1,721,106 research outputs found

    Therapeutic use of hyaluronic acid fillers in the treatment of corticosteroid-induced skin and subcutaneous atrophy

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    Corticosteroid injection–related tissue atrophy might cause permanent skin and soft tissue deformities1 due to several factors, most importantly fibroblast inhibition and decreased Type I collagen synthesis. Correction of these deformities is challenging and is mostly based on volume replacement with lipofilling or other methods. Clinical observations and research have shown that injection of stabilized hyaluronic acid (HA) induces collagen synthesis, partially restoring dermal matrix components, and eventually producing a permanent effect.2–5 Based on these data, we hypothesize that HA injections might successfully treat atrophic tissue changes caused by corticosteroid injection. We describe a case of persistent buttock corticosteroid injection–related skin and soft tissue atrophy treated successfully with repeated HA injections

    Nonsurgical treatment of earlobe aging in Mowlavi stages I and II earlobe ptosis with Hyaluronic acid fillers

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    Background: Earlobe deflation caused by fat atrophy is normally treated with lipofilling, mostly in the context of facelift surgery. In this report, we aim at reporting on Hyaluronic Acid injections to treat earlobe deflation. Materials and Methods: 16 Mowlavi Grade I and II patients were treated with HA injections, followed by molding to shape the lobule. Results: Effective correction, lasting 14 months on average, is achieved. Five patients needed a touch-up procedure after 4-6 months to improve the result. Conclusions: Earlobe augmentation with HA is an ideal option for correction of earlobe atrophy in cases of Mowlavi Grades I and II ptosis. Long-lasting (about 14 months) correction is achieved with no downtime

    Hyaluronic acid-based two-stage medical therapy to unfold the aged face: The centrifugal approach

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    Background: Facial aging is a multifactorial process characterized by structural changes to the dermis and ligaments, lipoatrophy in the fat pads and hypodermis, remodeling of the bony skeleton, change in muscle tonicity and tissue descent. Aims: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a hyaluronic acid-based treatment for the aging face that addresses all its causes in a caudal to cranial and medial to lateral direction: the centrifugal technique. Methods: Between March 2015 and January 2018, 187 patients were treated with a high G’ hyaluronic acid in two sessions, one/two weeks apart, to improve signs of facial aging, starting from the lower centrofacial area and progressing laterally and cranially. Results were assessed using a Global Aesthetic Improvement Scale (GAIS) judging pre- and post-treatment (32 weeks) pictures. Results: The technique effectively treated the aging face. The investigator and all patients evaluated the results improved or very much improved and agreed that the results were very natural looking. Conclusion: Use of a systematic centrifugal technique to address the signs of facial aging resulted in significant and long-lasting improvement, as judged by the investigator and high patient acceptance and satisfaction

    Rare prostatic carcinomas: histogenesis and morphologic pattern.

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    Most prostate cancers (90%) are acinar adenocarcinomas originating in the peripheral or other prostatic regions. The pathological finding, clinical course and immunohistochemical studies, indicate that the small cell carcinoma of the prostate is most likely to be a neuroendocrine neoplasm

    Cheek volumization and the nasolabial fold

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    Sir: We have read the article by Mowlds and Lambros1 with great interest and enthusiasm. The findings of their study show that the nasolabial fold does not improve after cheek injection. By analyzing three-dimensional images of the face before and immediately after cheek injection of high- G′ hyaluronic acid, they demonstrate that the perceived nasolabial fold improvement, reported after cheek injections,2,3 is attributable to overall improvement in facial appearance rather than to actual nasolabial fold improvement. As a consequence, it might be ruled out that the nasolabial fold is a consequence of cheek deflating and it is likely attributable predominantly to change in the corner of the mouth and to muscular traction.4 This finding is of paramount importance because cheek overvolumization is frequently performed in an attempt to achieve something that will not occur: correction of the nasolabial folds. This practice is responsible for the bloated, overfilled appearance of the cheeks. Cheek overfilling gives a bulging, unnatural result, especially on animation. Increasing cheek volume and enhancing malar projection, by injecting the deep medial cheek fat compartment, is part of the treatment because lost volumes should be replaced.5 It is overfilling in an attempt to improve nasolabial and nasojugal folds that causes unnatural results. In fact, we see more and more patients asking to avoid that overfilled appearance. We also strongly agree with the authors’ statement that “young faces benefit from filling prominences and older faces benefit from filling hollows.” We would like to emphasize how important it is to fill the nasolabial fold and nasojugal crease directly in the subdermal plane as they become hollow with age. The benefit of treating these areas is clearly shown by the case presented (Figs. 1 and 2). The result is obtained progressively (in two sessions separated by 10 days) using LP–nonanimal stabilized hyaluronic acid gel (Restylane Perlane, now Lyft, Restylane; Q-Med, Uppsala, Sweden). The result is long lasting and can be maintained by yearly repeated injections (Fig. 2). Treating the nasolabial and nasojugal creases directly allows not only elimination of the crease but also maintenance of a natural result by avoiding overfilling of the cheek. We aim at supporting the breakthrough findings of Mowlds and Lambros that volumizing the cheek does not improve the nasolabial fold. Filling of the cheek must be performed judiciously to reshape the cheek, and any attempt at treating the nasolabial fold by volumizing the cheek will fail. To flatten the nasolabial fold, it should be directly injected

    Nucleolar organizer regions in malignant melanoma and melanocytic nevi. Comparison of two counting methods.

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    Using a silver staining technique, we studied nucleolar organizer regions (AgNOR) in paraffin sections of junctional nevi, compound nevi, intradermal nevi, blue nevi, dysplastic nevi, Spitz nevi, lentigo maligna, malignant melanomas in nevus, superficial spreading melanomas, and nodular melanomas. Two methods of counting black dots within nuclei were employed. One method was to count the discrete black dots within the nuclei, including the tiny black dots seen within the nucleolus; the second method did not take into account the subsidary cluster of tiny black dots seen within the nucleolus, instead treating these dots as a single structure. Whichever method we used, a significant difference was found between the pooled mean AgNOR numbers for benign and malignant lesions. We found an overlap, however, between benign, in particular Spitz and dysplastic nevi, and malignant lesions when considering individual counts of AgNOR using both methods. We conclude that studying AgNOR does not seem to be a useful technique to differentiate Spitz and dysplastic nevi from malignant melanomas

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
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