Perioperative steroids effectively lower the risk of postoperative airway distress and postoperative fever in children undergoing the primary repair of their cleft palate. This finding favors a customary role for perioperative steroid therapy in pediatric primary palatoplasty.
Objective
To determine if perioperative steroid therapy benefits pediatric primary palatoplasty patients.
Design
A prospective, double-blind, randomized trial with a placebo control.
Setting
An academic medical center.
Patients
Forty-five children undergoing primary repair of their cleft palate between 1989 and 1996 who were under the age of 48 months and without developmental delay or any associated syndrome.
Interventions
Intravenous dexamethasone sodium phosphate (0.25 mg/kg) or a placebo (5% dextrose in water) immediately preoperatively and once every 8 hours for two doses postoperatively.
Main outcome measures
Postoperative airway distress, fever, oral fluid intake, discharge eligibility, and palatal fistula formation.
Results
Perioperative steroid therapy significantly reduced the incidence of postoperative airway distress (p = .05) and postoperative fever (p = .02); postoperative oral fluid intake, discharge eligibility, and palatal fistula formation were not significantly affected.
Conclusions
Perioperative steroids effectively lower the risk of postoperative airway distress and postoperative fever in children undergoing the primary repair of their cleft palate. This finding favors a customary role for perioperative steroid therapy in pediatric primary palatoplasty.
Detection and functional evaluation of mutant p53 alleles using a yeast assay could yield significant information for predicting the prognosis of patients with prostate cancer (CaP). Since the current version of this yeast assay is not applicable to archival tissues, we developed a modified assay for use on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue and have applied it to the study of patient samples. Using this modified assay, we examined archival CaP samples from 10 patients for mutations in exons 5-8 of p53 gene. Mutations were detected in four samples: three resulted in the formation of red yeast colonies indicating complete loss of function, while one gave pink yeast colonies, indicating that this mutant retained partial function. In parallel, we analyzed these samples for p53 abnormalities using a single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) approach. Only three of the four yeast-positive samples gave abnormal SSCP bands. In each case where abnormal p53 was found by both methods, DNA sequencing revealed the identical base change. These results suggest that the modified yeast assay may be more sensitive than SSCP for detection of p53 mutations, and demonstrate that the modified method can be used to detect and evaluate the function of p53 mutants present in archival tissue.
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