Preoperative Levels (preoperative + level)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Progression of Alphafetoprotein Before Liver Transplantation for Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Cirrhotic Patients: A Critical Factor

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 1 2010
E. Vibert
Liver transplantation (LT) for cirrhotic/Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is associated with reduced survival in patients with poor histological features. Preoperative levels of alphafetoprotein (AFP) could predict negative biological features. AFP progression could be more relevant than static AFP levels in predicting LT outcomes. A total of 252 cirrhotic/HCC patients transplanted between 1985 and 2005 were reviewed. One hundred fifty-three patients were analyzed, 99 excluded (for nonsecreting tumors and/or salvage transplantation). Using receiver operating characteristics analysis for recurrence after LT, ,progression' of AFP was defined by >15 ,g/L per month before LT. A total of 127 (83%) were transplanted under and 26(16%) over this threshold. After 45 months of follow-up (median), 5-year overall survival (OS) and recurrence free-survival (RFS) were 72% and 69%, respectively. Five-year survival in the progression group was lower than the nonprogression group (OS 54% vs. 77%; RFS 47% vs. 74%). Multivariate analysis showed progression of AFP >15 ,g/L per month and preoperative nodules >3 were associated with decreased OS. Progression group and age >60 years were associated with decreased RFS. Male gender, progression of AFP and size of tumor >30 mm were associated with satellite nodules and/or vascular invasion. In conclusion, increasing AFP >15 ,g/L/month while waiting for LT is the most relevant preoperative prognostic factor for low OS/DFS. AFP progression could be a pathological preoperative marker of tumor aggressiveness. [source]


Lag screw fixation of dorsal cortical stress fractures of the third metacarpal bone in 116 racehorses

EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 7 2010
S. L. JALIM
Summary Reasons for performing study: The effectiveness and best method to manage dorsal cortical stress fractures is not clear. This study was performed to evaluate the success of lag screw fixation of such fractures in a population of Thoroughbred racehorses. Hypothesis: Lag screw fixation of dorsal cortical stress fractures is an effective surgical procedure allowing racehorses to return to their preoperative level of performance. Methods: The records of 116 racehorses (103 Thoroughbreds) admitted to Equine Medical Centre, California between 1986 and 2008 were assessed. Information obtained from medical records included subject details, limb(s) affected, fracture configuration, length of screw used in repair and presence of concurrent surgical procedures performed. Racing performance was evaluated relative to these factors using Fisher's exact test and nonparametric methods with a level of significance of P<0.05. Results: Of 92 Thoroughbred horses, 83% raced preoperatively and 83% raced post operatively, with 63% having ,5 starts. There was no statistically significant association between age, gender, limb affected, fracture configuration or presence of concurrent surgery and likelihood of racing post operatively or of having 5 or more starts. The mean earnings per start and the performance index for the 3 races following surgery were lower compared to the 3 races prior to surgery; however, 29 and 45% of horses either improved or did not change their earnings per start and performance index, respectively. Conclusions and potential relevance: Data show that lag screw fixation is successful at restoring ability to race in horses suffering from dorsal cortical stress fractures. [source]


Mitral Regurgitation After Partial Left Ventriculectomy As the Cause of Ventricular Redilatation

JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, Issue 2 2001
Akira T. Kawaguchi M.D.
Background: It remains unclear whether ventricular redilatation after partial left ventriculectomy (PLV) is due to underlying pathology or to continued volume overload amenable to surgery. Methods: Among patients undergoing PLV, 32 had Doppler echocardiography preoperatively, immediately after surgery (> 1 week), early after surgery (1,3 months), and late after surgery (8,14 months). Patients were divided into groups with mitral regurgitation (MR; MR+, n = 16) and without postoperative MR (MR-, n = 16) and were compared for ventricular size, performance, and survival. Results: After initial surgical reduction, left ventricular dimension on average gradually increased back to the preoperative level in subgroups of patients with valvular disease and cardiomyopathy and in all patients combined. Most patients showed drastically reduced left ventricular dimension early after PLV. In MR+ patients, dimension increased back to the preoperative level within 3 months after surgery, whereas the MR- group maintained reduced dimension throughout the first year in all patients combined and in a subgroup of patients with cardiomyopathy. Occurrence of significant MR after PLV appeared to be related to severity of fibrosis in excised myocardium but not to severity of preexisting MR, etiology, or performance of mitral valvuloplasty. Conclusions: Early postoperative MR, residual or new, appeared to play an important role in dictating early hemodynamics and late outcome in patients undergoing PLV. Results suggest an aggressive simultaneous approach to abolish MR. Causative role of myocardial fibrosis remains unclear and needs further study. [source]


