Autore/Fonte: Nutririon, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases - Elsevier
Terapia del paziente con Ipercolesterolemia (età > 40 anni)
Leggi →
Gennaio 2023
Questo è quello che abbiamo trovato per te
Autore/Fonte: Nutririon, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases - Elsevier
Messa a punto all’IRCCS IRE, in laboratorio fa regredire malattia
L’Assimefac annuncia la pubblicazione della guida per i medici di medicina generale in merito alla terapia domiciliare del paziente Sars-Cov-2.
Nelle donne è associata a migliore memoria e capacità cognitive
Autore/Fonte: Hypertension
Senza trasfusioni in utero, ripulito sangue della mamma
Colpisce 1 su 20.000-50.000 neonati maschi, cura con 1 infusione
Autore/Fonte: Weill Cornell Medicine
Per 89% pazienti, dopo 3 anni. Locatelli, con una sola infusione
Per neoplasia a grandi cellule b recidivante o refrattaria
Objectives
To identify rates of additional operation after the index operation for degenerative lumbar spine diseases.
Design
Retrospective register study.
Setting
National outcome data from Swespine, the National Swedish spine register.
Participants
A total of 4705 patients who underwent one-level surgery for degenerative disk disease (DDD) or lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) with or without degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS) between 1 January 2007 and 31 December 2010 were followed from 1 January 2007 to 31 December 2020 to record all cases of additional lumbar spine operations.
Interventions
One-level spinal decompression and/or posterolateral fusion for degenerative spine diseases.
Primary outcome measures
Number of additional operations.
Results
Additional operations were more common at adjacent levels for patients with LSS with DS treated with decompression and fusion whereas additional operations were more evenly distributed between the index level and the adjacent levels for DDD treated with fusion and LSS with and without DS treated with decompression only. For patients younger than 60 years, treated with decompression and fusion for LSS with DS, the additional operations were evenly distributed between the index level and the adjacent levels.
Conclusions
There are different patterns of additional operations following the index procedure after surgery for degenerative spine diseases. Rigidity across previously mobile segments is not the only important factor in the development of adjacent segment disease (ASD) after spinal fusion, also the underlying disease and age may play parts in ASD development. The findings of this study can be used in the shared decision-making process when surgery is a treatment option for patients with degenerative lumbar spine diseases as the first operation may be the start of a series of additional spinal operations for other degenerative spinal conditions, either at the index level or at other spinal levels.
Autore/Fonte: N. Veronese
Autore/Fonte: M.L. Basci, P. Tasegian
Autore/Fonte: R. Palmese
Autore/Fonte: G. Nazzicone
Autore/Fonte: G. Costante, A. Ladisa, P. Pavone, L. Lippa.