In 65 patients an ultrasonographically guided needle biopsy was performed for histologic diagnosis of benign and malignant soft tissue and bone tumors. On the basis of the histopathologic findings, a final diagnosis could be made in 54 cases after sonographically guided needle biopsy of the soft tissue tumor component. In addition, tumor grouping was possible in seven cases; however, due to the small volume of the biopsy specimen, further tumor differentiation proved to be unsuccessful. A definite diagnosis was not possible in four patients, who had mainly cystoid tumors; however, malignancy could be ruled out in three of these cases. The decisive advantage of the ultrasonographically guided needle biopsy procedure over what is known as a blind tumor biopsy is that the biopsy needle can be positioned exactly by means of imaging control. The ultrasound screen enables the user to monitor the biopsy procedure; multiple biopsies of different parts of the tumor soft tissue component can be performed using a single needle tract. No complications occurred in our study. Because of the far-reaching consequences of ultrasonographically guided needle biopsy, this type of procedure should be performed only at tumor centers.
The advantages of the ultrasonic examination are the immediate availability, the avoidance of radiation and the visualization of movements with dynamic examinations. In contrast to X-ray examination the ultrasonic investigation can provide useful additional information on soft tissue structures.
In patients with habitual dislocation of the shoulder and post-fracture malrotation the measurement of humeral torsion is important in preoperative diagnostics. An easy method of ultrasonic measurement of humeral torsion is proposed. The correlation with anthropometric, radiological and CT-measurement is good, what could be shown in 20 macerated humeri. In 111 patients with normal glenohumeral joints the average of humeral retrotorsion was 61 degrees. 86% had a torsion between 40 and 80 degrees.
One specific femoral neck anchorage concept led to a change from preoperative tension to postoperative compression at the lateral cortical bone. This regionally limited effect may influence in the mid- or long-term the local bone remodeling in a negative manner.
This analysis, submitted retrospectively, evaluates 603 PCA-type or Duracon-type knee endoprostheses implanted in 527 patients over a 10-year period. In addition, the X-rays available in a group of 138 patients (100 women and 38 men) from the entire patient population were analysed. All of these 138 patients were invited to come in for a follow-up examination. The invitation was accepted by 80 patients. As well as radiological and physical examination, these patients were asked about their subjective physical condition in a semi-open questionnaire. The data obtained by the questionnaire is discussed in the Results section. The average age of the 397 women, of whom 61 were operated on in both knees, and 130 men, of whom 15 were operated on in both knees, was 68 years at the time of the operation. The 76 bilateral patients had the knee endoprostheses implanted within a mean interval of 17 months. The most frequent indications for surgery were primary and secondary gonarthrosis, followed by rheumatoid arthritis. The evaluation of the X-rays from the above population of 138 patients revealed no radiological signs of loosening. No correlation between the time after implantation and the formation of radiolucent margins could be established. Those knee endoprostheses which were implanted with a varus deviation of more than 10 degrees did not yield a poorer result than those implanted perpendicular. In comparison with the cemented implants, the cementless implants produced slightly better results.
We conducted a three-week randomized trial comparing the improvement of functional capacity by exercise training in chronic heart failure by the steady-state (EF 27.3%, n = 20) and the interval modus (EF 29.3%, n = 20) with a control group (EF = 26.6%, n = 10). Minimal EF was 10%, the lowest maximal oxygen consumption was 9.3 ml/kg/min and the lowest cardiac output was 1.9 l/min; 9 patients had been evaluated for HTX. VO2 at the anaerobic threshold and at maximal exercise increased in the continuous exercise group by 1.4 or 1.6 ml/kg/min, respectively, corresponding to an increase of 13.7% (p < 0.05) and 9.3% (p < 0.05). In the interval training group the increase was 1.3 and 1.5 ml/kg/min corresponding to 14% (p < 0.05) and 8.1% (p < 0.05). Continuous short-term exercise had no impact to central hemodynamics as pulmonary artery pressure (PA), capillary wedge pressure (pc), cardiac index (CI) or stroke volume index (SVI), whereas after interval training a significant increase at maximal exercise could be seen in CI (p < 0.05) and SVI (p < 0.01) with a concomitant drop in systemic peripheral resistance (p < 0.05) compared to the steady-state modus. Interval training was further characterized by a higher short-term but lower mean work load with a significantly smaller increase in lactate. Quality of life was improved according to the SF-36 questionnaire in both training groups but the psychologic sum factor was three times as high, increasing to 24.2% in the steady-state exercise group. It can be concluded that clinically stable patients with heart failure and even those already having been evaluated for cardiac transplantation profit from short-term physical training. Both training modalities seem equally suited to improve functional capacity. However interval training leads to more pronounced improvement in hemodynamics compared to the steady-state exercise, whereas the later had a greater impact on psychological well-being and quality of life. Patients with heart failure and severe peripheral deconditioning tolerate higher workloads with more peripheral stress by an interval training modus. Long-term training modalities need to be established to further improve and stabilize functional status.
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