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685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report on intentional marginal excision for osteosarcoma in conjunction with caffeine assisted chemotherapy for the purpose of preservation of good limb function. Twenty-seven patients with osteosarcoma (22 patients with Stage IIB and five with Stage IIIB) preoperatively were given three-to-five courses of intraarterial cisplatin and caffeine without or with doxorubicin. For 26 (96%) responders to the chemotherapy, limb salvage surgery was conducted by means of an intentional marginal procedure, which led to the preservation of important structures such as major neurovascular bundles, tendons, ligaments, muscles, and the epiphysis. Tumors were located in the distal femur in 11 patients, the proximal tibia in eight, the proximal fibula in four, the proximal humerus in two, and the proximal femur in one patient. The histologic response of these 26 patients to the preoperative chemotherapy showed no viable cells in 19 patients with Stage IIB osteosarcoma and only scattered foci of viable cells in two patients with Stage IIB and five patients with Stage IIIB osteosarcoma. As for reconstruction, distraction osteogenesis was performed in eight patients, allograft or autoclaved bone and prosthesis composite in four, autoclaved bone in two, osteochondral allograft in two, megaprosthesis in six, and resection alone in four patients. The average functional evaluation of the 26 patients was 91% of normal. Local tumor recurrence was seen in one patient, whereas 18 patients with Stage IIB osteosarcoma remain diseasefree with a mean followup of 61 months. Two patients with Stage IIB osteosarcoma and four patients with osteosarcoma Stage IIIB died of the disease. Intentional marginal excision for osteosarcoma in conjunction with caffeine assisted chemotherapy is advantageous because it results in the preservation of healthy important structures, with joint preservation possible in selected cases. This approach should help to improve the success rate of limb salvage surgery for osteosarcoma and to preserve the function of the affected limb.
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PMID:Marginal excision for osteosarcoma with caffeine assisted chemotherapy. 997 73

Transport distraction osteogenesis was used to reconstruct the articulation of the temporomandibular joint in two patients. Patient 1 underwent a gap arthroplasty for release of a bony ankylosis. Patient 2 had degenerative joint disease after tumor resection. Both patients had painful, limited mouth opening and facial asymmetry as a result of condylar shortening. A reverse-L osteotomy was performed from the sigmoid notch to the posterior border of the mandible. An external transport distraction device was applied, and the segment was advanced superiorly, 1.0 mm per day, until contact was made with the glenoid fossa. After distraction, the bone was found to have remodeled, inducing a new cortical layer on the articular surface. Additionally, a pseudodisk was generated as a result of the transport distraction. The two patients tolerated the procedure well, returning to pain-free normal mouth opening and being able to masticate regular diets.
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PMID:Reconstruction of the mandibular condyle using transport distraction osteogenesis. 1033 99

OBJECTIVE: Posterior cervical arthrodesis and stabilization with lateral mass plates is a biomechanically sound construct in multiple planes of motion. It is reproducible and especially useful when the posterior elements are missing or fractured. Unfortunately, it is difficult to use in patients with severe degenerative spondylosis because the plate is malleable only in the sagittal plane and the screw positions are dictated by the plate's entry holes. METHODS: A novel system of lateral mass screws that can be positioned before placement of a lateral construct was used in nine patients. Their outcomes as well as the technical applications of this system were reviewed. RESULTS: A total of 52 screws were placed in nine patients who underwent posterior cervical arthrodesis with the Cervifix system (Synthes USA, Paoli, PA). Diagnoses included trauma in four patients, degenerative spondylosis in three, and tumor in two. Rods were molded individually according to the patient's anatomy. Compression, distraction, and lateral rotation, if indicated, were performed. Follow-up averaged 36 weeks. Lateral and anteroposterior radiographs, obtained at progressive intervals, revealed excellent fixation and screw purchase without pull-out. There were no cases of spinal cord, nerve root, or vertebral artery injury. CONCLUSION: The Cervifix system accommodates variation in anatomic size and spacing of the lateral masses, potentiating precise screw placement. The rods can be molded in multiple planes, and selective application of compressive, distractive, or lateral rotatory forces is allowed. The system is very straightforward and simple to use, and we have had good success without pseudarthrosis or complications from screw placement in our series.
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PMID:Posterior cervical arthrodesis and stabilization: an early report using a novel lateral mass screw and rod technique 1037 26

