CONCLUSIONS It is important that the limitations of attenuation correction in PET-MR are considered when designing research and clinical PET-MR protocols in order to enable accurate quantification of brain PET scans. Whilst the effect of pads is not significant, dense hair, the use of headphones and the use of an independently acquired CT-scan can all lead to non-negligible effects on PET quantification. Although seemingly trivial, these effects add complications to setting up protocols for clinical and research PET-MR studies that do not occur with PET-CT. In the absence of more sophisticated PET-MR brain attenuation correction, the effect of all of the issues above can be minimised if the pragmatic approaches presented in this work are followed.PURPOSE Several studies have shown that orthodontic anomalies may affect young people's Oral Health-Related Quality of Life (OHRQoL). The purpose the present study was to translate in the Greek language, culturally adapt and initially validate the CPQ11-14 ISF-16 for a Greek adolescent population with malocclusion. METHODS Following relevant methodological recommendations, after translation, the comprehensiveness of the Greek version of CPQ11-14 ISF-16 (CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR) was verified in a pilot study of 20 Greek adolescents. The main study was undertaken in a sample of 200 adolescents that presented for an initial consultation at the Postgraduate Orthodontic Clinic. Cronbach's alpha was used to test internal consistency/reliability and Spearman's rho for criterion validity with the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14). Forty individuals completed the same questionnaires again after 3 weeks. Test-retest reliability was assessed using Intraclass Correlation Coefficient. Statistical tests were undertaken using SPSS (v. 24, IBM Corp., NY, USA). RESULTS The CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR presented high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.848 > 0.70) and very satisfactory Discrimination Index (DI = 0.47 > 0.30). Moreover, the CPQ11-14ISF-16 showed excellent criterion validity with OHIP-14 (rho = 0.719, p less then 0.001). Test-retest reliability was at high levels as well (ICC = 0.719, p less then 0.001). CONCLUSION The CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR exhibits satisfactory psychometric properties to continue the investigation of OHRQoL in Greek adolescents with malocclusion. Further testing of is required in a variety of environments to increase generalizability and investigate the particular characteristics of CPQ application in malocclusion cases.BACKGROUND Spontaneous sphenoid sinus cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) encephaloceles have been postulated to arise from a persistent Sternberg's canal. However, recent evidence has questioned this embryological etiology. We examined the anatomic location of a series of lateral sphenoid sinus encephaloceles to determine if they corresponded with the location of Sternberg's canal. METHODS We queried a prospectively acquired database of surgically treated spontaneous CSF leaks and identified those arising from the sphenoidal sinus. Images were reviewed to characterize the leaks with respect to the foramen rotundum (FR) and the vidian canal (VC). Four leak types were classified of which Type I (medial to FR and VC entering nasopharynx) was theoretically located in the precise location of Sternberg's canal. Type II was medial to FR; Type III was lateral to FR; Type IV passed through an enlarged FR into sphenoid sinus. Demographic data were analyzed. RESULTS Of 103 repaired CSF leaks, 17 arose from the lateral sphenoid sinus. There were no true Type I leaks, 3 Type II leaks, 12 Type III leaks, and 2 Type IV leaks. No differences were found with respect to sphenoid pneumatization, BMI, age, sex, arachnoid pits, or postoperative leak between different types. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ABT-263.html CONCLUSIONS No evidence was found to support the existence of a classic Sternberg canal CSF leak, supporting the hypothesis that most sphenoid spontaneous leaks likely occur secondary to chronically elevated ICP. Rare cases may be related to a weakness in the sphenoid wall in the region of Sternberg's canal.BACKGROUND Ovarian cancer represents a major global health burden that is rarely associated with distant metastasis. Axillary lymph node metastasis from ovarian cancer is rare and is reported only in few case reports in literature. CASE PRESENTATION We report three cases of ovarian carcinoma associated with axillary lymph node metastasis as well as a brief literature review. The pathologic subtype in one case was malignant mixed Mullerian tumor, while the other two cases were high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma. Axillary nodal metastasis was reported as a synchronous event in one case, while it was reported as recurrence events in the other two cases. CONCLUSION Physicians should be aware of this uncommon mode of metastasis in ovarian cancer cases. Multi-disciplinary discussion is crucial in the management of these cases to offer them the best suitable treatment.Lungworms of the genera Parafilaroides and Otostrongylus are responsible for parasitic bronchopneumonia, the foremost disease of eastern Atlantic common seals (EACS, Phoca vitulina vitulina) in the Dutch North Sea. Recently, there have been increased reports of lungworm cases and observations of unusually long Parafilaroides sp. adults in this location. The initial aim of this study was to confirm the identity of the Parafilaroides species infecting this population. Parafilaroides are usually small and delicate, making them difficult to extract from host tissue, and there is often difficulty accessing fresh specimens for morphological study. The large size of the Dutch worms and the accessibility of specimens from numerous animals enabled the description and measurement of many intact specimens (N = 64) from multiple host animals (N = 20). Species identity was confirmed by targeted sequencing of ribosomal and mitochondrial DNA amplicons from a subset of worms. Worm morphology was consistent with descriptions for P. gymnurus, but the mature females were 1.9-fold and 3.4-fold longer than those recovered from French EACS (P ≤ 0.001) and Canadian western Atlantic common seals (Phoca vitulina concolor; P ≤ 0.0001). They were also significantly longer than mature female P. gymnurus described from other seal species, with the exception of those from harp seals of Les Escoumins, Quebec. We suggest that intraspecific genetic differences in P. gymnurus and the environment within the host could contribute to the variation reported here. This study is the first to describe P. gymnurus using morphological and molecular methods and should serve as a reference for identification of the species.
