RESUMO
We compared patterns of bony and ligamentous injury with distal radial fractures in braced and unbraced wrists using 20 paired fresh cadaveric upper extremities. A commercially available wrist brace was placed on one wrist in each pair. Specimens were then placed in a fast-loading gravity-driven device and subjected to loads averaging 16 kg from an average height of 78 cm. Postfracture radiographs were obtained, the specimens were dissected, and fracture patterns and ligamentous integrity were assessed. The following fracture types were produced: distal radial fractures (eight unbraced, seven braced) and intraarticular (seven unbraced, four braced). Radiographically, seven unbraced wrists demonstrated carpal bone fracture and one braced wrist demonstrated carpal fractures. Eight unbraced and three braced wrists sustained carpal intrinsic ligament injuries, four unbraced and one braced wrists demonstrated extrinsic ligament injuries. More capsular tears occurred in the unbraced group (N = 8) than in the braced group (N = 1). This model demonstrated a difference in the patterns of injury in unbraced and braced wrists subjected to the same mechanical conditions, which suggests that use of a wrist brace may alter patterns of wrist injury.
Assuntos
Braquetes , Dispositivos de Fixação Ortopédica , Fraturas do Rádio/fisiopatologia , Traumatismos do Punho/fisiopatologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Cadáver , Humanos , Fraturas do Rádio/prevenção & controle , Traumatismos do Punho/prevenção & controleRESUMO
Distinction of enchondroma versus intramedullary chondrosarcoma affecting the appendicular skeleton (proximal to the metacarpals and metatarsals) is a frequent diagnostic dilemma. The authors studied a large series of patients with these lesions (92 with enchondromas, 95 with chondrosarcomas) using statistical assessment of both clinical parameters and numerous radiologic manifestations on images from multiple modalities to identify differentiating features. Multiple clinical and imaging parameters demonstrated statistically significant differences between enchondroma and chondrosarcoma, particularly pain related to the lesion, deep endosteal scalloping (greater than two-thirds of cortical thickness), cortical destruction and soft-tissue mass (at computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging), periosteal reaction (at radiography), and marked uptake of radionuclide (greater than the anterior iliac crest) at bone scintigraphy. All of these features strongly suggested the diagnosis of chondrosarcoma. These criteria allow distinction of appendicular enchondroma and chondrosarcoma in at least 90% of cases.
Assuntos
Neoplasias Ósseas/diagnóstico , Condroma/diagnóstico , Condrossarcoma/diagnóstico , Adulto , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Feminino , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Masculino , Estudos Retrospectivos , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios XRESUMO
The time course and extent of morphine-3-beta-D-glucuronide (M3G) production from morphine (MOR) and the clearance of M3G from plasma was studied in the late gestation fetal lamb. MOR was infused at a constant rate into the fetal vena cava and plasma was sampled from the fetus and ewe. Amniotic fluid was also sampled in one animal. M3G was produced in the fetal lamb and accumulated extensively in fetal plasma and amniotic fluid. Seizure activity was observed in two fetal lambs with extremely high plasma concentrations of M3G and MOR. The molar ratio of M3G to MOR in fetal plasma was dependent upon the duration of infusion, reaching a plateau of 60 at about 3 days, but appeared to be independent of the infusion rate over the range studied, 3 to 30 mg hr-1. Maternal plasma MOR and M3G concentrations were substantially less than corresponding fetal plasma concentrations. Using the steady-state plasma concentration of M3G obtained from infusion of MOR and the clearance of M3G derived from single injection of M3G to fetal lambs, the fraction of MOR converted to M3G by the fetus was calculated to be 0.63. Although MOR is conjugated to glucuronic acid in the fetal lamb and excreted into the amniotic fluid it is not readily transferred across the epitheliochorial placenta to the ewe because of restricted permeability.