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1.
Front Med (Lausanne) ; 9: 811546, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35237625

RESUMO

It is now known that COVID-19 not only involves the lungs, but other organs as well including the gastrointestinal tract. Although clinic-pathological features are well-described in lungs, the histopathologic features of gastrointestinal involvement in resection specimens are not well characterized. Herein, we describe in detail the clinicopathologic features of intestinal resection specimens in four patients with COVID-19 infection. COVID-19 viral particles by in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence studies are also demonstrated. All four patients were males, aged 28-46 years, with comorbidities. They initially presented with a severe form of pulmonary COVID-19 and showed gastrointestinal symptoms, requiring surgical intervention. Histopathologic examination of resected GI specimens, mostly right colectomies, revealed a spectrum of disease, from superficial mucosal ischemic colitis to frank transmural ischemic colitis and associated changes consistent with pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis. Three patients were African American (75%), and one was Caucasian (25%); three patients died due to complications of their COVID-19 infection (75%), while one ultimately recovered from their GI complications (25%), but experienced prolonged sequela of COVID-19 infection including erectile dysfunction. In conclusion, COVID-19 infection, directly or indirectly, can cause ischemic gastrointestinal complications, with predilection for the right colon.

2.
Hand (N Y) ; 16(6): 843-846, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31965865

RESUMO

Background: Historically, scaphoid nonunion has been surgically treated with vascularized bone graft taken from multiple different anatomic sites. However, none of these grafts fully recapitulate the unique osteoligamentous anatomy of the proximal pole of the scaphoid and the attachment of the scapholunate ligament (SLIL). We studied the anatomy of the vascularized second metatarsal head with its lateral collateral ligament as a potential novel treatment of proximal pole scaphoid nonunion with collapse. Methods: Scaphoids and second metatarsal heads were harvested from bilateral upper and lower extremities of 18 fresh frozen cadavers (10 male, 8 female) for a total of 36 scaphoids and 36 second metatarsal heads. The ipsilateral second metatarsal head was harvested with its lateral collateral ligament and its blood supply from the second dorsal metatarsal artery (SDMA). Measurements of the scaphoid, the SLIL, the second metatarsal head, and lateral collateral ligaments were compared to matched limbs from the same cadaver. Results: The anatomic dimensions of the second metatarsal head with its lateral collateral ligament are similar to the scaphoid proximal pole and the SLIL in matched cadaveric specimen. Conclusions: This anatomic cadaver study reveals that the second metatarsal head with its associated lateral collateral ligament is a well-matched donor to reconstruct the proximal pole of the scaphoid and SLIL. This anatomic similarity may be well suited to treat nonunion of the scaphoid proximal pole with or without avascular necrosis with simultaneous reconstruction of the SLIL. The authors describe a technique of vascularized reconstruction of the osteoligamentous proximal pole of the scaphoid with its attached SLIL utilizing autologous second metatarsal head with its attached lateral collateral ligament. Based on this cadaver study, this technique merits consideration.


Assuntos
Ligamentos Colaterais , Ossos do Metatarso , Osso Escafoide , Cadáver , Ligamentos Colaterais/cirurgia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Ossos do Metatarso/cirurgia , Osso Escafoide/cirurgia , Articulação do Punho
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