This animal airway model has demonstrated acceptable safety and biocompatibility of this novel biodegradable polydioxanone stent. We suggest that polydioxanone stenting be used for further clinical studies for cases in which complete stent degradation after temporary airway treatment is desirable.
It was concluded that, in the authors' facility, treatment of prostatic cancer by subtotal intracapsular prostatectomy was superior to that by total prostatectomy, with respect to both postoperative survival and serious complications.
The aim of this study was to assess the effects of four different drugs used for anaesthesia premedication on intraocular pressure and pupil size in dogs. A prospective, randomised, double-blind clinical study was carried out. The subjects were forty client-owned healthy dogs (20 males and 20 females), aged 8.0 ± 2.9 years, with body weights of 11.8 ± 8.5 kg (mean ± SD) and without ocular abnormalities that were scheduled for periodontal treatment. Animals were randomly allocated into four groups and received intravenously either medetomidine 0.01 mg/kg, acepromazine 0.02 mg/kg, fentanyl 0.01 mg/kg or butorphanol 0.2 mg/kg. Intraocular pressure, pupil size, heart rate, respiratory frequency and systolic and diastolic arterial pressures were measured prior to (baseline) and at five and 10 minutes after premedication (T5, T10). Data were analysed by Anderson-Darling, Bartlett’s, ANOVA and Dunnett’s tests (P < 0.05). Significant increases of intraocular pressure were observed at T5 and T10 in the fentanyl group. Significant decreases of pupil size at T5 and T10 were detected in the fentanyl, butorphanol and medetomidine groups. In the fentanyl group, heart rate dropped significantly at T10, while respiratory frequency was elevated at T5 and T10. In the medetomidine group, heart rate and respiratory frequency were decreased at T5 and T10. In the butorphanol group, systolic arterial pressure was decreased at T5 and diastolic arterial pressure was decreased at T5 and T10. In the acepromazine group, systolic arterial pressure was decreased at T10. Within ten minutes after intravenous administration in healthy dogs, fentanyl significantly increased intraocular pressure and fentanyl, butorphanol and medetomidine decreased pupil size.
This study appears from an experiment previously carried out in
New Zealand white rabbits. Allogenic mesenchymal stem cells
(MSCs) were transplanted into an iatrogenically-created defect in
the lateral section of the distal physis of the left femur in 10
miniature pigs. The right femur with the same defect served as a
control. To transfer MSCs, a freshly prepared porous scaffold was
used, based on collagen and chitosan, constituting a compact
tube into which MSCs were implanted. The pigs were euthanized
four months after the transplantation. On average, the left femur
with transplanted MSCs grew more in length (0.56±0.14 cm)
compared with right femurs with physeal defect without
transplanted MSCs (0.14±0.3 cm). The average angular (valgus)
deformity of the left femur had an angle point of 0.78°, following
measurement and X-ray examination, whereas in the right femur
without transplantation it was 3.7°. The initial results indicate
that preventive transplantation of MSCs into a physeal defect
may prevent valgus deformity formation and probably also
reduce disorders of the longitudinal bone growth. This part of our
experiment is significant in the effort to advance MSCs
application in human medicine by using pig as a model, which is
the next step after experimenting on rabbits.
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