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BACKGROUND: This study summarizes and analyzes data from patients suffering from symptomatic aortic stenosis who successfully underwent transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) using a novel, completely retrievable transcatheter heart valve. METHODS: We included patients who underwent a TAVI procedure with SinoCrown valves at our center between December 2021 and September 2022. We collected 1-year follow-up data on survival, complications, echocardiographic results, New York Heart Association functional class in heart failure, and patient-reported health-related quality of life outcomes. RESULTS: Eight successive patients (73.3 ± 4.3 years) were included in the study, with a median Society of Thoracic Surgery risk score of 4.26%. The procedure had a 100% success rate. Median postoperative discharge time was 7 days, with no 30-day hospital readmissions. Postoperative aortic valve hemodynamics improved, indicated by decreased transvalvular flow velocity compared with preoperative values (1.9 ± 0.2 vs. 4.9 ± 0.2 m/s, p < 0.0001). The median and maximum follow-up times were 8 and 12 months, respectively. During the follow-up period, there were no serious complications such as death, stroke, valve embolization, or high-grade atrioventricular block. CONCLUSIONS: The results from eight initial TAVI cases performed with the SinoCrown valve demonstrated promising safety and efficacy.
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OBJECTIVE: Surgical site infection(SSI)after neurosurgical procedure can be devastating. Delayed hospital stay has been identified as a potentially modifiable driver of SSI in general surgery patients. However, the relationship between preoperative length of stay and SSI has not been quantified previously in neurosurgery. This study aimed to clarify the association. DESIGN: A Cohort study based on STROBE checklist. METHOD: This observational study focused on cranial neurosurgery patients at a tertiary referral centers in China. Data collection from hospital information system conducted between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2016 was used to examine the results of interest (n = 600). Logistic regression analysis explored association between preoperative length of stay and SSI, adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: Overall SSI prevalence was 10.8% and was significantly higher in the longer preoperative length of stay group. Besides preoperative length of stay, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, type of surgery, gross blood loss also significantly associated with SSI prevalence. Compared with 1 to 2 days, longer preoperative length of stay was associated with increased SSI prevalence after adjustment for confounders (3 to 4 days: odds ratio[OR], 0.975[95%CI, 0.417 to 2.281]; 5 to 6 days: OR, 2.830[95%CI, 1.092 to 7.332]; 7 or more days: OR, 4.039[95%CI, 1.164 to 14.015]; P for trend < 0.001). On the other hand, we found a positive association between preoperative length of stay to deep/space-organ SSI (OR = 1.404; 95% CI: 1.148 to 1.717; P for trend < 0.001), which was higher than superficial SSI (OR = 1.242; 95% CI: 0.835 to1.848; P for trend= 0.062). CONCLUSIONS: In a cohort of patients from a single center retrospective surgical registry, a longer preoperative length of stay was associated with a higher incidence of cranial neurosurgical SSI. There is room for improvement in preoperative length of stay. This can be used for hospital management and to stratify patients with regard to SSI risk.
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Neurocirugia , Infección de la Herida Quirúrgica , Humanos , Infección de la Herida Quirúrgica/epidemiología , Infección de la Herida Quirúrgica/etiología , Estudios Retrospectivos , Tiempo de Internación , Estudios de Cohortes , Pueblos del Este de Asia , Factores de Riesgo , Procedimientos Neuroquirúrgicos/efectos adversosRESUMEN
The uplift of eastern Tibet, Asian monsoon development and the evolution of globally significant Asian biodiversity are all linked, but in obscure ways. Sedimentology, geochronology, clumped isotope thermometry, and fossil leaf-derived numerical climate data from the Relu Basin, eastern Tibet, show at â¼50-45 Ma the basin was a hot (mean annual air temperature, MAAT, â¼27 °C) dry desert at a low-elevation of 0.6 ± 0.6 km. Rapid basin rise to 2.0 ± 0.9 km at 45-42 Ma and to 2.9 ± 0.9 km at 42-40 Ma, with MAATs of â¼20 and â¼16 °C, respectively, accompanied seasonally varying increased annual precipitation to > 1500 mm. From â¼39 to 34 Ma, the basin attained 3.5 ± 1.0 km, near its present-day elevation (â¼3.7 km), and MAAT cooled to â¼6 °C. Numerically-modelled Asian monsoon strength increased significantly when this Eocene uplift of eastern Tibet was incorporated. The simulation/proxy congruence points to a distinctive Eocene Asian monsoon, quite unlike that seen today, in that it featured bimodal precipitation and a winter-wet regime, and this enhanced biodiversity modernisation across eastern Asia. The Paleogene biodiversity of Asia evolved under a continually modifying monsoon influence, with the modern Asian monsoon system being unique to the present and a product of a long gradual development in the context of an ever-changing Earth system.
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Biodiversidad , Clima , Tibet , Asia Oriental , Estaciones del AñoRESUMEN
Reconstructing the Paleogene topography and climate of central Tibet informs understanding of collisional tectonic mechanisms and their links to climate and biodiversity. Radiometric dates of volcanic/sedimentary rocks and paleotemperatures based on clumped isotopes within ancient soil carbonate nodules from the Lunpola Basin, part of an east-west trending band of basins in central Tibet and now at 4.7 km, suggest that the basin rose from <2.0 km at 50 to 38 million years (Ma) to >4.0 km by 29 Ma. The height change is quantified using the rates at which wet-bulb temperatures (Tw) decline at land surfaces as those surface rise. In this case, Tw fell from ~8°C at ~38 Ma to ~1°C at 29 Ma, suggesting at least ~2.0 km of surface uplift in ~10 Ma under warm Eocene to Oligocene conditions. These results confirm that a Paleogene Central Tibetan Valley transformed to a plateau before the Neogene.