Chordoma of the cervical spine is a rare but life-threatening disease with a relentless tendency towards local recurrence. Wide en bloc resection is recommended, but it is frequently not feasible in the cervical spine. Radiation therapy including high-energy particle therapy is commonly used as adjuvant therapy. The goal of this study was to examine treatment and outcome of patients with chordoma of the cervical spine. Patients affected by cervical spine chordoma who underwent surgery at the Rizzoli Institute and University Hospital of Modena, between 2007 and 2021 were identified. The clinical, pathologic, and radiographic data were reviewed in all cases. Patient outcomes including local recurrence and disease-specific survival (DSS) were analyzed using chi-square test and Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. Characteristics of the 29 patients (10 females; 19 males) included: median age at surgery 52.0 years (IQR 35.5 - 62.5 years), 10 (35%) involved upper cervical spine, 16 (55%) with tumors in the mid cervical spine, and 4 in the lower cervical spine (10%). Median tumor volume was 16 cm. 3. (IQR 8.7 - 20.8). Thirteen patients (45%) were previously treated surgically while 9 patients (31%) had previous radiation therapy. All patients underwent surgery: en bloc resection was passible in 4 patients (14 %), seventeen patients (59%) were treated with gross total resection while 8 patients (27%) underwent subtotal resection. Tumor volume was associated with a significantly higher risk of intraoperative complications (p < 0.01). Nineteen patients (65%) received adjuvant high-energy particle therapy. The median follow-up was 26 months (IQR 11 - 44). Twelve patients (41%) had local recurrence of disease. Patients treated with adjuvant high-energy particle therapy had a significant higher local control than patients who received photons or no
Open limb fractures are typically due to a high energy trauma. Several recent studied have showed treatment's superiority when a multidisciplinary approach is applied. World Health Organization reports that isolate limb traumas have an incidence rate of 11.5/100.000, causing high costs in terms of hospitalization and patient disability. A lack of experience in soft tissue management in orthopaedics and traumatology seems to be the determining factor in the clinical worsening of complex cases. The therapeutic possibilities offered by microsurgery currently permit simultaneous reconstruction of multiple tissues including vessels and nerves, reducing the rate of amputations, recovery time and preventing postoperative complications. Several scoring systems to assess complex limb traumas exist, among them: NISSSA, MESS, AO and Gustilo Anderson. In 2010, a further scoring system was introduced to focus open fractures of all locations: OTA-OFC. Rather than using a single composite score, the OTA-OFC comprises five components grades (skin, arterial, muscle, bone loss and contamination), each rated from mild to severe. The International Consensus Meeting of 2018 on musculoskeletal infections in orthopaedic surgery identified the OTA-OFC score as an efficient catalogue system with interobserver agreement that is comparable or superior to the Gustilo-Anderson classification. OTA-OFC predicts outcomes such as the need for
Osteoarthritis (OA) is an inflammatory degenerative disease that affects every fourth person with irreversible damage to the articular. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been shown to affect host cells by paracrine stimulation in regenerative environments. Here we apply hyaluronic acid (HA), an essential part of the extracellular matrix in cartilage, for MSC immobilization. The aim was to investigate long-term MSC survival and paracrine effect on chondrocytes in an inflammatory co-culture environment. We hypothesized that MSCs immobilized in a HA hydrogel could provide a long-term immunomodulatory effect on chondrocytes in vitro. Human MSCs were seeded in a HA hydrogel and co-cultured with non-osteoarthritic human chondrocytes in biphasic wells inhibiting cellular contact. An inflammatory environment was induced by IL1-beta and compared with standard culture medium. Relative gene expressions of collagen types I, II and X, aggrecan, SOX9, MMP-13 and ADAMTS-5) were examined at day 3,7,14 and 28. Significant up-regulation of SOX9 at day 7, 14 and 28 and a significant down-regulation of ADAMTS-5 (day 14 and 28) was observed with co-culture of HA-immobilized MSCs and MSCs compared with controls with or without HA (without MSCs)No changes in expression was observed for aggrecan and collagen type 1. We showed that MSC affect the expression of SOX9 and ADAMTS-5 in a paracrine manner when co-cultured with chondrocytes in an inflammatory environment. MSCs immobilized in HA hydrogels survived and were contained in the hydrogel for up to 28 days. This suggests that HA-immobilized MSCs could potentially be used as
Various chemicals are commonly used as
Curettage and packing with polymethylmethacrylate cement is a routine treatment for giant-cell tumour (GCT) of bone. We performed an in vitro evaluation of the cytotoxic effect of a combination of cement and methotrexate, doxorubicin and cisplatin on primary cell cultures of stromal GCT cells obtained from five patients. Cement cylinders containing four different concentrations of each drug were prepared, and the effect of the eluted drugs was examined at three different time intervals. We found that the cytotoxic effect of eluted drugs depended on their concentration and the time interval, with even the lowest dose of each drug demonstrating an acceptable rate of cytotoxicity. Even in low doses, cytotoxic drugs mixed with polymethylmethacrylate cement could therefore be considered as effective local