The masticatory rehabilitation of patients is dependent on the quality and volume of residual jaw bone. Loss of volume caused by tumor-related mandibular ridge resection or age-related atrophies may cause considerable problems. Reconstructive methods using free iliac bone, external tabula, or sandwich plasties are only a few examples of the common surgical treatment modalities. Doing without bone grafts, alveolar ridge augmentation by means of distraction osteogenesis might become a value method to improve the denture-bearing area. A new distraction implant system is shown and its first clinical use reported. Two distraction implants were inserted after an anterior segmental osteotomy. The alveolar ridge was then elevated 1 mm each day until the required augmentation of about 8 mm was achieved. After a latency period for pre-ossification of the callus, the distraction implants were replaced by the endosseous implants. The implant system and the surgical technique are shown, and the results are discussed. We believe that the implant distraction procedure will make useful contribution to the management of masticatory rehabilitation.
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PMID:[Initial experiences with a new distraction implant system for alveolar ridge augmentation]. 1041 88

The callus distraction method was applied to nine patients who were referred to us because of a bone tumor. Their mean age was 17 years and 3 months (range 7-37 years). Three were female, and 6 were male. All of the tumors were localised on the femur, and the histological diagnosis was two chondrosarcomas, one Ewing's sarcoma, three osteosarcomas, one giant cell bone tumor, and the remainder benign fibrous histiocytoma. The mean length of the defect after resection of the tumor was 11.5 (range 8-20) cm. Preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy were applied to patients with osteosarcoma and Ewing's sarcoma. The patients were followed up for 22 (range 15-30) months on average. The mean period of use of the external fixator was 12.5 (range 8-18) months. One patient suffered a tumour recurrence and died after 20 months. Complications included one deep infection, one skin invagination, and one premature consolidation and bone bridge in the defect area. All of the complications were successfully treated. Functional evaluation gave excellent results in four patients, good in three, and fair in two. This method can be used without any need for massive autogenous bone graft in repairing defects of any length and diameter produced after excision of the lesion and thus can be considered as an alternative to other techniques.
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PMID:Limb reconstruction with the callus distraction method after bone tumor resection. 1073 88

A patient with mycosis fungoides illustrates the problem of pain management during wound care and suggests the utility of a novel treatment, gabapentin. Skin lesions, be they induced through necrosis of tumor, therapy (e.g., radiotherapy), or by pressure ulceration, are often the cause of continuous pain or acute wound dressing pain. Optimizing the analgesic treatment in those patients is thus of major importance. Anti-inflammatory drugs and opioids are the cornerstones in the treatment of cancer pain but are rarely sufficient to control wound pain. Different adjuvant techniques can be used, including topical analgesics, psychological distraction techniques, anxiolytics, and co-analgesics. There is growing evidence that anticonvulsants, and sodium channel blockers in particular, are effective not only in neuropathic but also in inflammatory pain. Gabapentin, a voltage sensitive sodium and calcium channel blocker, was used as a co-analgesic to supplement morphine in this case of cancer wound dressing pain.
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PMID:Gabapentin for pain control in cancer patients' wound dressing care. 1151 5

Obstructive sleep apnea is a serious medical problem producing both physical and behavioral derangement. It is essential to provide a thorough workup and evaluation of all patients seeking care for snoring or OSA. Polysomnography is the standard for evaluation and assessment of the severity of OSA in every patient. The evaluation and workup for surgical intervention should include a thorough history, complete head and neck evaluation, nasopharyngeal laryngoscopy with a flexible fiberoptic endoscope, and appropriate imaging (e.g., cephalometrics). This workup allows pathologic entities of the upper airway (e.g., neoplasia, cysts) to be ruled out and regions of disproportionate anatomy (e.g., large soft palate, uvula, base of tongue, and a hypoplastic mandible) to be documented. Treatment of site-specific based on the finding of the evaluation. Treatment of snoring is often addressed by more conservative palatal procedures such as LAUP, RVTR, or electrocautery of the soft palate. The more aggressive palatal procedures such as UPPP are generally reserved for OSA. Nasal airway reconstruction may aid in the treatment of OSA, because increased nasal resistance and obstruction may significantly increase the negative pressure of the upper airway, leading to collapse of the velopharyngeal, base-of-tongue, and hypopharyngeal regions. Children with OSA usually respond well to adenotonsillectomy. Occasionally, uvulopalatopharyngeal procedures may be necessary. Craniofacial anomalies and significant skeletal anomalies such as severe mandibular hypoplasia have historically been problematic. Tracheostomies were at one time the only way to secure the airway in these patients. New developments in distraction osteogenesis have enabled mandibular lengthening and airway improvement, leading to earlier decannulation of these patients. The combined phase I and phase II treatment has a success rate of greater than 90%. Phase I treatment may include nasal reconstruction, uvulopalatopharyngeal, base-of-tongue, and hypopharyngeal surgery. Phase I surgery has a documented success rate of about 70% to 80%. Phase II surgery (MMA) has a success rate approaching 100%. In certain cases, MMA may be used as the primary treatment of OSA.
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PMID:Surgical management for snoring and sleep apnea. 1169 45

