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Gross Observation (gross + observation)
Selected AbstractsIntervertebral chondrocalcinosis: an exercise in differential diagnosis in palaeopathologyINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 1 2009S. A. Mays Abstract Intervertebral chondrocalcinosis (calcification of intervertebral discs and associated structures) may arise from a variety of causes. This work presents a discussion of intervertebral chondrocalcinosis and the identification of its most probable cause in skeletal remains, using as a case study a skeleton of an elderly male from medieval Ipswich, UK. The skeleton is examined using gross observation and radiography, and the intervertebral calcifications are subject to chemical analysis. In addition to intervertebral chondrocalcinosis (which has resulted in ankylosis of lumbo-sacral segments), lesions identified include chondrocalcinosis at some synovial joints, various soft tissue calcified bodies, and severe osteoarthritis particularly at the gleno-humeral joints. Interpretation of the results of the chemical analysis of the calcified deposits is complicated by diagenesis, but they are most consistent with apatite and/or whitlockite. Arriving at a most probable cause of the lesions in this case is difficult, but it is tentatively suggested that ochronosis may be the best diagnostic option. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Radiographic clues to fractures of distal humerus in archaeological remainsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 4 2001B Glencross Abstract Today, distal humeral fractures occur most frequently in children and adolescents, and are usually the result of a fall onto extended arms, or less often on flexed elbows. Trauma to the distal humerus at the physis and epiphyses often produces non-displaced or mildly displaced fractures that are difficult to recognize radiographically. To help identify these types of injuries, clinicians have developed two measurement techniques that are applied to the X-rays of the injured bones. In a preliminary attempt to assess the usefulness of these measurement techniques for recognizing trauma in archaeological skeletal remains, 25 humeri from two Ontario ossuary samples were submitted to radiography. Clinical data on distal humeral fractures, their incidence, and mechanisms of injury were also used to interpret the lifestyles and cultural activities of the aboriginal individuals under study. While only one healed fracture was suspected after gross observation, a total of four fractures were ultimately identified using the two measurements, the humerotangential-angle (HTA) and the anterior hunieral line (AHL). Our results provide indirect, but telling, evidence of accidental childhood injuries to distal humerus in an archaeological population. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Changes of articular cartilage after immobilization in a rat knee contracture modelJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 2 2009Yoshihiro Hagiwara Abstract The objective was to determine the changes of articular cartilage of the knee joint during immobilization in a rat model. The knee joints of adult male rats were immobilized at 150° of flexion using an internal fixator for 3 days, and 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 weeks. The articular cartilage from the medial midcondylar region of the knee was obtained, divided into three areas (non-contact area, transitional area, contact area), and in each area, a degree of degeneration was evaluated by gross observation, histomorphometric grading, and measurements of thickness and number of chondrocytes. Elasticity of the articular cartilage was estimated by measuring the sound speed with use of scanning acoustic microscopy. Degeneration of the articular cartilage was mainly observed in the contact and transitional areas. Matrix staining intensity by safranin-O and number of chondrocytes were decreased in these two areas. The thickness of the articular cartilage in the non-contact and contact areas was unchanged, but it was increased in the transitional area. Decrease in sound speed was observed in the transitional area of both the femoral and tibial cartilage, indicating the softening of the articular cartilage. The changes of articular cartilage became obvious as early as 1 week after immobilization. These changes may be due to a lack of mechanical stress or a lack of joint fluid circulation during immobilization. Although we do not know the reversibility of these changes of articular cartilage, early mobilization is preferable to avoid these cartilage changes. © 2008 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 27:236,242, 2009 [source] Light and Electron Microscopic Analyses of Autologous Pericardial Tissue Used as a Small-Diameter Arterial Graft in DogsARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2002Won Gon Kim Abstract: As a form of small-diameter arterial graft, we implanted fresh autologous pericardium and pericardium treated with 0.6% glutaraldehyde in the bilateral