Search results for " Needle"

showing 10 items of 115 documents

Percutaneous liver biopsy: a safe outpatient procedure?

2001

Following the discovery of hepatitis C virus, more liver biopsies (LB) than before are being performed to assess the severity of liver disease. In this study, following the recommendations for outpatient LB made by the Patient Care Committee of the American Gastroenterological Association, we assessed the feasibility and benefits of LB performed as an outpatient versus inpatient procedure over the last 7 years in our centre. The study included 1,581 patients consecutively examined in our institute; all LBs were performed by a single operator with a 16-gauge needle using the Menghini technique, and in all cases the puncture site was determined using prebiopsy ultrasound. Liver lesions were c…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaCost ControlChronic liver diseaseLiver biopsy complicationLiver diseasePatient satisfactionAmbulatory careBiopsyAmbulatory CareMedicineHumansAgedRetrospective StudiesUltrasonographymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryPatient SelectionChronic liver diseaseBiopsy NeedleHaemobiliaGastroenterologyOutpatientRetrospective cohort studyHealth Care CostsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSurgeryLiverPatient SatisfactionFemalebusinessComplicationDigestion
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Ki-67 immunoexpression and radiological assessment of necrosis improves accuracy of conventional and modified core biopsy systems in predicting the f…

2021

Based on the French Federation Nationale des Centers de Lutte Contre le Cancer (FNCLCC) grading system, this study assesses the accuracy of conventional and modified core biopsy (CB) systems in predicting the final grade (low vs high) assigned to the resected specimen. Substituting Ki-67 immunoexpression for mitotic count, and radiological for histological assessment of necrosis, we used two modified FNCLCC CB grading systems: (1) Ki-67 immunoexpression alone, and (2) Ki-67 plus radiological assessment of necrosis. We graded 199 soft tissue sarcomas (STS) from nine centers, and compared the results for the conventional (obtained from local histopathology reports) and modified CB systems wit…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySoft Tissue NeoplasmsPathology and Forensic MedicineRadiological necrosisNecrosisCore biopsymedicineBiomarkers TumorHumansGrading (education)Retrospective StudiesNot evaluatedReceiver operating characteristicbiologybusiness.industrySarcomasSoft tissueSarcomaCell Biologymedicine.diseaseKi-67 AntigenRadiological weaponKi-67biology.proteinKi-67HistopathologyFemaleSarcomaBiopsy Large-Core NeedleNuclear medicinebusinessFNCLCC grading system
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CT-guided stereotactic biopsy aided by Doppler ultrasonic vascular monitoring

1992

The use of a 20 MHz pulsed Doppler technique during stereotactic brain tumour biopsies is described. By means of a miniaturized ultrasonic probe the tissue planned for biopsy was investigated for vessel signals. Out of 41 patients, with this technique a flow-pulse curve in front of the biopsy cannula was registered in 14 cases. In 9 cases one pulse curve was determined and in 5 cases two or more flow curves were found, indicating the presence of arterial vessels. The depth of the vessels signal could be localized and this area avoided for biopsy sampling. In a series of 41 stereotactic biopsies carried out in this way there was no intra-operative haemorrhage or postoperative haematoma.

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyStereotactic biopsyAdolescentStereotaxic Techniquessymbols.namesakeBiopsymedicineHumansSampling (medicine)ChildAgedNeuroradiologymedicine.diagnostic_testBrain Neoplasmsbusiness.industryBiopsy NeedleInterventional radiologyCerebral ArteriesMiddle AgedEchoencephalographyCannulaChild PreschoolsymbolsFemaleSurgeryUltrasonic sensorNeurology (clinical)RadiologyTomography X-Ray ComputedbusinessDoppler effectBlood Flow VelocityActa Neurochirurgica
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Stereotactic biopsies guided by an optical navigation system: technique and clinical experience.

