167 research outputs found
Comparison of 6 cone-beam computed tomography systems for image quality and detection of simulated canine impaction-induced external root resorption in maxillary lateral incisors
INTRODUCTION:
The most frequent adverse effect of canine impaction is resorption of the adjacent incisors. The subjective image quality and the radiographic diagnostic accuracy for detection of simulated canine-induced external root resorption lesions in maxillary lateral incisors were compared among 6 cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) systems in vitro.
METHODS:
A child cadaver skull in the early mixed dentition was obtained. This skull had an impacted maxillary left canine and allowed a reliable simulation. Simulated root resorption cavities were created in 8 extracted maxillary left lateral incisors by the sequential use of 0.16-mm diameter round burs in the distopalatal root surface. Cavities of varying depths were drilled in the middle or apical thirds of each tooth root according to 3 setups: slight (0.15, 0.20, and 0.30 mm), moderate (0.60 and 1.00 mm), and severe (1.50, 2.00, and 3.00 mm) resorption. The lateral incisors, including 2 intact teeth, were repositioned individually in the alveolus with approximal contacts to the impacted maxillary left canine. Six sets of radiographic images were obtained with 3D Accuitomo-XYZ Slice View Tomograph (J. Morita, Kyoto, Japan), Scanora 3D CBCT (Soredex, Tuusula, Finland), Galileos 3D Comfort (Sirona Dental Systems, Bensheim, Germany), Picasso Trio (E-WOO Technology, Giheung-gu, Republic of Korea), ProMax 3D (Planmeca OY, Helsinki, Finland), and Kodak 9000 3D (Trophy, Croissy-Beaubourg, France) for each tooth setup. The CBCT images were acquired and subsequently analyzed by 12 observers. Linear models for repeated measures were used to compare the CBCT systems for the image quality and the degree of agreement between the diagnosed severity of root resorption and the true severity.
RESULTS:
The differences in the image quality between CBCT systems were statistically significant (P 0.05) among the different CBCT systems.
CONCLUSIONS:
High image quality is important when detecting root resorption. The CBCT systems used in this study had high accuracy with no significant differences between them in the detection of the severity of root resorption.sponsorship: The research leading to these results received funding from the European Atomic Energy Community's Seventh Framework Program FP7/2007-2011 under grant agreement no 212246 (SEDENTEXCT: Safety and Efficacy of a New and Emerging Dental X-ray Modality). (European Atomic Energy Community|212246, Academy of Finland (AKA)|212246)status: Publishe
Increasing experience of modified two‐stage transanal ileal pouch–anal anastomosis for therapy refractory ulcerative colitis. What have we learned? A retrospective analysis on 75 consecutive cases at a tertiary referral hospital
AIM: Ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) should be delayed to a second stage in patients with ulcerative colitis and prolonged exposure to medical therapy. However, there is still discussion about whether a modified two-stage approach is preferable to a three-stage approach. Recently, a transanal approach has been introduced to overcome the well-known difficulties of laparoscopic pelvic surgery. This paper presents short-term outcomes of transanal IPAA (Ta-IPAA) according to a modified two-stage approach. METHODS: Data from all patients who underwent a modified two-stage Ta-IPAA for ulcerative colitis refractory to medical therapy were retrieved retrospectively from a prospective database. A comprehensive complication index was used for 90-day postoperative complications. Conversion, duration of surgery, hospital stay and reoperation were considered. A logistic regression model was used to assess risk factors for peri-pouch sepsis. RESULTS: Seventy-five (68.8%) patients were identified from 109 consecutive IPAAs. Median operation time was 159 min. Conversion rate was 4%. Mean comprehensive complication index was 7. All anastomotic leaks (10.6%) were treated with diverting ileostomy. Additionally, active rescue with transanal drainage and early resuturing of the anastomotic gap was performed in six patients. Ileostomy closure occurred after a median period of 5.4 months. At univariable analysis, factors associated with peri-pouch sepsis were male gender and age at IPAA construction. CONCLUSIONS: A modified two-stage Ta-IPAA is safe and feasible. Standardization and reproducibility of the technique are reflected in few conversions and intra-operative complications. Finally, morbidity and anastomotic leak do not differ from those reported in previous Ta-IPAA series with a variable proportion of multistage procedures.status: Publishe
