Sarcopenia has been observed to be a predictor of mortality in international studies of patients with metastatic disease of the spine. This study aimed to validate sarcopenia as a prognostic tool in a New Zealand setting. A secondary aim of this study was to assess the intra-observer reliability of measurements of psoas and vertebral body cross sectional areas on computed tomography imaging. A cohort of patients who had presented to Waikato Hospital with secondary neoplasia in the spinal column from 2014 to 2018 was selected. Cross sectional psoas and vertebral body areas were measured at the mid-pedicle L3 level, followed by calculation of the psoas to vertebral body cross sectional area ratio. Psoas to vertebral body cross sectional area ratio was compared with survivorship. The strength of the correlation between sarcopenia and survivorship was compared with the correlation between
Malnutrition is an important consideration during the perioperative period and albumin is the most common laboratory surrogate for nutritional status. The purpose of this study is to identify if preoperative
Aim. This study seeks to outline the clinical, laboratory, and imaging features of patients with pyogenic spondylitis. It aims to define a novel imaging sign that could indicate the severity of suppurative spondylitis, aiding in its early diagnosis and treatment. Method. This retrospective study included 137 patients from 2013 to 2023. Through the analysis and summary of imaging characteristics among all patients, we identified a distinct MRI sign known as ‘the Disc Penetration sign’ (DP). This sign is defined as an image finding on sagittal MRI depicting the anterior and posterior penetration of an abscess through the intervertebral disc space, affecting both the anterior margin of the vertebrae and the structures within the spinal canal. Observational parameters included WBC, ESR, CRP, hemoglobin, and albumin levels. Documentation of the study included location and segment of the lesion, presence or absence of spinal cord compression, and paravertebral abscesses. Results. 56 patients presented with the Disc Penetration sign(DP) and 81 did not. In both groups, there were no significant differences in gender ratio or age (P > 0.05). However, significant differences were observed in the presence of comorbid diabetes and chronic kidney disease (p < 0.05). The DP group had a significantly greater ESR level (74.30±33.79 mm/h vs. 51.46±30.46 mm/h, P < 0.001) and CRP level (47.28 mg/L vs. 26.18 mg/L, P = 0.003). Additionally, the DP group had a significantly lower Hb (100.66±19.82 g/L vs. 116.99±19.99g/L,P < 0.001) and the
Obtaining primary wound healing in total joint arthroplasty (TJA) is essential to a good result. Wound healing disturbances (WHD) can occur and the consequences can be devastating to the patient and to the surgeon. Determination of the host healing capacity can be useful in predicting complications. Cierney and Mader classified patients as Type A: no healing compromises and Type B: systemic or local healing compromise factors present. Local factors include traumatic arthritis with multiple previous incisions, extensive scarring, lymphodema, poor vascular perfusion, and excessive local adipose deposition. Systemic compromising factors include diabetes, rheumatic diseases, renal or liver disease, immunocompromise, steroids, smoking, and poor nutrition. Low
Purpose. A major drawback of current cartilage and intervertebral disc (IVD) tissue engineering is that human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from osteoarthritic (OA) patients express high levels of type X collagen. Type X collagen is a marker of late stage chondrocyte hypertrophy, linked with endochondral ossification, which precedes bone formation. However, it has been shown that a novel plasma-polymer, called nitrogen-rich plasma-polymerized ethylene (PPE:N), is able to inhibit type X collagen expression in committed MSCs. The aim of this study was to determine if the decreased expression of type X collagen, induced by the PPE:N surfaces is maintained when MSCs are removed from the surface and transferred to pellet cultures in the presence of serum and growth factor free chondrogenic media. Method. Human MSCs were obtained from aspirates from the intramedullary canal of donors undergoing total hip replacement for OA. Cells were expanded for 2–3 passages and then cultured on polystyrene dishes and on two different PPE:N surfaces: high (H) and low (L) pressure deposition. Cells were transferred for 7 additional days in chondrogenic serum free media (DMEM high glucose supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine, 20 mM HEPES, 45 mM NaHCO3, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 ug/ml streptomycin, 1 mg/ml bovine
Bacterial infection activates neutrophils to release neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in bacterial biofilms of periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs). The aim of this study was to evaluate the increase in NET activation and release (NETosis) and haemostasis markers in the plasma of patients with PJI, to evaluate whether such plasma induces the activation of neutrophils, to ascertain whether increased NETosis is also mediated by reduced DNaseI activity, to explore novel therapeutic interventions for NETosis in PJI in vitro, and to evaluate the potential diagnostic use of these markers. We prospectively recruited 107 patients in the preoperative period of prosthetic surgery, 71 with a suspicion of PJI and 36 who underwent arthroplasty for non-septic indications as controls, and obtained citrated plasma. PJI was confirmed in 50 patients. We measured NET markers, inflammation markers, DNaseI activity, haemostatic markers, and the thrombin generation test (TGT). We analyzed the ability of plasma from confirmed PJI and controls to induce NETosis and to degrade in vitro-generated NETs, and explored the therapeutic restoration of the impairment to degrade NETs of PJI plasma with recombinant human DNaseI. Finally, we assessed the contribution of these markers to the diagnosis of PJI.Aims
Methods