Anxiety and depression of patients with digestive cancer

PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES, Issue 5 2005
TOSHIKO MATSUSHITA phd
Abstract This study sought to characterize the psychological status of digestive cancer patients, and to investigate the relationship between psychological characteristics and clinical factors. Subjects were 85 inpatients scheduled to undergo surgery for digestive cancer and 26 control patients. The Japanese versions of Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and Zung's Self Rating Depression Scale (SDS) were administered for all subjects before surgery, before discharge, and 6 months after discharge. Changes in HADS and SDS scores across the three examination days for three groups of subjects (advanced-phase, early phase, and control groups) were compared. The mean scores of anxiety and depression were significantly higher in the advanced-phase group than in the other two groups. Examination day showed a significant effect on depression; depression increased from before surgery to before discharge, and did not return to the preoperative level at 6 months after discharge, but no significant effect on anxiety. As for the relationship between psychological trends and clinical factors, anxiety in the ,middle age' and ,chemotherapy' groups was more severe than in the ,elderly' and ,no chemotherapy' groups. Depression in the ,medical treatment equipment', ,chemotherapy', and ,long-term hospitalization' groups was more severe than in the ,no equipment', ,no chemotherapy', and ,standard-term hospitalization' groups. These results suggest that we should pay careful attention to cancer patients undergoing surgery, especially young patients who are constantly at risk of anxiety, and assess their depression taking into account their disease and treatment conditions, especially after the time when their discharge is determined. [source]


Surgical Management of Jugular Foramen Meningiomas: A Series of 13 Cases and Review of the Literature,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 10 2007
Mario Sanna MD
Abstract Objective: Primary meningiomas occurring within the jugular foramen are exceedingly rare lesions presumed to originate from arachnoid-lining cells situated within the jugular foramen. The objective of this study is to analyze the management and outcome in a series of 13 primary jugular foramen meningiomas collected at a single center. Study Design: Retrospective study. Setting: Quaternary referral otology and skull base private center. Methods: Charts belonging to 13 consecutive patients with pathologically confirmed jugular foramen meningioma surgically treated between September 1991 and May 2005 were examined retrospectively. The follow-up of the series ranged from 12 to 120 (mean, 42.8 ± 27.5) months. Results: Four (28.5%) patients underwent single-stage tumor removal through the petro-occipital transigmoid (POTS) approach. In two patients with preoperative unserviceable hearing, a combined POTS-translabyrinthine approach was adopted. Two patients underwent a combined POTS-transotic approach because of massive erosion of the carotid canal. A modified transcochlear approach type D with posterior rerouting of the facial nerve and transection of the sigmoid sinus and jugular bulb was performed in two patients with a huge cerebellopontine angle tumor component with extension to the prepontine cistern together with massive involvement of the petrous bone and middle ear and encasement of the vertical and horizontal segments of the intrapetrous carotid artery. In one patient with evidence of a dominant sinus on the site of the tumor, a subtotal tumor removal via an enlarged translabyrinthine approach (ETLA) was planned to resect the intradural component of the tumor. Two patients in our series underwent a planned staged procedure on account of a huge tumor component in the neck. One of these patients underwent a first-stage infratemporal fossa approach type A to remove the tumor component in the neck; the second-stage intradural removal of the tumor was accomplished via an ETLA. The last patient underwent a first-stage modified transcochlear type D approach to remove the intradural tumor component followed by a second-stage transcervical procedure for removal of the extracranial component. Gross total tumor removal (Simpson grade I,II) was achieved in 11 (84.6%) cases. Subtotal removal of the tumor was accomplished in two patients. Good facial nerve function (grades I and II) was achieved in 46.1% of cases, whereas acceptable function (grade III) was achieved in the remaining cases 1 year after tumor removal. Hearing was preserved at the preoperative level in all four patients who underwent surgery via the POTS approach. After surgery, no patient recovered function of the preoperatively paralyzed lower cranial nerves. A new deficit of one or more of the lower cranial nerves was recorded in 61.5% of cases. Conclusions: Surgical resection is the treatment of choice for jugular foramen meningiomas. Among the various surgical techniques proposed for dealing with these lesions, we prefer the POTS approach alone or combined with the translabyrinthine or transotic approaches. Despite the advances in skull base surgery, new postoperative lower cranial nerve deficits still represent a challenge. [source]