2002

Frame-based stereotactic biopsies are time-consuming procedures making necessary head fixation in a ring, explicit coordinate calculation and setting of the parameters. Frameless systems make many of these intermediate steps unnecessary, impose less mechanical restrictions regarding access to the lesions, and with slight modifications can be used to perform stereotactic biopsies. A special adaptation designed to fix the holder and the biopsy instrument is described. The neuronavigation optical tracking system of Radionics was used. CT scans were performed with 6 skin markers. Calibration was performed after head fixation in the Mayfield clamp. Mean calibration error was 2.19 +/- 0.81 mm. Th…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyStereotactic biopsyNeuronavigationTime FactorsAdolescentVisual controlStereotaxic TechniquesBiopsymedicineHumansChildAgedBrain Diseasesmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryBiopsy NeedleGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedCannulaSurgeryOptical navigationClampSurgery Computer-AssistedRadionicsSurgeryFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessNuclear medicineTomography X-Ray ComputedMinimally invasive neurosurgery : MIN
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Enzyme activities and glycogen concentration in skeletal muscle in alcoholism. The effect of abstinence and physical conditioning.

1974

. Muscle metabolism of chronic alcoholics has been studied using a muscle biopsy technique immediately after a drinking period, after 6–7 days' abstinence and after one month's physical conditioning. The activities of CPK, HK, LDH, MDH and SDH were significantly decreased in musculus vastus lateralis for 1–2 days after an alcoholic debauch. The enzyme activities of the alcoholics, who either had been abstinent for 6–7 days or in addition conditioned for one month, did not differ from those of the controls. The concentration of muscle glycogen was at the same level in both groups, but in bicycle ergometer work of an equal relative intensity the alcoholics used more glycogen than the control …

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyTime Factorsmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhysical fitnessPhysical Exertionchemistry.chemical_compoundMalate DehydrogenaseInternal medicineHexokinaseInternal MedicinemedicineHumansCreatine Kinasemedia_commonchemistry.chemical_classificationMuscle biopsyPhysical Education and TrainingPhysical conditioningGlycogenmedicine.diagnostic_testL-Lactate Dehydrogenasebusiness.industryMusclesBiopsy NeedlePhosphotransferasesSkeletal muscleAbstinenceMiddle AgedSuccinate DehydrogenaseAlcohol OxidoreductasesAlcoholismEndocrinologyEnzymemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryConditioningbusinessEnergy MetabolismGlycogenActa medica Scandinavica
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Microcirculation in the healing of surgical wounds in the oral cavity.

2013

Abstract. The aim of this research is to evaluate in vivo the characteristics of microcirculation after taking a biopsy sample from the oral mucosa. 20 patients were recruited to the study and all underwent an oral mucosa biopsy for the excision of benign neoformations. The modifications in the oral microcirculation were evaluated in vivo in correspondence to the surgical site through videocapillaroscopy at three different times: 30 min before the biopsy; 48 h after the biopsy; and 7 days after the biopsy. The statistical significance was checked with the Mann–Whitney U-test (P < 0.05). The analysis of videocapillaroscopic patterns showed statistically significant variations relative to the…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyVideo RecordingMicroscopic AngioscopyFibromaMicrocirculationMicroscopic AngioscopyYoung AdultDouble-Blind MethodIn vivoBiopsymedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedHumansOral mucosaAgedMouth neoplasmMouthWound Healingoral microcirculationmedicine.diagnostic_testPapillomabusiness.industrySettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaMicrocirculationBiopsy NeedleOptical ImagingSurgical woundvideocapillaroscopysurgical wounds.Middle AgedSurgeryCapillariesTongue Neoplasmsmedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyLip NeoplasmsSurgeryFemaleMouth NeoplasmsOral SurgerybusinessWound healingFollow-Up StudiesInternational journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery
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Surgical Treatment of Extravasation Injuries

2005

The authors present their experience of treating anti-cancer drug extravasation by means of a composite surgical technique that consists of infiltration with physiological solution and hyaluronidase and subsequent manual aspiration of solutes alternated with profuse irrigation of the infiltrated area. In the immediate post-op we carry out a medical therapy that consists of calciparine and topic antibiotic and/or steroid creams. Since the year 2000 this technique has been used on 25 patients. We have had neither complications nor scars. Copyright 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc Surgical treatment of extravasation injuries. Napoli P, Corradino B, Badalamenti G, Tripoli M, Vieni S, Furfaro MF, Cordova A,…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyantiblastictreatment KeyWords Plus:ANTITUMOR AGENTSextravasation injury; antiblastic; prevention; treatmentANTITUMOR AGENTS; APPROPRIATE MANAGEMENT; TISSUE EXTRAVASATION; HYALURONIDASE [Author Keywords]Drug ExtravasationTherapeutic irrigationScarsAntineoplastic AgentsTISSUE EXTRAVASATIONAPPROPRIATE MANAGEMENTCicatrixpreventionBiopsymedicineHumansCalciparineAuthor Keywords:extravasation injurySurgical treatmentTherapeutic IrrigationAgedRetrospective Studiesmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryBiopsy NeedleGeneral MedicineHYALURONIDASEMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseHandExtravasationSurgeryAnti-Bacterial Agentsanticancer drugsTreatment OutcomeOncologyAnesthesiaSurgeryFemalemedicine.symptombusinessInfiltration (medical)Extravasation of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Materials
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Invisible gastric carcinoma detected by random biopsy: long-term results after photodynamic therapy

