This study confirms the contention that both formation and closure of defunctioning colostomies are associated with significant complications; furthermore, approximately one-half of patients will not have their colostomy closed.
The risks of foreign implantation may be avoided in tendon repair by the use of absorbable sutures, for example polydioxanone. In this study, the in vivo tensile strength half-life of 4/0 polydioxanone was found to be approximately 4 weeks. Using a rabbit model, we compared polydioxanone tendon repairs with polypropylene tendon repairs. Unilateral flexor digitorum longus repairs were performed on 46 rabbits using either polydioxanone or polypropylene. Tendons were harvested at 3 days, 2 weeks and 4 weeks and the tensile breaking strengths were obtained. 30 intact rabbit flexor digitorum longus tendons and 20 freshly repaired tendons were also tested. By 4 weeks, the repair strength had increased eight-fold from approximately 20 N to 166 N. The sutures made little contribution to the overall strength of a 4-week-old repair. There was no significant difference between polydioxanone and polypropylene repairs at any stage. These results show that polydioxanone repairs were as strong as polypropylene during the first critical weeks of tendon healing.
A technique of filling calvarial defects using bone dust reinforced with titanium Micro Mesh (Leibinger) was investigated using plain x-ray films and computed tomography (CT) in seven consecutive patients (age range, 7-21 years). The aim of our study was to assess whether, in the presence of the titanium, bone dust harvested with a power burr promotes persistent ossification that is comparable with adjacent bone. The mesh was localized by standard skull plain x-ray films, and orthogonal CT scans were obtained at between 9 and 18 months post-operatively. An ultrahigh-resolution algorithm was used to detect neoossification on either side of the Micro Mesh (1-mm collimation, 330-mA and 120 KV(p) at the center of 400 HU, and window width of 2000 Hu). The mesh induced minimal streak artifact. Virtually no new bone formation was seen. It appears that bone dust was completely reabsorbed in this patient group even in the presence of semi-rigid fixation.
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