Comparative Assessment of Coagulation Changes Induced by Two Different Types of Heart,Lung Machine

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2010
Niels Rahe-Meyer
Abstract The cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) used in heart surgery has a deleterious effect on hemostasis. The aim of our study was to assess by means of standard laboratory and point-of-care methods changes induced by CPB in coagulation parameters, particularly in platelet function, and to determine whether these changes differ depending on the type of heart,lung machine (HLM) used: minimal extracorporeal circulation system (MECC) and standard HLM. The study enrolled 88 patients scheduled for coronary artery bypass surgery performed on pump. Forty-four interventions were performed with MECC and 44 with standard HLM. Blood was sampled preoperatively, after 30 min on CPB, after weaning from CPB, and 24 h postoperatively. Coagulation and platelet function were assessed using multiple electrode aggregometry (MEA), rotation thromboelastometry, as well as standard laboratory tests. Rotation thromboelastometry and standard laboratory reflected significantly impaired hemostasis after weaning from CPB but no significant differences between the two groups at different time points. Aggregation decreased significantly in both groups as early as 30 min after the institution of CPB (P < 0.05, Mann,Whitney U -test) and recovered within the first 24 h postoperatively, without reaching the preoperative level. Intraoperatively, aggregometry values reflected a significantly more severe reduction of platelet function in standard HLM group than in the MECC group (P < 0.01, ProcMixed test). Our findings suggest that MEA and thromboelastometry reflect impairment of coagulation in cardiac surgery performed on different types of HLM and that platelet function is less affected by MECC than by standard HLM. [source]


Effects of intermittent Pringle's manoeuvre on cirrhotic compared with normal liver

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 7 2010
Y. Sugiyama
Background: Although patients with liver cirrhosis are supposed to tolerate ischaemia,reperfusion poorly, the exact impact of intermittent inflow clamping during hepatic resection of cirrhotic compared with normal liver remains unclear. Methods: Intermittent Pringle's manoeuvre was applied during minor hepatectomy in 172 patients with a normal liver, 59 with chronic hepatitis and 97 with liver cirrhosis. To assess hepatic injury, delta (D)-aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and D-alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (maximum level minus preoperative level) were calculated. To evaluate postoperative liver function, postoperative levels of total bilirubin, albumin and cholinesterase (ChE), and prothrombin time were measured. Results: Significant correlations between D-AST or D-ALT and clamping time were found in each group. The regression coefficients of the regression lines for D-AST and D-ALT in patients with normal liver were significantly higher than those in patients with cirrhotic liver. Irrespective of whether clamping time was 45 min or less, or at least 60 min, D-AST and D-ALT were significantly lower in patients with cirrhosis than in those with a normal liver. Parameters of hepatic functional reserve, such as total bilirubin, prothrombin time, albumin and ChE, were impaired significantly after surgery in patients with a cirrhotic liver. Conclusion: Patients with liver cirrhosis had a smaller increase in aminotransferase levels following portal triad clamping than those with a normal liver. However, hepatic functional reserve in those with a cirrhotic liver seemed to be affected more after intermittent inflow occlusion. Copyright © 2010 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Postoperative serum attenuates LPS-induced release of TNF-, in orthopaedic surgery