CONCLUSIONS It is important that the limitations of attenuation correction in PET-MR are considered when designing research and clinical PET-MR protocols in order to enable accurate quantification of brain PET scans. Whilst the effect of pads is not significant, dense hair, the use of headphones and the use of an independently acquired CT-scan can all lead to non-negligible effects on PET quantification. Although seemingly trivial, these effects add complications to setting up protocols for clinical and research PET-MR studies that do not occur with PET-CT. In the absence of more sophisticated PET-MR brain attenuation correction, the effect of all of the issues above can be minimised if the pragmatic approaches presented in this work are followed.PURPOSE Several studies have shown that orthodontic anomalies may affect young people's Oral Health-Related Quality of Life (OHRQoL). The purpose the present study was to translate in the Greek language, culturally adapt and initially validate the CPQ11-14 ISF-16 for a Greek adolescent population with malocclusion. METHODS Following relevant methodological recommendations, after translation, the comprehensiveness of the Greek version of CPQ11-14 ISF-16 (CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR) was verified in a pilot study of 20 Greek adolescents. The main study was undertaken in a sample of 200 adolescents that presented for an initial consultation at the Postgraduate Orthodontic Clinic. Cronbach's alpha was used to test internal consistency/reliability and Spearman's rho for criterion validity with the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14). Forty individuals completed the same questionnaires again after 3 weeks. Test-retest reliability was assessed using Intraclass Correlation Coefficient. Statistical tests were undertaken using SPSS (v. 24, IBM Corp., NY, USA). RESULTS The CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR presented high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.848 > 0.70) and very satisfactory Discrimination Index (DI = 0.47 > 0.30). Moreover, the CPQ11-14ISF-16 showed excellent criterion validity with OHIP-14 (rho = 0.719, p less then 0.001). Test-retest reliability was at high levels as well (ICC = 0.719, p less then 0.001). CONCLUSION The CPQ11-14 ISF-16-GR exhibits satisfactory psychometric properties to continue the investigation of OHRQoL in Greek adolescents with malocclusion. Further testing of is required in a variety of environments to increase generalizability and investigate the particular characteristics of CPQ application in malocclusion cases.BACKGROUND Spontaneous sphenoid sinus cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) encephaloceles have been postulated to arise from a persistent Sternberg's canal. However, recent evidence has questioned this embryological etiology. We examined the anatomic location of a series of lateral sphenoid sinus encephaloceles to determine if they corresponded with the location of Sternberg's canal. METHODS We queried a prospectively acquired database of surgically treated spontaneous CSF leaks and identified those arising from the sphenoidal sinus. Images were reviewed to characterize the leaks with respect to the foramen rotundum (FR) and the vidian canal (VC). Four leak types were classified of which Type I (medial to FR and VC entering nasopharynx) was theoretically located in the precise location of Sternberg's canal. Type II was medial to FR; Type III was lateral to FR; Type IV passed through an enlarged FR into sphenoid sinus. Demographic data were analyzed. RESULTS Of 103 repaired CSF leaks, 17 arose from the lateral sphenoid sinus. There were no true Type I leaks, 3 Type II leaks, 12 Type III leaks, and 2 Type IV leaks. No differences were found with respect to sphenoid pneumatization, BMI, age, sex, arachnoid pits, or postoperative leak between different types. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ABT-263.html CONCLUSIONS No evidence was found to support the existence of a classic Sternberg canal CSF leak, supporting the hypothesis that most sphenoid spontaneous leaks likely occur secondary to chronically elevated ICP. Rare cases may be related to a weakness in the sphenoid wall in the region of Sternberg's canal.BACKGROUND Ovarian cancer represents a major global health burden that is rarely associated with distant metastasis. Axillary lymph node metastasis from ovarian cancer is rare and is reported only in few case reports in literature. CASE PRESENTATION We report three cases of ovarian carcinoma associated with axillary lymph node metastasis as well as a brief literature review. The pathologic subtype in one case was malignant mixed Mullerian tumor, while the other two cases were high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma. Axillary nodal metastasis was reported as a synchronous event in one case, while it was reported as recurrence events in the other two cases. CONCLUSION Physicians should be aware of this uncommon mode of metastasis in ovarian cancer cases. Multi-disciplinary discussion is crucial in the management of these cases to offer them the best suitable treatment.Lungworms of the genera Parafilaroides and Otostrongylus are responsible for parasitic bronchopneumonia, the foremost disease of eastern Atlantic common seals (EACS, Phoca vitulina vitulina) in the Dutch North Sea. Recently, there have been increased reports of lungworm cases and observations of unusually long Parafilaroides sp. adults in this location. The initial aim of this study was to confirm the identity of the Parafilaroides species infecting this population. Parafilaroides are usually small and delicate, making them difficult to extract from host tissue, and there is often difficulty accessing fresh specimens for morphological study. The large size of the Dutch worms and the accessibility of specimens from numerous animals enabled the description and measurement of many intact specimens (N = 64) from multiple host animals (N = 20). Species identity was confirmed by targeted sequencing of ribosomal and mitochondrial DNA amplicons from a subset of worms. Worm morphology was consistent with descriptions for P. gymnurus, but the mature females were 1.9-fold and 3.4-fold longer than those recovered from French EACS (P ≤ 0.001) and Canadian western Atlantic common seals (Phoca vitulina concolor; P ≤ 0.0001). They were also significantly longer than mature female P. gymnurus described from other seal species, with the exception of those from harp seals of Les Escoumins, Quebec. We suggest that intraspecific genetic differences in P. gymnurus and the environment within the host could contribute to the variation reported here. This study is the first to describe P. gymnurus using morphological and molecular methods and should serve as a reference for identification of the species.
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