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21.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:In the chronic phase after traumatic brain injury, DTI findings reflect WM integrity. DTI interpretation in the subacute phase is less straightforward. Microbleed evaluation with SWI is straightforward in both phases. We evaluated whether the microbleed concentration in the subacute phase is associated with the integrity of normal-appearing WM in the chronic phase.MATERIALS AND METHODS:Sixty of 211 consecutive patients 18 years of age or older admitted to our emergency department ≤24 hours after moderate to severe traumatic brain injury matched the selection criteria. Standardized 3T SWI, DTI, and T1WI were obtained 3 and 26 weeks after traumatic brain injury in 31 patients and 24 healthy volunteers. At baseline, microbleed concentrations were calculated. At follow-up, mean diffusivity (MD) was calculated in the normal-appearing WM in reference to the healthy volunteers (MDz). Through linear regression, we evaluated the relation between microbleed concentration and MDz in predefined structures.RESULTS:In the cerebral hemispheres, MDz at follow-up was independently associated with the microbleed concentration at baseline (left: B = 38.4 [95% CI 7.5–69.3], P = .017; right: B = 26.3 [95% CI 5.7–47.0], P = .014). No such relation was demonstrated in the central brain. MDz in the corpus callosum was independently associated with the microbleed concentration in the structures connected by WM tracts running through the corpus callosum (B = 20.0 [95% CI 24.8–75.2], P < .000). MDz in the central brain was independently associated with the microbleed concentration in the cerebral hemispheres (B = 25.7 [95% CI 3.9–47.5], P = .023).CONCLUSIONS:SWI-assessed microbleeds in the subacute phase are associated with DTI-based WM integrity in the chronic phase. These associations are found both within regions and between functionally connected regions.

The yearly incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is around 300 per 100,000 persons.1,2 Almost three-quarters of patients with moderate to severe TBI have traumatic axonal injury (TAI).3 TAI is a major predictor of functional outcome,4,5 but it is mostly invisible on CT and conventional MR imaging.6,7DTI provides direct information on WM integrity and axonal injury.5,8 However, DTI abnormalities are neither specific for TAI nor stable over time. Possibly because of the release of mass effect and edema and resorption of blood products, the effects of concomitant (non-TAI) injury on DTI are larger in the subacute than in the chronic phase (>3 months).4,9,10 Therefore, DTI findings are expected to reflect TAI more specifically in the chronic than in the subacute phase (1 week–3 months).4 Even in regions without concomitant injury, the effects of TAI on DTI are dynamic, possibly caused by degeneration and neuroplastic changes.6,11,12 These ongoing pathophysiological processes possibly contribute to the emerging evidence that DTI findings in the chronic phase are most closely associated with the eventual functional outcome.12,13Although DTI provides valuable information, its acquisition, postprocessing, and interpretation in individual patients are demanding. SWI, with which microbleeds can be assessed with high sensitivity, is easier to interpret and implement in clinical practice. In contrast to DTI, SWI-detected traumatic microbleeds are more stable1 except in the hyperacute14,15 and the late chronic phases.16 Traumatic cerebral microbleeds are commonly interpreted as signs of TAI. However, the relation is not straightforward. On the one hand, nontraumatic microbleeds may be pre-existing. On the other hand, even if traumatic in origin, microbleeds represent traumatic vascular rather than axonal injury.17 Indeed, TAI is not invariably hemorrhagic.18 Additionally, microbleeds may secondarily develop after trauma through mechanisms unrelated to axonal injury, such as secondary ischemia.18DTI is not only affected by pathophysiological changes but also by susceptibility.19 The important susceptibility-effect generated by microbleeds renders the interpretation of DTI findings at the location of microbleeds complex. In the chronic phase, mean diffusivity (MD) is the most robust marker of WM integrity.4,6 For these reasons, we evaluated MD in the normal-appearing WM.Much TAI research focuses on the corpus callosum because it is commonly involved in TAI5,18,20 and it can reliably be evaluated with DTI,5,21 and TAI in the corpus callosum is related to clinical prognosis.6,20 The corpus callosum consists of densely packed WM tracts that structurally and functionally connect left- and right-sided brain structures.22 The integrity of the corpus callosum is associated with the integrity of the brain structures it connects.23 Therefore, microbleeds in brain structures that are connected through the corpus callosum may affect callosal DTI findings. Analogous to this, microbleeds in the cerebral hemispheres, which exert their function through WM tracts traveling through the deep brain structures and brain stem,24,25 may affect DTI findings in the WM of the latter.Our purpose was to evaluate whether the microbleed concentration in the subacute phase is associated with the integrity of normal-appearing WM in the chronic phase. We investigated this relation within the cerebral hemispheres and the central brain and between regions that are functionally connected by WM tracts.  相似文献   
22.

Background

In a pooled analysis of the phase 3 Controlled Myelofibrosis Study With Oral JAK Inhibitor Treatment I (COMFORT-I) and COMFORT-II clinical trials, adult patients with intermediate-2 or high-risk myelofibrosis who received oral ruxolitinib at randomization or after crossover from placebo or best available therapy (BAT) had improved overall survival (OS).