2008

Background and study aims Gastric cancer diagnosed from routine gastric biopsies without any evidence of a visible lesion and negative repeated biopsies is an infrequent but serious clinical problem for which gastrectomy has usually been recommended, even if operative specimens do not show cancer either. We report on a series of 22 such patients undergoing long-term follow-up after attempted treatment with photodynamic therapy (PDT). Patients and methods 22 patients with invisible gastric cancer (IGC) who presented during a 10-year period (10 men, mean age 56 +/- 15 years) were prospectively included. Initial histopathological findings confirmed by second opinion included 10 well-differenti…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentPhotodynamic therapyGastric carcinomaAdenocarcinomaStomach NeoplasmsBiopsymedicineCarcinomaHumansAgedPhotosensitizing Agentsmedicine.diagnostic_testSignet ring cellbusiness.industryBiopsy NeedleStomachSecond opinionGastroenterologyCancerMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseSurgeryTreatment OutcomePhotochemotherapyFemaleGastrectomybusinessCarcinoma Signet Ring CellEndoscopy
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Kinin receptor status in normal and inflammed gastric mucosa

1997

No documented studies have been reported on the presence of B1 and B2 kinin receptors in the mammalian gastric mucosa. This first study aimed to immunolocalise sites of B1 and B2 kinin receptors in the human pyloric gastric mucosa and to evaluate its role in gastritis. Biopsies were obtained from patients with dyspepsia during endoscopic examination of the patient. The diagnosis and grading of the gastritis was performed on histological examination. Sections were immunostained for both B1 and B2 receptors using rabbit anti-human B1 and B2 kinin receptor antibodies. Control tissue was obtained from partial gastrectomy specimens, following surgical excision of the antrum for duodenal ulcers. …

AdultReceptor StatusPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyReceptor Bradykinin B2Molecular Sequence DataInflammationBiologyReceptor Bradykinin B1EpitheliumAntibody SpecificityGastroscopyPyloric AntrummedicineGastric mucosaAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceDyspepsiaReceptorAntrumBradykinin Receptor AntagonistsPharmacologyReceptors BradykininBiopsy NeedleKininImmunohistochemistryPrecipitin TestsEpitheliummedicine.anatomical_structureGastric MucosaGastritisRabbitsmedicine.symptomGastritisFluorescein-5-isothiocyanateImmunopharmacology
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Uterine leiomyoma metastasis as a first sign of breast cancer

1998

Uterine metastases from extragenital cancer are rarely reported in the literature. More frequently, the female genital tract is involved by direct extension from an adjacent pelvic organ. A 37-year-old woman had a myoma of the uterine wall and hypermenorrhea. The mass was laparoscopically enucleated, and frozen section examination was performed because it was macroscopically suspicious for sarcomatoid degeneration. The final diagnosis was metastatic carcinoma in the uterus of probable breast origin.

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyUterusAntineoplastic AgentsBreast NeoplasmsMetastatic carcinomaMetastasisFatal OutcomeBreast cancermedicineHumansGynecologyFrozen section procedureUterine leiomyomaLeiomyomabusiness.industryBiopsy NeedleObstetrics and GynecologyCancerMyomamedicine.diseaseImmunohistochemistrymedicine.anatomical_structureChemotherapy AdjuvantLymphatic MetastasisUterine NeoplasmsFemaleLaparoscopyRadiotherapy AdjuvantbusinessThe Journal of the American Association of Gynecologic Laparoscopists
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