The EXIT procedure (EX utero Intrapartum Treatment) encompasses a multidisciplinary approach to situations in which airway obstruction is anticipated. Uteroplacental circulation is maintained to avoid neonatal hypoxemia while intubation is attempted. Not only is it useful in congenital diaphragmatic hernia with intrauterine tracheal occlusion, but new indications have been proposed. We present two cases in which EXIT procedure was adopted (huge cervical mass with tracheal compression and a highly vascularized cephalocervical mass) for the same purpose on different grounds. Our two cases stress once more the importance of combining fetal ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging in the characterization of cervical masses and its usefulness in programming the procedure with a multidisciplinary team.
Alimentary tract duplications are rare congenital malformations with few reports of the antenatal sonographic appearance. Early diagnosis is of paramount importance to prevent complications. We present a case of a cystic gastric duplication diagnosed antenatally at 31 weeks' gestation, which was treated successfully. Simultaneously, we review all published cases of prenatally diagnosed enteric duplications.
Adhesive joints usually experience mixed mode and mostly cyclic stresses conditions during their service life. The aim of the current research is to investigate the fatigue behaviour of a structural epoxy adhesive. Pure modes I and II and mixed mode tests were carried out to study the fracture and fatigue crack growth (FCG) behaviour of the adhesive. Compliance‐based beam method was considered for experimental fracture energy measurement. The effects of load level and load ratio on the mode I FCG behaviour and Paris law parameters were also investigated. Result showed that the effect of load level on fatigue crack propagation is more pronounced for lower R ratios. It was found that when the crack faces are closer during the unloading process, the difference between the R2 and Gmin/Gmax is higher. Some possibilities are the crack closure phenomenon, difficulty in measuring the Gmin, and the employed data reduction approach.
Short bowel syndrome is the most common cause of intestinal failure in children. The treatment is based on a multidisciplinary approach involving pediatricians, pediatric surgeons, and nutritionists. Surgical procedures for intestinal lengthening may be decisive, having been revalued after the recent description of serial transverse enteroplasty (STEP). We reviewed the patients who underwent the STEP operation for short bowel syndrome in our hospital in order to evaluate medium-term outcome. Between April 2006 and December 2008, three children were submitted to STEP without postoperative complications directly related to the procedure. In two cases the autonomy for oral/enteric feeding was obtained within 3 and 7 months after surgery with sustained growth, persisting at 5 years of follow-up after STEP. One child remained dependent of parenteral nutrition and was submitted to intestinal transplantation 30 months after STEP. However, since STEP until transplantation, it was possible to increase enteric volume and decrease intestinal dilation and the frequency of occlusive episodes. STEP is an effective and safe technique for intestinal lengthening that may allow increased tolerance to oral/enteric feeding or at least alleviate some complications of short bowel syndrome.
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