carotid arteries of dogs and then compared the time-related changes of the grafts explanted after the predetermined periods. The pericardial grafts were implanted in 1 animal each for scheduled periods of 3 days, 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months. The retrieved grafts were processed for light and electron microscopic analyses following gross observation. The glutaraldehyde-treated small-diameter pericardial vascular grafts showed a better endothelialization of the blood-contacting surface and a slower fragmentation of the collagen layers than the fresh grafts although it has yet to be proven whether these differences are so significant as to affect the patency results between the groups. [source] Bone formation at rhBMP-2-coated titanium implants in the rat ectopic modelJOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY, Issue 5 2007Jan Hall Abstract Background: The objective of this study was to evaluate local bone formation at titanium porous oxide (TPO) implant surfaces adsorbed with recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2). Methods: In vitro studies were used to estimate the kinetics of I125 -labeled rhBMP-2 released from TPO surfaces with narrow (N) or open (O) pores. Machined/turned titanium (MT) surfaces served as control. The rat ectopic model was used to assess local bone formation. Briefly, TPO-N, TPO-O, and MT disc implants adsorbed with 5, 10, or 20 ,g rhBMP-2, respectively, were implanted subcutaneously into the ventral thoracic region in 5-week-old male Long Evans rats. The animals were euthanized at day 14 postsurgery when implants with surrounding tissues were removed, radiographed, and gross observations recorded. The specimens were processed for histologic evaluation using conventional cut-and-grind techniques. TPO implants without rhBMP-2 included in a preliminary evaluation revealed no evidence of bone formation, tissue encapsulation, or vascularity, thus such controls were not further used. Results: TPO and MT implant surfaces adsorbed with 5 ,g rhBMP-2 retained 2.3,5.4% rhBMP-2 following immersion and rinse in buffer, and 1.1,2.2% rhBMP-2 following repeated immersions and rinses over 27 days. TPO implants retained the most rhBMP-2 and MT implants retained the least. Explants revealed increased hard tissue formation, tissue encapsulation, and vascularity at TPO compared with MT implants. Radiographic observations were consistent with the explant observations. The histologic analysis showed greater amounts of bone formation, osteoblastic cells, osteoid, marrow, tissue encapsulation, vascularity, and bone voids for implants adsorbed with 10 and 20 ,g rhBMP-2, and for TPO implants at the 5- ,g rhBMP-2 dose. The histometric analysis revealed significantly greater bone formation at TPO-O than at MT implants at the 5- ,g rhBMP-2 dose. All surfaces showed significant bone formation at the 10- and 20- ,g dose. Conclusions: rhBMP-2 adsorbed onto TPO implant surfaces executes an osteoinductive effect including bone contacting the implant surface. This effect is surface- and dose-dependent; the TPO-O surface yielding the most bone at the low discriminating rhBMP-2 dose. [source] Individual variations in aging of the male urethral rhabdosphincter in JapaneseCLINICAL ANATOMY, Issue 4 2002Gen Murakami Abstract Although the degenerative changes with aging of the male urethral rhabdosphincter (URS) have been investigated, its individual morphological variations are still unclear. To provide an anatomical basis for clinical evaluation of the individual URS function in the aged, we investigated the structural differences in the URS of 25 elderly Japanese men using semiserial sections stained immunohistochemically and by hematoxylin-eosin. Before removal of the histological specimens, we dissected the ischioanal fossa and labeled several structures by carbon particles to allow proper orientation during the histological observations. In addition, macroscopic slices (10 mm thickness) made from five other male pelves were examined and, when necessary, followed by routine histological procedure to confirm the gross observations. An extended circular URS (over ½ circumferential configuration) was found in 15/25 cadavers, but showed very limited height (proximal-distal length) and thickness. A more restricted URS, including even a thin, arc-like pattern, was observed in the remaining cadavers. The attachment of the URS to the smooth muscle layer was loose and usually clearly separated. Continuation between the URS and deep transverse perineal muscle was sometimes observed. The thick fascia of the levetor ani, with high content of smooth muscles, usually provided the lateral or dorsal insertions of the URS. Our results in elderly Japanese subjects suggest that the sphincteric action is weak or incomplete. We suggest that the elderly URS maintains continence by retracting the urethra backward and upward with the aid of the levator sling, rather than the real sphincteric action expected in younger men. Clin. Anat. 15:241,252, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] |