describe a triangular area of the face, between the nasolabial fold, the malar arch, and the line that connects these two anatomical landmarks, where a good aesthetic facial restoration in HIV patients with facial wasting may be achieved regardless of which filling technique is used. Copyright © 2012 Journal of Drugs in Dermatology
Easy closure of anterior palatal fistula with local flaps
Background: Anterior palatal fistula is often observed in the treatment of the cleft palate with a push-back palatoplasty. High rate of incomplete closure is reported. We describe a reliable new technique with reverse local flaps to close an anterior palatal fistula. Materials and Methods: One hundred seventeen cleft patients, treated with push-back palatoplasty, underwent repair of an anterior palatal fistula by our group. Fistulas were located in the anterior hard palate, with a variable size between 0.1 cm to more than 0.5 cm. Two reverse local flaps from the nasal mucosa of the lateral palatal edges are used to close the fistula. A third flap is elevated from the premaxilla in bilateral clefts. The flaps are elevated toward the center of the fistula. The closure is made in 2 layers for unilateral cleft and in 3 layers for bilateral cleft, using absorbable sutures. Results: Complete closure of the anterior palatal fistula was achieved in 77 patients (65%) after the first surgery, 27 patients (23%) required a second attempt to close the fistula, and 10 patients (8.5%) required a third surgery. Three patients (2.5%) continued to have a fistula after 5 surgeries. Conclusions: We believe that our method is reliable and easy to perform, and it has a high success rate. The technique is indicated to correct small- to medium-size defects. © 2010 by Mutaz B. Habal, MD
A modified scalpel in hair restoration
: One limiting factor of hair transplantation is the amount of hair available in the patient donor scalp. Several techniques have been proposed as steel punches, multiblade knives, FUE (follicular unit extract) and single-strip harvesting. The authors introduce a modified surgical scalpel with a No. 10 blade to minimize side effects. This scalpel is folded at 120-degree angle and allows the incision to be parallel to the hair follicles and help the surgeon to avoid resection of the hair during dissection. The authors propose this modified scalpel as a new ideal instrument for removing the donor area in hair transplantation
Microsurgical anastomosis with the 'PCA' technique.
BACKGROUND:
In this study, we introduce a new microvascular anastomosis technique called 'PCA' (Posterior wall first--Continuous interrupted--Airborne). The conventional microvascular anastomosis (CI), with single interrupted stitches, requires a long time to be completed, as each suture must be tied before starting the following stitch. Surgeons are often searching to reduce microsurgery time, particularly when there are multiple vessels to be anastomosed or when there is a prerequisite for the ischemia time to be quick.
METHODS:
The authors conducted a comparative study of PCA and CI on 40 Wistar-albino rats. The femoral arteries and veins of each rat were used, resulting in a total of 160 vessels, with a diameter of 0.8 to 1mm. The rats were divided into two groups. Patency rates were compared between the two groups, using the chi-square test. The times required to perform the anastomosis were compared using the Student's t test. A p value<0.001 was considered significant.
RESULTS:
The mean time required for microvascular anastomosis of the femoral arteries was 22 minutes (mins) and 46 seconds (secs) in the PCA group, and 28 mins and 50 secs in the CI group. The mean time required for microvascular anastomosis of veins was 19 mins and 20 secs in the PCA group, and 23 mins and 36 secs in the CI group.
CONCLUSION:
The combination of the three different techniques (posterior wall first, continuous-interrupted, and airborne), used for the microvascular anastomosis, is safe, secure, and time-saving. The advantages of this combined method are the benefits of a single stitch, the increased speed of a continuous suture, and the reduced time of tying. The PCA technique may be helpful to selected clinical situations, due to a reduction in microsurgical time, as in such cases of multiple digital replantations, multiple "in chain" free flaps, vein grafts, and high metabolic free flaps, such as the intestine free microvascular transfer
Assessment of a New Hyaluronic Acid Filler. Double-blind, Randomized, Comparative Study between Puragen and Captique in the Treatment of Nasolabial Folds
Fillers represent a field of aesthetic medicine under remarkable expansion. Over the past few years, in the USA, there has been a huge increase in the use of fillers, especially for hyaluronic acid (400% in 2004). The causes of this increase have been the greater tolerability of this reabsorbable filler with respect to the others, and its prolonged efficacy in time due to chemical modifications of its molecular structure. In our study, we report the results of a double-blind comparative study between Puragen (latest-generation hyaluronic acid with double cross-linking) and Captique (second generation hyaluronic acid with single cross-linking), in the treatment of nasolabial folds. Each patient received Puragen in one nasolabial fold and Captique in the contralateral fold, at random. Clinical efficacy was assessed independently by the investigator and the patient 2, 4 and 6 months after baseline or when the optimal cosmetic result was obtained. The tolerability assessment was made by the patient (using a daily diary to record any adverse events) for 2 weeks after each treatment, and by the operator 2, 4, and 6 months after baseline. Sixty-eight patients completed follow up at 6 months. From the results obtained in this study, Puragen remained stably in the treated tissues even after 6 months while less satisfactory results were obtained with Captique
Utilization of intense pulsed light in the treatment of face and neck erythrosis
Erythrosis is a clinical manifestation characterized by parossistic vasodilatations followed by fixed superficial venular dilatations localized at the face, neck, décolleté and pinnas. To date, a variety of lasers have been used for treating vascular skin lesions. This study will describe the response on these vascular lesions using the intense pulsed light (IPL) source. Twenty-two female patients and twelve men, aged between 19 and 65, had a phototype ranging from 2 to 4 on the Fitzpatrick scale. The technique is based on a pulsed light of high intensity obtained with a vascular filter of 560 nm. They underwent five treatments of twenty minutes each, at intervals of twenty-one days, with a variable fluency between 9-12 J/cm2 and impulse time of 10-20 ms. The sheaf used is a rectangular spot of 2 cm x 5 cm. In twenty-four patients we obtained a total regression of the cutaneous manifestation after 5 applications, whilst another two patients showed only an attenuation of the erythema. In five cases with erythrosis the erythema persisted after the end of the treatment, although the patients were satisfied with the evident benefits. In two patients affected by Civatte's poikiloderma of the neck we obtained differing results: In the first case an evident positive response of the clinical picture was perceived after only two application of the IPL; in the second case, the benefits were evident after 3-4 applications of IPL at a higher fluency of up to 14 J/ cm2. One patient in treatment with oral antibiotics showed good results from the first application with regression of the erythema up to its disappearance. Collateral effects are not reported, although there was a long-standing (more than 48 hours) post-treatment erythema in only one case. The IPL system, with its broad range of technical variables, is an effective tool in achieving meaningful and lasting clearance of erythrosis
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