This study retrospectively reviewed the clinical records and radiographs of 11 patients with progressive early-onset scoliosis who failed to respond to nonoperative management and who underwent consecutive distraction of subcutaneous rods. Eleven children were treated by consecutive distraction of subcutaneous rods, and in two patients with rodding and anterior apical fusion. At surgery, the average patient age was 5.66 years, with a mean Cobb angle of 74 degrees and an average Pedriole angle of 39 degrees. The etiology of the scoliosis included four syndromic and one each congenital, post-rib resection, post-spinal tumor resection, neurofibromatosis, myelomeningocele, infantile idiopathic, and juvenile idiopathic. Subcutaneous rodding halted curve progression in all patients. At an average of 5.1 years after surgery, one patient showed no deterioration of the curve and nine patients showed an improvement of > or =40% in the magnitude of the original curvature. Eight of these patients had already had definitive surgery performed with segmental spinal instrumentation and fusion. Spinal growth occurred in all 11 patients and ranged from 0.5 to 4.5 cm (mean 2.0). Early results from these patients show that subcutaneous rodding with consecutive distraction allows correction of progressive early-onset scoliosis that failed to respond to nonsurgical management, preserving the individual growth potential of the spinal column and delaying definitive surgical treatment. Rotational deformity did not deteriorate radiographically, but clinical deformity increased subjectively. The amount of growth achieved and the number of procedures required to obtain these results raises the question of whether patients would be better served by a single anterior, posterior fusion and instrumentation at a young age.
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PMID:Subcutaneous rodding for progressive spinal curvatures: early results. 1196 41

Distraction osteogenesis has been widely utilized to treat leg length discrepancy, deformity, nonunion, osteomyelitis, and bone loss. It has been found that most difficult conditions can be resolved with this method. This paper introduces the usefulness of distraction osteogenesis for the treatment of nonunion and bone loss after tumor excision. The procedure was found to be extremely effective for the treatment of nonunion accompanied by bone loss and infected nonunion. In particular, the Ilizarov method offers a simultaneous solution for several problems related to nonunion, such as instability, infection, deformity, bone loss, joint contracture, limb length discrepancy, and skin defects. In addition, distraction osteogenesis is safe, useful, and efficient for the treatment of bone loss even after tumor excision. Joint preservation and reconstruction by means of distraction osteogenesis is the most conservative limb-saving surgery available at present. Furthermore, distraction osteogenesis can provide natural limb regeneration.
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PMID:Distraction osteogenesis for treatment of bone loss in the lower extremity. 1464 83

Fibular and scapular osteocutaneous free-tissue transfer represents the workhorse procedure in the reconstruction of large oromandibular defects. However, transplanted bone segments for mandibular reconstruction may be too short for a correct interarch alignment, which is a prerequisite for further functional rehabilitation. Extraoral distraction osteogenesis was performed in the neomandible of five patients after tumor resection following neoadjuvant radiotherapy-chemotherapy. The neomandible was distracted bilaterally in two patients and unilaterally in three patients. Gradual distraction was applied at a rate of 0.5 mm twice a day after osteotomy in the region of vascularized fibular and scapular reconstruction. An average sagittal bone gain of 11 mm was achieved following active distraction. In three patients, the distraction procedure rendered good results with full compensation of the deficit; in one patient, the sagittal bone gain did not compensate for a lateral deviation of the mandible; and in another patient, the fixation pins loosened and had to be reaffixed. Osteodistraction is a treatment option in patients in whom vascularized bone grafts have been used for mandibular reconstruction, but due to contractures or lack of hard and soft tissues, no satisfactory interarch alignment could be achieved. Distraction procedures in irradiated and reconstructed neomandibles bear a higher risk of failure and complications than those in nonirradiated tissues. A correct and stable intermaxillary relation always has to be attempted in the first surgical approach, as osteodistraction cannot be suggested as a routine procedure in this special group of patients.
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PMID:Lengthening of the reconstructed mandible using extraoral distraction devices: report of five cases. 1261 98


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