Search results for "Vertebra"
showing 10 items of 1220 documents
Drosophila as a model of wound healing and tissue regeneration in vertebrates.
2011
Understanding the molecular basis of wound healing and regeneration in vertebrates is one of the main challenges in biology and medicine. This understanding will lead to medical advances allowing accelerated tissue repair after wounding, rebuilding new tissues/organs and restoring homeostasis. Drosophila has emerged as a valuable model for studying these processes because the genetic networks and cytoskeletal machinery involved in epithelial movements occurring during embryonic dorsal closure, larval imaginal disc fusion/regeneration, and epithelial repair are similar to those acting during wound healing and regeneration in vertebrates. Recent studies have also focused on the use of Drosoph…
Scheie syndrome: enzyme replacement therapy does not prevent progression of cervical myelopathy due to spinal cord compression.
2009
Hurler-Scheie syndrome is caused by alpha-l-iduronidase deficiency. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) can improve physical capacity and reduces organomegaly. However, the effect on bradytrophic connective tissue is limited. As intravenously administered enzyme cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, the therapy of choice for the more severe Hurler syndrome is haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT). In the more attenuated Scheie syndrome, neurological impairment is less severe; therefore, ERT may be appropriate to treat these patients. Information on long-term outcome in Scheie patients undergoing ERT is scarce. We report a 38-year-old female Scheie patient who has been on ERT for 8 yea…
SPECT Bone scintigraphy of benign and malignant lesions of the spine
1989
70 patients were examined with planar and SPECT bone scintigraphy. SPECT proved to be superior over planar bone scanning for imaging of traumatic, inflammatory, and malignant bone lesions. SPECT provides three-dimensional information and, therefore, delineates the exact location and extension of lesions. It also has a higher sensitivity than planar bone scintigraphy. The three-dimensional bone scan generates complementary diagnostic information which often facilitates an adequate therapy protocol.
Is Propionibacterium acnes related to disc degeneration in adults? A systematic review.
2016
Background The aim of this paper was to systematically review the evidence linking Propionibacterium acnes (P. acnes) with the development of symptomatic degenerative disc disease. Evidence acquisition Data were obtained from MEDLINE from their inception to October 2015. Two authors independently conducted the searches, extracted data and completed methodological quality assessments. Articles were included if they investigated the presence of P. acnes in symptomatic degenerative disc disease through intra-operative cultural examination. The methodological quality of the studies was evaluated using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Evidence synthesis Overall 641 articles were retrieved with 9 cros…
Anterior fusion for cervical spondylosis
1978
Anterior fusion was performed on 138 patients as treatment for degenerative changes of the cervical vertebral column. The results were checked after up to 11 years in 122 patients and were found to be good in 55%, fair in 3895% and poor in 6.5%. There were complications of phonetic paralysis in one case, Horner syndrome in two cases, 2 wound infections, and complaints about the iliac crest in 3 patients. Kyphosis at the fused segment occurred 26.1% of cases, the average angle being 15.3 degrees, but it did not influence the clinical results. Mortality was 2%. Inadequate visualization of the nerve roots at operation was probably the reason for the segmental deficits and suggestions were made…
Elevated Protein Content and Prolyl 4-Hydroxylase Activity in Severely Degenerated Human Annulus Fibrosus
2000
Alterations involved with the intervertebral disc degeneration are partly well described, however, it is not so well known how collagen network is affected by the disease. We analyzed the rate of collagen biosynthesis (estimated by the enzymic activities of prolyl 4-hydroxylase and galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase) and the level of hydroxylysylpyridinoline and lysylpyridinoline crosslinks both in normal (n=7) and degenerated (n=7) human annulus fibrosus. The activity of prolyl 4-hydroxylase was significantly increased in degenerated tissue. However, no significant changes in the collagen content or in the amount of hydroxylysylpyridinoline and lysylpyridinoline collagen crosslinks…
Bilateral vertebral artery dissection, agenesis of both ICAs, and connective tissue aberrations
2013
A 35-year-old woman presented with acute signs of stroke (appendix e-1 on the Neurology® Web site at [www.neurology.org][1]). After initial CT with angiography, MRI with time-of-flight angiography confirmed agenesis of both internal carotid arteries (ICAs; figure 1A). It revealed bilateral vertebral artery (VA) dissections and ischemias in both middle artery territories (figure 1, A–E). Skin biopsy microscopy (figure 2) was consistent with ultrastructural connective tissue disease (uCTD), for which no further evidence was found apart from mild hypermobility of the finger joints. The underlying uCTD with structural instability of the arterial walls and the increased blood flow in the vertebr…
Basilar Artery Occlusion and the Dense Artery Sign in the Newborn
1998
A child with basilar artery occlusion in the neonatal period is reported. The occlusion was documented by unenhanced computed tomography performed in the neonatal period demonstrating a “dense” artery at the tip of the basilar artery. The pattern of cerebral damage on MRI scan at 10 years of age confirmed the site of the vascular occlusion. The evidence suggests that embolization was the operating pathogenic mechanism of cerebral vascular occlusion. Neonatal arterial thrombosis involving the carotid circulation has been well documented and may be due to many pathological factors including direct trauma to the carotid artery and embolization from remote sites. Thrombosis of the vertebral art…
Symmetrical Infarction of the Cervical Spinal Cord Due to Spontaneous Bilateral Vertebral Artery Dissection
1998
To the Editor: Vertebral artery (VA) dissection is a well-known cause of vertebrobasilar ischemia in young people and may be due to preceding chiropractic maneuvers, cystic medial necrosis, mucopolysaccharidosis and reticular fiber diseases, vasculitis,1 2 or a yet-unknown arteriopathy.3 Common findings in VA dissection are unilateral or bilateral neck pain associated with cerebellar and brain stem (usually medullary) infarctions,2 3 which are rarely associated with clinical signs of spinal cord lesions.4 5 6 Recently, 1 patient each was described with bilateral spinal cord infarction7 and Brown-Sequard’s syndrome8 as the sole manifestation of spontaneous unilateral VA dissection. We add an…