Non-conventional Versus Conventional Strictureplasties for Crohn's Disease. A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Treatment Outcomes
BACKGROUND: Strictureplasties [SXP] represent an alternative to bowel resection in Crohn's disease [CD]. Over the years, there has been growing interest in the role of non-conventional SXP for the treatment of extensive CD. A systematic review was performed on complications and recurrence following conventional and non-conventional SXP. METHODS: The available literature was screened according to the PRISMA statement, until June 2020. Results were categorised into three groups: studies reporting on conventional SXPs; studies with a mixed cohort of conventional and non-conventional SXPs [% non-conventional SXPs ≤15%]; and studies reporting on non-conventional SXPs. Considered endpoints were postoperative complications and overall and SXP site-specific surgical recurrence. Random-effect meta-analysis and meta-regression were used to obtain and compare combined estimates between groups. RESULTS: A total of 26 studies for a total of 1839 patients with CD were included. The pooled postoperative complication rates were was 15.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] 11.2%-20.3%), 7.4% [95% CI 0.2%-22.9%], and 19.2% [95% CI 5-39.6%] for the three groups, respectively. The rates of septic complications were 4% [95% CI 2.2%-6.2%], 1.9% [95% CI 0.4%-4.3%], and 4.2% [95% CI 0.9%-9.8%], respectively. Cumulative overall surgical recurrence rates were 27.5% [95% CI 18.5%-37.6%], 13.2% [95% CI 8.6%-18.7%], and 18.1% [95% CI 6.8%-33.3%]; and SXP site-specific surgical recurrence rates were 13.2% [95% CI 6.9%-21.2%], 8.3% [95% CI 1.6-19.3%], and 8.8% [95% CI 2.2%-19%], respectively. Formal comparison between the groups revealed no differences. CONCLUSIONS: Non-conventional SXP did not differ from conventional SXP with respect to safety and long-term recurrence. Consistent heterogeneity was observed and partially limits the conclusions of this study.status: Publishe
TAMIS is a valuable alternative to TEM for resection of intraluminal rectal tumors
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare the short-term outcome after Transanal Endoscopic Microsurgery (TEM) and Transanal Minimally Invasive Surgery (TAMIS) for intraluminal rectal lesions. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database of all TEM and TAMIS procedures performed at a single institution by one surgeon between March 2009 and September 2017 was conducted. Primary outcome was operating time. Secondary outcomes were blood loss, pathological outcome, length of hospital stay, 30-day readmission and mortality. RESULTS: Fifty-three patients underwent TEM procedure and 68 patients underwent TAMIS. Operating time was significantly shorter for TAMIS compared with TEM (median 45 vs 65 min, p < 0.0001). Blood loss was negligible for both TEM and TAMIS. Resection margins, lesion grade and invasion depth were comparable for both approaches. A significantly higher postoperative readmission rate was observed in the TEM group (17% vs 4.4%, p = 0.031). Mortality was zero in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: TAMIS is a valuable alternative to TEM, leading to decreased operating times, because all resections can be done in lithotomy position.status: Publishe
Effect of anastomotic configuration on Crohn’s disease recurrence after primary ileocolic resection: a comparative monocentric study of end-to-end versus side-to-side anastomosis
There is ongoing debate whether the type of anastomosis following intestinal resection for Crohn's disease (CD) can impact on complications and postoperative recurrence. The aim of the present study is to describe the outcomes of side-to-side (S-S) vs end-to-end (E-E) anastomosis after ileocecal resection for CD. A retrospective comparative study was conducted in consecutive CD patients who underwent primary ileocecal resection between 2005 and 2013. All patients underwent colonoscopy 6 months postoperatively to assess endoscopic recurrence, defined as Rutgeerts' score (RS) >= i2. Surgical recurrence implied reoperation due to CD activity at the anastomotic site. Modified surgical recurrence was defined as the need for reoperation or balloon-dilation. Perioperative