In patients with high-grade osteosarcoma treated with surgery and chemotherapy, the presence of increased levels of P-glycoprotein in tumor cells is associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse events and is independent of the extent of necrosis after preoperative chemotherapy.
We studied 51 patients with 64 fractures of the thoracolumbar and lumbar spine undergoing the surgical treatment by percutaneous trans-pedicular fixation and stabilization with minimally invasive technique. Patient follow-up ranged from 6 to 28 months (mean 14.2 months) and the patients were assessed by clinical and radiographic evaluation. The results show that percutaneous trans-pedicular fixation and stabilization with minimally invasive technique is an adequate and satisfactory procedure to be used in specific type of the thoracolumbar and lumbar spine fractures.
The regenerative medicine, a new discipline that merges biological sciences and the fundamental of engineering to develop biological substitutes, has greatly benefited from recent advances in the material engineering and the role of stem cells in tissue regeneration. Regenerative medicine strategies, involving the combination of biomaterials/scaffolds, cells, and bioactive agents, have been of great interest especially for the repair of damaged bone and bone regrowth. In the last few years, the life expectancy of our population has progressively increased. Aging has highlighted the need for intervention on human bone with biocompatible materials that show high performance for the regeneration of the bone, efficiently and in a short time. In this review, the different aspects of tissue engineering applied to bone engineering were taken into consideration. The first part of this review introduces the bone cellular biology/molecular genetics. Data on biomaterials, stem cells, and specific growth factors for the bone regrowth are reported in this review.
We analysed two series of patients affected by unicompartmental arthrosis or axial malalignment of the knee treated with two different techniques of high tibial osteotomy. Forty-seven knees were treated with a closing wedge osteotomy (CWO) and 40 with an opening wedge osteotomy (OWO). The two groups were comparable with respect to age, gender and deformity. For each patient the patellar height was measured by Caton's method before surgery, and at the latest assessment (at least 1 year after operation). The correction rate for the two series was analysed to assess any possible correlation between the variation of the patellar height and the degree of correction of the knee axis. We concluded that a high tibial osteotomy modifies the patellar height and that this depends on the technique employed. Patellar 'lowering' occurred more often with OWO than with CWO and the latter also produced a high degree of patellar elevation.
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