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 10 2007
Olav Reikerås
Abstract Studies with ex vivo stimulation of whole blood samples from injured patients have revealed a diminished production capacity for a broad range of secretory products, including inflammatory cytokines. Recent interest has focused on the release of mediators in serum that depress the cell-mediated immune response following trauma. The involvement of the lipid mediator prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) has been assumed because it is a potent endogenous immunosuppressor. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that inhibitory substances circulating in the patient's serum after a major musculoskeletal trauma might impair leukocyte function by evaluating the effect of such serum on cytokine release in a whole blood model. Six females and three males undergoing elective total hip replacement were included in the study. Ex vivo LPS-induced TNF-, and IL-10 were measured in whole blood sampled preoperatively and added serum taken before, at the end of operation, and at postoperative days 1 and 6 with saline as negative control. LPS induced significant releases of TNF-, and IL-10 in whole blood. Addition of preoperative, postoperative, and day-1 postoperative serum did not alter the LPS-induced release of TNF-, as compared to saline. In the presence of serum from postoperative day 6, however, the expression of TNF-, was significantly reduced as compared to saline and preoperative serum (p,=,0.021 and 0.008, respectively). Neither of the serum samples altered the release of IL-10. PGE2 was significantly (p,=,0.008) increased in serum at postoperative day 6 as compared to preoperative levels. In conclusion, these data show that at day 6 after major orthopaedic surgery, the patient serum contained activity that inhibited ex vivo LPS-induced TNF-, release. The potent TNF-, inhibitory activity found at day 6 after injury correlated with increased levels of PGE2 and indicates cell-mediated hyporesponsiveness to a second stimulus. © 2007 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 25:1395,1400, 2007 [source]


Initial steroid bolus injection promotes vigorous CD8+ alloreactive responses toward early graft acceptance immediately after liver transplantation in humans

LIVER TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 9 2007
Hiroto Egawa
We have found that steroid bolus withdrawal prior to graft reperfusion increased the incidence of acute cellular rejection (ACR). This study aims to clarify how initial steroid bolus (ISB) injection at reperfusion influences the kinetics of CD8+ alloreactive immune responses immediately after living donor liver transplantation (LDLT). A total of 49 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected recipients were classified into 3 groups according to hierarchical clustering by preoperative CD8+CD45 isoforms. The naive T cell proportion was considerably higher in Group I than in Groups II and III, whereas Group II recipients had the highest effector memory (EM) T cells and Group III the highest effector T cells. The frequency of ACR was significantly higher in recipients without ISB than in those with ISB. In particular, the ACR rates were the highest in Group II without ISB. Following ISB, the proportion of effector T cells was promptly upregulated within 6 hours after graft reperfusion, simultaneously with the upregulation of CD27,CD28, subsets, interferon-gamma (IFN-,), tumor necrosis factor-alpha and perforin expression, which significantly correlated with increasing interleukin (IL)-12 receptor beta 1 cells. These were then downregulated to below preoperative levels by tacrolimus (Tac) administered at 24 hours. These changes did not occur in the absence of ISB. In Group II without ISB, the downregulation of IL-12R,1+ cells was the greatest, consistent with the highest rates of ACR and mortality (60%). In conclusion, ISB must be done in place, especially in Group II with preexisting high EM T cells, to enable the development of early allograft acceptance. Liver Transpl 13:1262,1271, 2007, © 2007 AASLD. [source]


The effect of multilevel upper airway surgery on continuous positive airway pressure therapy in obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome,,