factors related to recurrence were evaluated. Of the 127 patients included, 51 (40.2%) received an E-E anastomosis. Median follow-up was longer in the E-E group (8.62 vs 13.68 years). Apart from the microscopic resection margins, patient, disease and surgical characteristics were similar between both groups. Anastomotic complications were comparable (S-S 5.3% vs E-E 5.8%, p = 1.00)0. Postoperatively, biologicals were used in 55.3% and 62.7% (p = 0.47) in S-S and E-E patients, respectively. Endoscopic recurrence did not differ between S-S and E-E patients (78.9 vs 72.9%, p = 0.37), with no significant difference in RS values between both groups (p = 0.87). Throughout follow-up, a higher surgical (p = 0.04) and modified surgical recurrence (p = 0.002) rate was observed in the E-E anastomosis group. Type of anastomosis was an independent risk factor for modified surgical recurrence. The type of anastomosis did not influence endoscopic recurrence and immediate postoperative disease complications. However, the wide diameter and the morphologic characteristic of the stapled S-S anastomosis resulted in a significant reduced risk for surgical and endoscopic reintervention on the long term.Bram Verstockt is supported by a Clinical Research Fund (KOOR) from the University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium and the Research Council at KU Leuven, Belgium. João Sabino is a senior clinical investigator of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO)
A joint normal-ordinal (probit) model for ordinal and continuous longitudinal data
In biomedical studies, continuous and ordinal longitudinal variables are frequently encountered. In many of these studies it is of interest to estimate the effect of one of these longitudinal variables on the other. Time-dependent covariates have, however, several limitations; they can, for example, not be included when the data is not collected at fixed intervals. The issues can be circumvented by implementing joint models, where two or more longitudinal variables are treated as a response and modeled with a correlated random effect. Next, by conditioning on these response(s), we can study the effect of one or more longitudinal variables on another. We propose a normal-ordinal(probit) joint model. First, we derive closed-form formulas to estimate the model-based correlations between the responses on their original scale. In addition, we derive the marginal model, where the interpretation is no longer conditional on the random effects. As a consequence, we can make predictions for a subvector of one response conditional on the other response and potentially a subvector of the history of the response. Next, we extend the approach to a high-dimensional case with more than two ordinal and/or continuous longitudinal variables. The methodology is applied to a case study where, among others, a longitudinal ordinal response is predicted with a longitudinal continuous variable
A joint normal-binary (probit) model for high-dimensional longitudinal data
In many biomedical studies multiple responses are collected over time, which results in highdimensional longitudinal data. It is often of interest to model the continuous and binary responses jointly, which can be done with joint generalized mixed models in which the association is modelled through random effects. Investigating the association between the responses is often limited to scrutinizing the correlations between the latent random effects. In this article, this approach is extended by deriving closed-form formulas for the manifest correlations (and corresponding standard errors), which reflects the correlation between the observed responses as observed. In addition, the marginal joint model is constructed, from which predictions of subvectors of one response conditional on subvectors of other response(s) and potentially a subvector of the history of the response can be derived. Corresponding prediction and confidence intervals are constructed. Two case studies are discussed, in which further pseudo-likelihood methodology is applied to reduce the computational complexity
STRATIFICATION OF HIGH-RISK PROSTATE CANCER INTO PROGNOSTIC CATEGORIES; A EUROPEAN MULTI-INSTITUTIONAL STUDY
Rectal organoid morphology analysis (ROMA) as a novel physiological assay for diagnostic classification in cystic fibrosis