Methods

This post hoc analysis of pooled COMFORT data examined relevant disease outcomes based on the disease duration (≤12 or >12 months from diagnosis) before ruxolitinib initiation.

Results

The analysis included 525 patients (ruxolitinib: ≤12 months, n = 84; >12 months, n = 216; placebo/BAT: ≤12 months, n = 66; >12 months, n = 159); the median age was 65.0–70.0 years. Fewer thrombocytopenia and anemia events were observed among patients who initiated ruxolitinib treatment earlier. At Weeks 24 and 48, the spleen volume response (SVR) was higher for patients who initiated ruxolitinib earlier (47.6% vs. 32.9% at Week 24, p = .0610; 44.0% vs. 26.9% at Week 48, p = .0149). In a multivariable analysis of factors associated with spleen volume reduction, a logistic regression model that controlled for confounding factors found that a significantly greater binary reduction was observed among patients with shorter versus longer disease duration (p = .022). At Week 240, OS was significantly improved among patients who initiated ruxolitinib earlier (63% [95% CI, 51%‒73%] vs. 57% [95% CI, 49%‒64%]; hazard ratio, 1.53; 95% CI, 1.01‒2.31; p = .0430). Regardless of disease duration, a longer OS was observed for patients who received ruxolitinib versus those who received placebo/BAT.

Conclusions

These findings suggest that earlier ruxolitinib initiation for adult patients with intermediate-2 and high-risk myelofibrosis may improve clinical outcomes, including fewer cytopenia events, durable SVR, and prolonged OS.

Plain Language Summary

  • Patients with myelofibrosis, a bone marrow cancer, often do not live as long as the general population. These patients may also have an enlarged spleen and difficult symptoms such as fatigue.
  • Two large clinical trials showed that patients treated with the drug ruxolitinib lived longer and had improved symptoms compared to those treated with placebo or other standard treatments.
  • Here it was examined whether starting treatment with ruxolitinib earlier (i.e., within a year of diagnosis) provided benefits versus delaying treatment.
  • Patients who received ruxolitinib within a year of diagnosis lived longer and experienced fewer disease symptoms than those whose treatment was delayed.
  相似文献   
23.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Cervical spine axial MRI T2-hyperintense fluid signal of the anterior median fissure and round hyperintense foci resembling either the central canal or base of the anterior median fissure are associated with a craniocaudad sagittal line, also simulating the central canal. On the basis of empiric observation, we hypothesized that hyperintense foci, the anterior median fissure, and the sagittal line are seen more frequently in patients with Chiari malformation type I, and the sagittal line may be the base of the anterior median fissure in some patients.MATERIALS AND METHODS:Saggital line incidence and the incidence/frequency of hyperintense foci and anterior median fissure in 25 patients with Chiari I malformation and 25 contemporaneous age-matched controls were recorded in this prospective exploratory study as either combined (hyperintense foci+anterior median fissure in the same patient), connected (anterior median fissure extending to and appearing to be connected with hyperintense foci), or alone as hyperintense foci or an anterior median fissure. Hyperintense foci and anterior median fissure/patient, hyperintense foci/anterior median fissure ratios, and anterior median fissure extending to and appearing to be connected with hyperintense foci were compared in all, in hyperintense foci+anterior median fissure in the same patient, and in anterior median fissure extending to and appearing to be connected with hyperintense foci in patients with Chiari I malformation and controls.RESULTS:Increased sagittal line incidence (56%), hyperintense foci (8.5/patient), and anterior median fissure (4.0/patient) frequency were identified in patients with Chiari I malformation versus controls (28%, 3.9/patient, and 2.7/patient, respectively). Increased anterior median fissure/patient, decreasing hyperintense foci/anterior median fissure ratio, and increasing anterior median fissure extending to and appearing to be connected with hyperintense foci/patient were identified in Chiari subgroups. A 21%–58% increase in observed anterior median fissure extending to and appearing connected to hyperintense foci in the entire cohort and multiple sagittal line subgroups compared with predicted occurred.CONCLUSIONS:In addition to the anticipated increased incidence/frequency of sagittal line and hyperintense foci in patients with Chiari I malformation, an increased incidence and frequency of anterior median fissure and anterior median fissure extending to and appearing to be connected with hyperintense foci/patient were identified. We believe an anterior median fissure may contribute to a saggital line appearance in some patients with Chiari I malformation. While thin saggital line channels are usually ascribed to the central canal, we believe some may be due to the base of the anterior median fissure, created by pulsatile CSF hydrodynamics.