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 1 2009
FACS, Michael Friedman MD
Abstract Objective: To investigate the effect of multilevel upper airway surgery (USA) on subsequent continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy in patients with obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS). Study Design: Fifty-two patients who underwent multilevel UAS with persistent symptoms of OSAHS represent the cohort for this study. All patients had undergone manual CPAP titrations both pre- and postoperatively. Patients were used as their own controls and were compared pre- and postoperatively with regard to body mass index, full night polysomnography (PSG), optimal CPAP pressure settings, presence of rapid eye-movement (REM) sleep, identification of mouth leakage, and CPAP compliance. Results: Postoperative values for apnea index (AI), apnea hypopnea index (AHI), and minimum oxygen saturation (min SaO2) were all significantly decreased from their preoperative levels. Compliance with CPAP therapy significantly increased from a mean 0.02 ± 0.14 hours per night prior to surgery to a 3.2 ± 2.6 hours per night following surgery (P < .001). In addition, the optimal CPAP pressure setting decreased significantly for a preoperative value of 10.6 ± 2.1 cm H2O to 9.8 ± 2.1 cm H2O following surgery. Fifty of the 52 patients (96.2%) studied were able to maintain optimal pressure settings without mouth leak, postoperatively. Conclusions: In this study, most patients who had persistent symptoms of OSAHS after multilevel UAS did not have significant mouth leak that would preclude CPAP therapy. In this cohort of patients, CPAP pressure setting as well as compliance was significantly improved postoperatively. Laryngoscope, 119:193,196, 2009 [source]


Impaired Proinsulin Processing is a Characteristic of Transplanted Islets

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION, Issue 9 2009
A. M. Klimek
We sought to determine whether recipients of islet transplants have defective proinsulin processing. Individuals who had islet allo- or autotransplantation were compared to healthy nondiabetic subjects. Insulin (I), total proinsulin (TP), intact proinsulin and C-peptide (CP) were measured in samples of fasting serum by immunoassay, and the ratios of TP/TP+I and TP/CP were calculated. Islet allotransplant recipients had elevated TP levels relative to nondiabetic controls (16.8 [5.5,28.8] vs. 8.4 [4.0,21.8] pmol/L; p < 0.05) and autologous transplant recipients (7.3 [0.3,82.3] pmol/L; p < 0.05). Islet autotransplant recipients had significantly higher TP/TP+I ratios relative to nondiabetic controls (35.9 ± 6.4 vs. 13.9 ± 1.4%; p < 0.001). Islet allotransplant recipients, some of whom were on insulin, tended to have higher TP/TP+I ratios. The TP/CP ratio was significantly higher in both islet autotransplant (8.9 [0.6,105.2]; p < 0.05) and allotransplant recipients (2.4 [0.8,8.8]; p < 0.001) relative to nondiabetic controls (1.4 [0.5,2.6]%). Consistent with these findings, TP/TP+I and TP/CP values in islet autotransplant recipients increased significantly by 1-year posttransplant compared to preoperative levels (TP/CP: 3.8 ± 0.6 vs. 23.3 ± 7.9%; p < 0.05). Both allo- and autotransplant subjects who received <10 000 IE/kg had higher TP/CP ratios than those who received >10 000 IE/kg. Islet transplant recipients exhibit defects in the processing of proinsulin similar to that observed in subjects with type 2 diabetes manifest as higher levels of total proinsulin and increased TP/TP+I and TP/CP ratios. [source]


Haemoglobin A1c as a predictor of postoperative hyperglycaemia and complications after major colorectal surgery,

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY (NOW INCLUDES EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY), Issue 11 2009
U. O. Gustafsson
Background: Hyperglycaemia following major surgery increases morbidity, but may be improved by use of enhanced-recovery protocols. It is not known whether preoperative haemoglobin (Hb) A1c could predict hyperglycaemia and/or adverse outcome after colorectal surgery. Methods: Some 120 patients without known diabetes underwent major colorectal surgery within an enhanced-recovery protocol. HbA1c was measured at admission and 4 weeks after surgery. All patients received an oral diet beginning 4 h after operation. Plasma glucose was monitored five times daily. Patients were stratified according to preoperative levels of HbA1c (within normal range of 4·5,6·0 per cent, or higher). Results: Thirty-one patients (25·8 per cent) had a preoperative HbA1c level over 6·0 per cent. These had higher mean(s.d.) postoperative glucose (9·3(1·5) versus 8·0(1·5) mmol/l; P < 0·001) and C-reactive protein (137(65) versus 101(52) mg/l; P = 0·008) levels than patients with a normal HbA1c level. Postoperative complications were more common in patients with a high HbA1c level (odds ratio 2·9 (95 per cent confidence interval 1·1 to 7·9)). Conclusion: Postoperative hyperglycaemia is common among patients with no history of diabetes, even within an enhanced-recovery protocol. Preoperative measurement of HbA1c may identify patients at higher risk of poor glycaemic control and postoperative complications. Copyright © 2009 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Trabeculectomy with OloGen versus trabeculectomy for the treatment of glaucoma: a pilot study