Background Diagnosing cystic fibrosis (CF) is not always straightforward, in particular when sweat chloride concentration (SCC) is intermediate and <2 CF-causing CFTR variants are identified. The physiological CFTR assays proposed in the guidelines, nasal potential difference and intestinal current measurement, are not readily available nor feasible at all ages. Rectal organoid morphology analysis (ROMA) was previously shown to discriminate between organoids from subjects with and without CF based on a distinct phenotypical difference: compared with non-CF organoids, CF organoids have an irregular shape and lack a visible lumen. The current study serves to further explore the role of ROMA when a CF diagnosis is inconclusive. Methods Organoid morphology was analysed using the previously established ROMA protocol. Two indices were calculated: the circularity index to quantify the roundness of organoids and the intensity ratio as a measure of the presence of a central lumen. Results Rectal organoids from 116 subjects were cultured and analysed together with the 189 subjects from the previous study. ROMA almost completely discriminated between CF and non-CF. ROMA indices correlated with SCC, pancreatic status and genetics, demonstrating convergent validity. For cases with an inconclusive diagnosis according to current guidelines, ROMA provided additional diagnostic information, with a diagnostic ROMA classification for 18 of 24 (75%). Discussion ROMA provides additional information to support a CF diagnosis when SCC and genetics are insufficient for diagnostic classification. ROMA is standardised and can be centralised, allowing future inclusion in the diagnostic work-up as first-choice physiological assay in case of an unclear diagnosis.This work was supported by a grant from the Belgian cystic fibrosis patient association ’Association Muco/Mucovereniging’ to the Belgian Organoid Project and the CF research centre at KU Leuven, by the Research Grant of the
Belgian Society of Paediatrics (BVK-SBP 2019), by a grant from the UZ Leuven Fund for Translational Biomedical Research and by the Klosterfrau Group Award for research in Paediatric Pulmonology awarded by the Klosterfrau Healthcare Group (no award/grant numbers).
Acknowledgements
We thank all people who participated in this study. We thank Abida Bibi and Yoline Soeffers for the technical work involving the rectal organoids. We thank the team at the UZ Leuven CF reference centre for supporting this research, particularly Linda Boulanger, Nathalie Feyaerts, Marianne Schulte and Els Aertgeerts
Short- and Long-term Outcomes Following Sideto-side Strictureplasty and its Modification Over the Ileocaecal Valve for Extensive Crohn’s Ileitis
Background and Aims: Postoperative recurrence remains a challenging problem in patients with Crohn's disease [CD]. To avoid development of short bowel syndrome, strictureplasty techniques have therefore been proposed. We evaluated short- and long-term outcomes of atypical strictureplasties in CD patients with extensive bowel involvement. Methods: Side-to-side isoperistaltic strictureplasty [SSIS] was performed according to the Michelassi technique or modification of this over the ileocaecal valve [mSSIS]. Ninety-day postoperative morbidity was assessed using the comprehensive complication index [CCI]. Clinical recurrence was defined as symptomatic, endoscopically or radiologically confirmed, stricture/inflammatory lesion requiring medical treatment or surgery. Surgical recurrence was defined as the need for any surgical intervention. Endoscopic remission was defined as <= i1, according to the modified Rutgeerts score. Deep remission was defined as the combination of endoscopic remission and absence of clinical symptoms. Perioperative factors related to clinical recurrence were evaluated. Results: A total of 52 CD patients [SSIS n = 12; mSSIS n = 40] were included. No mortality occurred. Mean CCI was 10.3 [range 0-33.7]. Median follow-up was 5.9 years [range 0.8-9.9]. Clinical recurrence [19 patients] was 29.7% and 39.6% after 3 and 5 years, respectively. Surgical recurrence [seven patients] was 2% and 14.1% after 3 and 5 years, respectively. At the end of the follow-up, 92% of patients kept the original strictureplasty and deep remission was observed in 25.7% of the mSSIS patients. None of the perioperative variables considered showed a significant association with clinical recurrence. Conclusions: SSIS is safe, effective, and provides durable disease control in patients with extensive CD ileitis.Bislenghi, G (corresponding author), UZ Leuven, Herestr 49, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium.
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