Objective. To analyze the course of pregnancy and delivery that occurred before and after surgical correction of idiopathic scoliosis with instrumented fixation of the spine.Material and Methods. The paper presents a retrospective randomized study of 100 patients of reproductive age (18–35 years) with Lenke type 2–6 idiopathic scoliosis. The following aspects of pregnancy were analyzed: the possibility of independent conception, the pain severity according to VAS during each of the three trimesters of pregnancy, and the mode of delivery (naturally or by C-section). A comparative analysis of the data of patients operated on for the spine deformity correction before and after pregnancy and delivery was carried out. Data was collected using a questionnaire survey of patients. Detection and analysis of differences between groups were carried out using the χ 2 criterion.Results. A statistical relationship was found between the presence of instrumentation installed before delivery (during or before pregnancy) and the need for C-section. It was revealed that the lower the caudal end of instrumentation within the L3–S1 region, the higher the C-section occurrence. Predominantly thoracic scoliosis (Lenke types 2–4) is characterized by higher likelihood of independent conception and lower lumbar pain intensity during pregnancy than predominantly lumbar scoliosis (Lenke types 5–6). There are also certain difficulties in conducting spinal anesthesia in patients with installed instrumentation, which negatively affects the possibility of its use.Conclusion. The issue of the course of pregnancy and delivery in idiopathic scoliosis continues to be very significant for both patients and spine surgeons who supervise them. The solution to this issue is impossible without cooperation with obstetrician gynecologists and anesthetists planning and administering anesthetic management during delivery (which is especially important in case of impossibility or significant restriction of spinal anesthesia use in such patients).
One of the most serious/potentially fatal complications of transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) is internal carotid artery (ICA) injury. Of 6230 patients who underwent TSS, ICA injury occurred in 8 (0.12%). The etiology, possible treatment options, and avoidance of ICA injury were analyzed. ICA injury occurred at two different stages: (1) during the exposure of the sella floor and dural incision over the sella and cavernous sinus and (2) during the resection of the cavernous sinus extension of the tumor. The angiographic collateral blood supply was categorized as good, sufficient, and nonsufficient to help with the decision making for repairing the injury. ICA occlusion with a balloon was performed at the injury site in two cases, microcoils in two patients, microcoils plus a single barrel extra-intracranial high-flow bypass in one case, stent grafting in one case, and no intervention in two cases. The risk of ICA injury diminishes with better preoperative preparation, intraoperative navigation, and ultrasound dopplerography. Reconstructive surgery for closing the defect and restoring the blood flow to the artery should be assessed depending on the site of the injury and the anatomical features of the ICA.
The skin is a combination of two different types of tissue—epithelial and connective (mesenchymal). The outer protective layer of the skin, the epidermis, consists of multiple layers of keratinocytes residing on the basement membrane that separates them from the underlying dermis, which consists of a well-vascularized fibrous extracellular matrix seeded mainly by fibroblasts and mesenchymal stromal cells. These skin features suggest that the development of a fibroblast-friendly porous scaffold covered with a flat dense sheath mimicking the basement membrane, and sufficient to support keratinocyte attachment, would be a reasonable approach in the generation of clinically-relevant skin substitutes useful for reconstructive dermatology and burn treatment. Therefore, we developed a procedure to obtain biocompatible composite bilayer scaffolds comprising a spongy dermis-like body (supporting vascularization and appropriate fibroblast and multipotent stromal cell activity) fused with a film-like cover (supporting keratinocyte attachment, growth and differentiation). The sodium alginate (SA), an algae-derived biopolymer, has been used as a base component for these scaffolds while collagen (CL) and fibrinogen (FG) were used as minor additives in variable concentrations. The slow rates of composite SA-based scaffold biodegradation were achieved by using Ba2+ as cross-linking cations. By manipulating the SA/CL/FG ratio we managed to obtain sponge scaffolds with highly interconnected porous structures, with an average pore size ranging from 60 to 300 μm, and sufficient tensile strength (3.12–5.26 MPa). The scaffolds biocompatibility with the major human skin cell types was confirmed by seeding the scaffold sponge compartment with primary skin fibroblasts and subcutaneous adipose-derived stromal cells while the film side biocompatibility was tested using primary human keratinocytes. The obtained results have shown that bilayer alginate-based scaffolds have biological and mechanical properties comparable with CL scaffolds but surpass them in cost efficiency and vascularization ability in the subcutaneous implantation model in laboratory mice.
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