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 1 2010
Dimitris Papaconstantinou
Abstract. Purpose:, To present the preliminary results of our study comparing the outcomes of trabeculectomy with or without OloGen implant in patients requiring glaucoma surgery for uncontrolled intraocular pressure (IOP). Methods:, Forty eyes of 40 patients were assigned randomly to undergo trabeculectomy either with OloGen implant (study group) or without implant (control group). Preoperative data included age, gender, type of glaucoma, IOP and number of preoperative glaucoma medications. Postoperative IOP, number of postoperative glaucoma medications and postoperative complications were recorded. Each patient was followed up for at least 6 months. Results:, There were no significant differences between the groups in terms of age, gender, type of glaucoma, preoperative IOP and number of antiglaucoma medications. Mean IOPs for both groups were significantly lower than preoperative levels at all intervals (P < 0.05) The number of glaucoma medications used dropped from a preoperative mean of 3.5 ± 0.7 to a 6-month postoperative mean of 0.3 ± 0.7 (P < 0.001) in the study group and from 3.7 ± 0.4 to 0.5 ± 1.1 (P < 0.001) in the control group. No statistically significant differences between the two groups were observed in terms of postoperative complications. Conclusion:, In this pilot study it appears that trabeculectomy with OloGen does not seem to offer any significant advantages compared with trabeculectomy alone. Additionally, even though there were no statistical differences between the two groups as far as complications were concerned, one eye from the study group developed endophthalmitis 10 days after surgery and two eyes presented with positive Seidel test and flat anterior chamber and required additional suturing. Studies with larger numbers of patients and longer follow-ups are required to confirm these findings and to examine the safety and long-term outcomes of trabeculectomy with OloGen. [source]


Longterm results after phacovitrectomy and foldable intraocular lens implantation

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 8 2009
Wensheng Li
Abstract. Purpose:, This study aimed to evaluate the longterm results of phacovitrectomy and foldable intraocular lens (IOL) implantation in eyes with significant cataract and co-existing vitreoretinal diseases. Methods:, We carried out a retrospective study of 186 eyes of 149 patients with various vitreoretinal abnormalities and visually significant cataracts. Vitreoretinal surgery was combined with phacoemulsification and foldable IOL implantation. Main outcome measures were visual acuity (VA), preoperative data, and intraoperative and postoperative complications. Results:, The most common indications for surgery were non-diabetic vitreous haemorrhage and proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Preoperative vision ranged from 0.6 to light perception; postoperative vision ranged from 1.2 to no light perception. Postoperatively, in 162 eyes (87.1%) VA improved by , 3 lines on the decimal chart. In 14 eyes (7.5%), vision remained within 3 lines of preoperative levels and in 10 eyes (5.3%), vision had decreased by the last follow-up. Postoperative complications included elevated intraocular pressure and posterior capsule opacification, corneal edema, macular edema, fibrinous reaction, vitreous hemorrhage, corneal epithelial defects, anterior chamber hyphema, choroidal detachment, persistent macular hole, posterior synechiae, recurrent retinal detachment, rubeosis iridis, neovascular glaucoma. Conclusions:, Combined vitreoretinal surgery and phacoemulsification with foldable IOL implantation is safe and effective in treating vitreoretinal abnormalities co-existing with cataract. Based on extensive experience with the combined procedure, we suggest that combined surgery is recommended in selected patients with simultaneous vitreoretinal pathological changes and cataract. [source]