3 resultados para Axe HHS

em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça


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OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) content in hip joint cartilage in mature hips with a history of slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) using delayed gadolinium-enhanced MRI of cartilage (dGEMRIC). METHODS: 28 young-adult subjects (32 hips) with a mean age of 23.8+/-4.0 years (range: 18.1-30.5 years) who were treated for mild or moderate SCFE in adolescence were included into the study. Hip function and clinical symptoms were evaluated with the Harris hip score (HHS) system at the time of MRI. Plain radiographic evaluation included Tonnis grading, measurement of the minimal joint space width (JSW) and alpha-angle measurement. The alpha-angle values were used to classify three sub-groups: group 1=subjects with normal femoral head-neck offset (alpha-angle <50 degrees ), group 2=subjects with mild offset decrease (alpha-angle 50 degrees -60 degrees ), and group 3=subjects with severe offset decrease (alpha-angle >60 degrees ). RESULTS: There was statistically significant difference noted for the T1(Gd) values, lateral and central, between group 1 and group 3 (p-values=0.038 and 0.041). The T1(Gd) values measured within the lateral portion were slightly lower compared with the T1(Gd) values measured within the central portion that was at a statistically significance level (p-value <0.001). HHS, Tonnis grades and JSW revealed no statistically significant difference. CONCLUSION: By using dGEMRIC in the mid-term follow-up of SCFE we were able to reveal degenerative changes even in the absence of joint space narrowing that seem to be related to the degree of offset pathology. The dGEMRIC technique may be a potential diagnostic modality in the follow-up evaluation of SCFE.

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Grâce à une collaboration entre des cardiologues suisses, la Fondation Cœur de la Tour et l’Hôpital universitaire BPKIHS à Dharan, il a été possible en l’espace de deux ans, en utilisant une approche «hybride», de développer le premier programme de cardiologie invasive et interventionnelle indépendant dans l’est du Népal. Depuis janvier 2011, 496 patients ont pu être investigués et traités en 23 mois (coronarographies, angioplasties coronaires, pose de pacemakers temporaires et définitifs, drainages péricardiques, etc.). Parallèlement à cet axe principal, la Fondation a également soutenu un programme préexistant de prévention des facteurs de risque cardio-vasculaires dans cette région, et a apporté un appui financier à la mise sur pied d’un projet de dépistage et de traitement des atteintes cardiaques rhumatismales chez les enfants en âge scolaire.