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Filter by:The most effective treatment for atlantoaxial dislocation is surgical treatment, with the principle of achieving reduction, reconstruction, and fusion of the atlantoaxial joint. The surgical strategies mainly include simple anterior approach, simple posterior approach, and combined anterior posterior approach. The investigators have summarized 904 cases of atlantoaxial instability or dislocation from 1998 to 2010 and preliminarily published the diagnosis and treatment strategy tree of the Third Hospital of Beijing Medical University. This strategy is divided into four types based on the severity of atlantoaxial dislocation: unstable, reversible, difficult to recover, and skeletal, and enters different surgical treatment processes. With the increase in the number of cases, accumulation of experience, and technological improvements in the past decade, spinal surgery colleagues have updated their classification diagnosis, diagnosis and treatment processes, and surgical techniques for atlantoaxial instability or dislocation. However, the selection of treatment strategies for atlantoaxial dislocation is mostly based on the surgeon's own experience, and there is a lack of standardized, large-scale, and high-level evidence-based medical research on the safety and effectiveness of current empirical strategies. Based on this, this study intends to adopt a multicenter, retrospective, and prospective study to construct a high-quality clinical cohort of atlantoaxial dislocation, update the classification and diagnosis and treatment strategies of atlantoaxial dislocation. And conduct long-term follow-up on patients to evaluate their safety and effectiveness, guide the surgical treatment of atlantoaxial dislocation, and thus form a recognized diagnostic and treatment standard for atlantoaxial dislocation.
A diagnostic and prognostic study, in which the expression of CD64 in activated neutrophils and CD64 and IL17A regulatory T cells in patients with sepsis will be evaluated as a probable marker for sepsis as a primary objective
Schistosomiasis is one of most important human parasitic diseases worldwide. Pregnant women and their infants are two vulnerable population groups, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where - amongst other infectious agents - they are heavily exposed to infections with S. haematobium. Adoption of the recommendation and implementation by national disease control programs was however delayed in most African countries, due to the lack of safety data in humans and in the unborn babies. First results from randomized controlled trials with PZQ in pregnant women meanwhile have provided evidence for the safety of PZQ also in newborns. In Gabon, S. haematobium is the primarily prevalent Schistosoma species infection. As it is true for most of observational and interventional studies on schistosomiasis, the power of the study is weakened due to the low sensitivity of reference schistosomiasis diagnosis applied, and one might correctly assume that a considerable proportion of samples were misclassified as negative in the control groups. Therefore, diagnostic tests that are highly sensitive and specific are essential to the detection of Schistosoma infections and are urgently needed for a test-and-treat strategy to control schistosomiasis in pregnancy as well as tools to determine efficacy of new interventions tested in clinical trials. Circulating anodic antigen (CAA) and circulating cathodic antigen (CCA) have levels correlating with the number of worms and have also been shown to clear within a few days or weeks after successful treatment. Assays measuring serum levels of these antigens (POC-CCA, UCP-LF CAA) are therefore deemed to assess drug efficacy. Based on above mentioned tools, we decided to assess the accuracy of CAA measurement to determine the Schistosoma infection in two specific conditions: A) as a diagnostic tool for S. haematobium to prepare for the future implementation of a PZQ test-and-treat strategy and B) as a diagnostic tool to measure efficacy of praziquantel in schistosomiasis and pregnancy intervention trials.