Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Titanium plate has been widely used in several surgical fields, such as craniofacial reconstruction and orthopedic prosthesis. This prosthesis has been proved not only with good biocompatibility and mechanical strength, but also with light weight and low radiological interference. From October 1991 to May 1995, 6 patients underwent thoracic cage reconstruction with titanium plate in our hospital. They included 5 females and 1 male, with ages ranging from 26 to 62 years. Four of them suffered from primary chest wall tumors (2 desmoid tumors, a chondrosarcoma, and 1 hemangioma), one had a recurrent chest wall tumor from breast carcinoma, and one had thoracic hypoplasia. The thoracic cage defect ranged from 5 x 6 cm to 10 x 15 cm, and 1 to 3 titanium plates were used for the reconstruction. No paradoxical movement or other prosthesis-related complications have occurred during the follow-up period. We conclude that titanium plate is a good material for thoracic cage reconstruction.
...
PMID:Using titanium plate or meshplate for chest wall reconstruction: report of 6 cases and literature review. 894 51

Most vertebral haemangiomas are asymptomatic. A case of spinal reconstruction for symptomatic extraosseous thoracic haemangioma using a titanium cage is reported. Radiographs of the T11 vertebra demonstrated characteristic vertical striations. Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography showed spinal cord compression by extraosseous tumour extension. Several tumour feeding vessels were shown by angiography. Through a transpedicular biopsy, a histological diagnosis of cavernous haemangioma was made. Embolisation of feeding vessels was performed using coils before surgery. Laminectomy and subtotal vertebrectomy were performed by a single posterior approach. Rigid stabilisation of the spine was achieved with pedicle screw systems and a cage filled with an autogenous bone graft. Five months postoperatively, stabilisation of the spine was established without loosening of the cage or pedicle screws. Clinical symptoms were improved.
...
PMID:Spinal reconstruction for symptomatic thoracic haemangioma using a titanium cage. 1235 20

We retrospectively reviewed the clinical characteristics and the surgical results of seven patients treated with L5 vertebrectomy. The pathologies, clinical characteristics, preoperative and postoperative radiological findings, surgical techniques, and instrumentation for seven patients operated on between 1998 and 2009 are presented in this article. Biopsies were performed on all patients except those involving trauma. Patients were followed up at three-month intervals in the first year, at 6-month intervals in the second year, and on a regular basis afterward. One patient had a traumatic L5 burst fracture; the other six had tumoral pathologies in the L5 vertebrae. One tumoral lesion was a chordoma, another was a hemangioma, and the remaining four were metastatic lesions. Radiotherapy and chemotherapy were performed for the metastatic tumor patients during the postoperative period. Patients with renal cancer and chordoma survived for 3 years; patients with lung cancer and bladder cancer survived for 1 year; and patients with breast cancer survived for 16 months. The lumbosacral region presents significant stabilization problems because of the presence of sacral slope. In our opinion, if the lesion involves only the L5 vertebra, anterior cage-filled bone cement or bone graft should be performed, as dictated by the pathology and posterior transpedicular instrumentation. If the lesion involves the L4 vertebra or the sacrum and the L5 vertebra, the instrumentation can be extended to cover other segments with sacral attachments. The present cases involved only L5 vertebra and treatment with short-segment stabilization covering the anterior and posterior columns.
...
PMID:L5 vertebrectomy for the surgical treatment of tumoral and traumatic lesions of L5 vertebra. 2257 98

Approaches to ventrally located intramedullary lesions of the upper cervical spine can be extremely challenging. We present a custom-tailored, minimally invasive anterior approach to a ventrally located, intramedullary cavernous hemangioma with partial lateral corpectomy of C2, complete resection of the lesion and subsequent reconstruction. A 20-year-old woman presented with the history of progressive numbness of the left upper and lower extremities and some episodes of severe headaches was referred to magnetic resonance imaging: Here, an intramedullary lesion with typical radiological features for a cavernous malformation at the ventral surface of the spinal cord at the C2 level was detected. The surgical procedure was performed under general anesthesia and electrophysiological monitoring (somatosensory-evoked potentials (SEP), muscle motor-evoked potentials (MEP), and D-wave recording). Complete resection of the cavernous malformation was achieved and reconstruction of the cervical spine was performed using a custom-tailored cage. Intraoperative neuromonitoring during resection, revealed a transient MEP loss, but unchanged D-wave and SEP recordings indicated unchanged neurological outcome. Early clinical follow-up of the patient revealed no new neurological deficits. At 3-month follow-up, there was some improvement of the sensory function. This custom-tailored minimally invasive anterior approach to a ventrally located intramedullary cavernous malformation with partial C2-corpectomy describes a possible and successful approach to ventrally located intramedullary lesions of the upper cervical spinal cord. Additionally, the hereby-described approach is not related to cervical instability.
...
PMID:Custom-tailored minimally invasive partial C2-corpectomy for ventrally located intramedullary cavernous malformation. 2356 96