Axial MR imaging of the cervical spine frequently demonstrates hyperintense, linear, anatomically, sagittally-oriented T2 fluid signal of the anterior median fissure (AMF) and hyperintense foci (HIF) resembling the central canal or the base of the AMF.1-3 These axial T2 findings may be associated with a channel-like T2-hyperintense craniocaudad line on images parallel to the sagittal plane (a sagittal line [SL]), simulating the central canal (Fig 1).4,5 A previous analysis of HIF, AMF, and a thin SL in a population without Chiari I malformation provided not only a baseline for their identification but also a confirmation of a relationship between not only the AMF and HIF but also their relationship to the SL.1 It found the following:
  1. HIF were greater in number than AMFs, but AMFs increase in the presence of increasing HIF, suggesting an anatomic relationship.
  2. SLs were associated with greater numbers of both HIF and AMF/patient (pt.) versus no SL, 6.7 versus 2.7/pt. and 3.3 versus 2.0/pt., respectively. SL presence correlated more closely to HIF than to AMF presence within the entire 358-patient group.
  3. When HIF and AMF were classified as combined (concurrent HIF and AMF, with ≥1 of each both present in the same patient [HIF+AMF]) or continuous (AMF appearing to extend to and join an HIF [AMF>HIF]), HIF and AMF/pt. each differed numerically and patients with an SL had more combined HIF+AMF and continuous AMF>HIF than patients without an SL.
  4. In patients with both SL and combined HIF+AMF (a circumstance allowing the possibility of a relationship of all 3 structures), HIF become proportionally fewer compared with AMFs. In patients with an SL actually exhibiting continuous AMF>HIF, the HIF/AMF ratio decreased further.
Open in a separate windowFIG 1.A patient with Chiari I with 19 HIF up to 3 mm in diameter, 1 AMF, no AMF>HIF, and an SL of various hyperintensity and diameter from C4 through T1, consistent with hydromyelia.While it is expected that manifestations of the central canal as an SL and HIF are more frequent in patients with Chiari syndrome type I,6 past experience leads us to hypothesize that AMFs are also seen more frequently in patients with Chiari I malformation and that the SL or channel may represent the base of a wide AMF, rather than the central canal, in some patients (Figs 1 and and2).2). Therefore, we performed an exploratory prospective analysis of HIF, AMF, and SL in patients with Chiari I malformation to examine their relationships.Open in a separate windowFIG 2.Postdecompressive craniectomy patient with Chiari I with 9 HIF, 4 AMFs, 1 AMF>HIF, and sharp and hyperintense SLs at C6–C7 and less hyperintense, sharp, and defined SLs at C2–C6.  相似文献   
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Objective:To study the effect of oral administration of dimethyl dimethoxy biphenyl dicarboxylate(DDB) on adjusting angiogeneic/inflammatory mediators and ameliorating the pathology of bones in rats with collagen-induced arthritis(CIA).Methods:Wistar rat model of CIA was set up using bovine collagen type Ⅱ.Fifty rats were divided into five groups randomly:normal,CIA model,DDB treatment,methotrexate(MTX) treatment,and combined DDB+MTX treatment.Ankle joints of rats were imaged with digital X-ray machine to show the destruction of joints.Fore and hind paw and knee joints were removed above the ankle joint then processed for haematoxylin and eosin staining.Plasma levels of vascular endothelial growth factor(VEGF),platelet derived growth factor,interleukin-8(IL-8),IL-4,tumor necrosis factor α(TNF-α),and cyclooxygenase-2(COX-2) were quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.Nitric oxide levels were detected by Griess reagent.Results:Compared with the CIA model group,a remarkable reduction in various angiogenic(VEGF and IL-8) and inflammatory mediators(TNF-α,IL-4 and COX-2) after treatment with DDB either alone or combined with MTX(P0.05 or P0.01).Histopathological and X-ray findings were confirmatory to the observed DDB anti-arthritic effect.The DDB-treated group showed amelioration in signs of arthritis which appeared essentially similar to normal.Conclusion:Our data shed light on the therapeutic efficacy of DDB in experimental rheumatoid arthritis(RA) compared with a choice drug(MTX) and it may be offered as a second-line drug in the treatment of RA.  相似文献   
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Background

Nursing Home Compare (NHC) ratings, created and maintained by Medicare, are used by both hospitals and consumers to aid in the skilled nursing facility (SNF) selection process. To date, no studies have linked NHC ratings to actual episode-based outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether NHC ratings are valid predictors of 90-day complications, readmission, and bundle costs for patients discharged to an SNF after primary total joint arthroplasty (TJA).

Methods

All SNF-discharged primary TJA cases in 2017 at a multihospital academic health system were queried. Demographic, psychosocial, and clinical variables were manually extracted from the health record. Medicare NHC ratings were then collected for each SNF. For patients in the Medicare bundle, postacute and total bundle cost was extracted from claims.

Results

Four hundred eighty-eight patients were discharged to a total of 105 unique SNFs. In multivariate analysis, overall NHC rating was not predictive of 90-day readmission/major complications, >75th percentile postacute cost, or 90-day bundle cost exceeding the target price. SNF health inspection and quality measure ratings were also not predictive of 90-day readmission/major complications or bundle performance. A higher SNF staffing rating was independently associated with a decreased odds for >75th percentile 90-day postacute spend (odds ratio, 0.58; P = .01) and a 90-day bundle cost exceeding the target price (odds ratio = 0.69; P = .02) but was similarly not predictive of 90-day readmission/complications.

Conclusion

Results of our study suggest that Medicare's NHC tool is not a useful predictor of 90-day costs, complications, or readmissions for SNFs within our health system.  相似文献   
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