The aim of the study was to verify the labrum’s morphological changes in unstable and dysplastic hips during treatment. Between January 2013 and April 2015, 74 dysplastic hips were divided into type D (n=12), type III (n=40), and type IV (n=22). The labrum was evaluated on ultrasonography (US) for echogenicity and dimensions with interobserver/intraobserver tests: test 1 (US at diagnosis and control group), test 2 (US at diagnosis and 6 weeks post-treatment), and test 3 (US at diagnosis and at end of treatment). Statistical analysis was performed. The labrum was less echogenic in test 1 and more echogenic in test 3, and the labrum was smaller in test 1 and larger in test 3. The labrum undergoes statistically significant increase of echogenicity and dimensions after treatment, suggesting a stabilizing role. Level of Evidence: Level II, Oxford Center for Evidence-based Medicine.
Circulating progenitor cells (CPCs) mobilized from bone marrow will replace the use of bone marrow transplantation because hematopoietic reconstitution is more rapid using the former technique. We report on early and late recovery of hematopoiesis after CPC transplantation in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and analyze the role of variables possibly influencing engraftment. From December 1992 through September 1995, 57 consecutive NHL patients were enrolled in this study. Patients could be divided into 2 groups: the first comprised 32 patients with untreated diffuse large-cell lymphoma and unfavorable prognostic factors; the second comprised 25 patients with resistant or relapsing NHL of low-and high-grade histology. All patients received high-dose chemotherapy (carmustine, cytarabine, etoposide, and melphalan; BEAM) followed by CPC transplantation. In all, 25 patients were treated with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) after CPC administration. The time to short-and long-term hematologic engraftment and variables correlating with multilineage long-term reconstitution were examined. The time to bilineage (neutrophils and platelets) hematopoietic reconstitution did not differ in G-CSF-treated and-untreated patients. In contrast, the time taken to reach a neutrophil count of 0.5 x 10(9)/1 and a WBC of 1 x 10(9)/1 was significantly shorter in G-CSF-treated patients. Overall, 33 patients achieved long-term, complete trilineage engraftment after a median of 117 days from CPC transplantation. The leukocyte count was the first parameter to reach full engraftment and hemoglobin was the last. According to Kaplan-Meier analysis, 80% of the patients are projected to reconstitute fully at 12 months after transplantation. Univariate and multivariate analyses showed that sustained, long-term hematopoiesis was significantly related to a younger age, an early bilineage reconstitution, and the quantity of CD34+ cells infused.
Between 1990 and 1996, 129 children (mean age 4.8 years) with hip pain were examined consecutively. In group I (n = 100, mean age 4.14 +/- 2.2), transient synovitis of the hip was diagnosed; group II (n = 29, mean age 7.3 +/- 2.1) showed the following diagnoses: Perthes' disease (n = 12), early slipped capital femoral epiphysis (n = 5), Meyer's dysplasia (n = 2), septic arthritis of the hip (n = 2), osteomyelitis of the acetabulum (n = 1), abscess of the psoas (n = 1), chondromatosis of the hip joint (n = 1), Ewing's sarcoma of the os pubis (n = 1), hip dysplasia (n = 1). Three patients who had synovitis developed Perthes' disease and were assigned to group II. The efficiency of ultrasound, scintigraphy and MRI as diagnostic tools was tested in the examination of painful hip. A capsular distension was present in 73 cases and showed a significant statistical difference (t-test, P < 0.001) in group I between affected and unaffected hips. There were no differences in the measurements of the epiphyseal and metaphyseal width in group I between the affected and the nonaffected side (t-test, P = 0.91, P = 0.57) and between the first sonographic evaluation at presentation and at the follow-up (t-test, P = 0.053, P = 0.75). MRI was performed, because of persistent joint effusion, in 10 cases in group I, and Perthes' disease was excluded. In group II the use of an MRI allowed the diagnosis in 89% of the cases. Sonographic examination, together with X-ray examination and serological testing, represent the first choices in the evaluation of a painful hip at presentation and in the follow-up of transient synovitis. MRI should always be performed when abnormalities are present at the clinical and sonographic examination, and when the X-ray does not allow a clear diagnosis.
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