Although the neuropathology of ischaemic fibre degeneration is relatively well known, its pathogenesis is poorly understood. One of the presumed mechanisms is oxidative stress, causing the breakdown of the blood-nerve barrier (BNB) and ending in lipid peroxidation. We evaluated the effect of ischaemia and reperfusion on the sciatic-tibial nerve of the rat and investigated the biochemical, pathological, and functional evidence of BNB disruption and lipid peroxidation. The distal portion and trifurcation of the sciatic nerve were rendered ischaemic by clamping the femoral vessels for 3 h and followed by varying durations of reperfusion. Reperfusion resulted in an increase in lipid peroxidation beginning from the first hour and increasing until the seventh day, followed by a gradual decline over the following weeks. Nerve oedema and ischaemic fibre degeneration (IFD) consistently became more severe and prominent with reperfusion, indicating that oxidative stress damages the BNB and causes IFD. Results of functional testing by the sciatic function index correlated with other parameters as walking track analysis results got worse as reperfusion periods increased. Impairment of walking patterns was more striking after the first day and continued up to the third week. These data indicate that severe ischaemia of the peripheral nerve results in reperfusion injury, functional impairment, and disruption of the BNB. Microvascular events, which may occur during reperfusion, may be important in amplifying the nerve fibre degeneration that initiated during ischaemia.
This case describes a 2-year-old boy who developed multiple giant pyogenic granulomas on his left upper extremity secondary to a burn injury caused by boiling milk. Here, we present multiple pyogenic granulomas in a burn patient and discuss the possible etiologies of the entity. The pyogenic granulomas were excised and wounds closed with sutures (primary repair) (primary closure). No pyogenic granulomas have recurred after 11 months of follow-up. Pyogenic granuloma with multiple dissemination in a burn scar is an extremely rare occurrence, and there have been no reports of pyogenic granulomas caused by flame and other type of scalding burns such as hot water and oil. The case presented here was a burn injury caused by hot milk. The burn etiology, not the burn injury itself, is important because all similar cases have the same etiology. We thought that this may not be a coincidence and that milk proteins or other components of the milk might cause the development of pyogenic granuloma.
ImportanceTo make progress toward precision psychiatry, it is crucial to move beyond case-control studies and instead capture individual variations and interpret them in the context of a normal range of biological systems.ObjectiveTo evaluate whether baseline deviations from a normative reference range in subcortical volumes are better predictors of antipsychotic treatment response than raw volumes in patients with first-episode psychosis (FEP) who were naive to antipsychotic medication.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsIn this prospective longitudinal study, patients with first-episode psychosis who were referred from different clinical settings (emergency department, inpatient units, and outpatient clinics) at the University of Alabama at Birmingham were included. A total of 286 patients were screened, 114 consented, 104 enrolled in the treatment trial, and 85 completed the trial. Patients were observed for 16 weeks. Controls were matched by age and sex. Data were collected between June 2016 and July 2021, and data were analyzed from August 2021 to June 2022.InterventionsRisperidone on a flexible dosing scheme for 16 weeks. There was an option to switch to aripiprazole for excessive adverse effects.Main Outcomes and MeasuresThe main outcome of this study was to evaluate, in patients with FEP who were naive to antipsychotic medication, the association of baseline raw volumes and volume deviations in subcortical brain regions with response to antipsychotic medication. Raw brain volumes or volume deviation changes after treatment were not examined.ResultsOf 190 included participants, 111 (58.4%) were male, and the mean (SD) age was 23.7 (5.5) years. Volumes and deviations were quantified in 98 patients with FEP, and data from 92 controls were used as comparison for case-control contrasts and reference curve calibration. In case-control contrasts, patients with FEP had lower raw thalamus (P = .002; F = 9.63; df = 1), hippocampus (P = .009; F = 17.23; df = 1), amygdala (P = .01; F = 6.55; df = 1), ventral diencephalon (P = .03; F = 4.84; df = 1), and brainstem volumes (P = .004; F = 8.39; df = 1). Of 98 patients, 36 patients with FEP (36%) displayed extreme deviations. Associations with treatment response significantly differed between raw volume and deviation measures in the caudate (z = −2.17; P = .03) and putamen (z = −2.15; P = .03).Conclusions and RelevanceThese data suggest that normative modeling allows capture of interindividual heterogeneity of regional brain volumes in patients with FEP and characterize structural pathology in a clinically relevant fashion. This holds promise for progress in precision medicine in psychiatry, where group-level studies have failed to derive reliable maps of structural pathology.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.