1.Clinical Findings and Results of Surgical Resection in 19 Cases of Spinal Osteoid Osteoma.
Mohammad Reza ETEMADIFAR ; Abdollah HADI
Asian Spine Journal 2015;9(3):386-393
STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive cases series. PURPOSE: To evaluate clinical findings and results of conventional surgery in patients with spinal osteoid osteoma (OO). OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: OO is a rare benign tumor with spinal involvement rate of about 10%-20%. METHODS: This descriptive study was conducted on 19 patients (11 males and 8 females with an average age of 19.8 years) with documented histopathological and imaging findings of OO referred to a university hospital. Neurologic symptoms and pain were scored before and after the open surgical excision. Data were analyzed by SPSS ver. 16 software using chi-square and significance level of 0.05. RESULTS: The most common complaint was back or neck pain (84.2%) and in 68.4% spinal deformity (mostly scoliosis) shown with an average cobb angle of 21degrees at presentation. The sites of involvement were 35% in the lumbar, 35% in the thoracic, 25% in the cervical, and 5% in the sacrum. Lamina was the most common site (50%) of involvement with predilection for the right side (p=0.001). All patients were treated by conventional surgical excision with a complete recovery of pain and deformity. No recurrence occurred after a mean follow up of 44.5 months, but 4 of 19 cases instrumented because of induced instability. In one case there were two levels of involvement (C7-T1) simultaneously. Interestingly, 10 out of 19 of our cases belonged to a specific race (Bakhtiari). CONCLUSIONS: Surgical intra-lesional curettage is potentially an effective method without any recurrence, which can lead to spontaneous scoliosis recovery and pain relief. Race may be a potential risk factor for spinal (OO).
Congenital Abnormalities
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Continental Population Groups
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Curettage
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Male
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Neck Pain
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Neurologic Manifestations
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Osteoma, Osteoid*
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Recurrence
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Risk Factors
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Sacrum
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Scoliosis
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Spine
2.A Comparative Study of the Effect of Flaxseed Oil and Sunflower Oil on the Coagulation Score, Selected Oxidative and Inflammatory Parameters in Metabolic Syndrome Patients
Atefeh AKRAMI ; Elham MAKIABADI ; Moein ASKARPOUR ; Katayoun ZAMANI ; Amir HADI ; Amin MOKARI-YAMCHI ; Siavash BABAJAFARI ; Shiva FAGHIH ; Abdollah HOJHABRIMANESH
Clinical Nutrition Research 2020;9(1):63-72
0.05). However, serum IL-6 levels significantly decreased in the flaxseed oil group compared to the sunflower oil group (p = 0.017). No side effect was observed during the study due to the use of sunflower and flaxseed oils. We observed that consumption of flaxseed oil improved serum IL-6 levels but had no effect on oxidative stress and coagulation score in patients with MetS. Further studies are needed to confirm the veracity of our results.TRIAL REGISTRATION: Iranian Registry of Clinical Trials Identifier: IRCT2015012020737N1]]>
Chronic Disease
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Diet
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Energy Intake
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Flax
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Helianthus
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Humans
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Inflammation
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Interleukin-6
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Linseed Oil
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Oxidative Stress