1.Extraosseous Thoracic Foraminal Osteoblastoma: Diagnostic Dilemma and Management with 3 Year Follow-Up.
Shailesh Ramakant HADGAONKAR ; Ashok Kumar SHYAM ; Kunal Chandrakant SHAH ; Ketan Shripad KHURJEKAR ; Parag Kantilal SANCHETI
Asian Spine Journal 2014;8(5):689-694
Osteoblastomas are bone forming lesions arising mainly from posterior elements of the vertebra. They are commonly encountered in the cervical and lumbar regions. We present a case of a thoracic osteoblastoma which is extra osseous and is not communicating with any part of the vertebra present intraforaminally. This is a rare presentation of an osteoblastoma. Imaging studies do not accurately diagnose the osteiod lesion. The size of the lesion and cortical erosion seen on the computed tomography scan help in differentiating the osteoid osteoma and osteoblastoma, but they are less sensitive and specific. Thus a histopathology is the investigation of choice to diagnose the osteoblastoma. Early and adequate removal of mass prevents malignant transformation, metastasis, and recurrence. In our case we excised the pars interarticularis unilaterally, removed the osteoid mass intact, and performed unilateral instrumented fusion. There was no recurrence and solid fusion was seen at 3 years follow up.
Follow-Up Studies*
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Lumbosacral Region
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Neoplasm Metastasis
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Osteoblastoma*
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Osteoma, Osteoid
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Recurrence
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Spine
2.Correlation between Preoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signal Intensity Changes and Clinical Outcomes in Patients Surgically Treated for Cervical Myeloradiculopathy.
Chaitanya Baban CHIKHALE ; Ketan Shripad KHURJEKAR ; Ashok Kumar SHYAM ; Parag Kantilal SANCHETI
Asian Spine Journal 2017;11(2):174-180
STUDY DESIGN: This was a single surgeon, single center-based retrospective study with prospective data collection. PURPOSE: To assess the correlation between T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signal intensity (SI) changes and factors such as age, duration of symptoms, baseline modified Japanese Orthopedic Association (mJOA) score and to determine its prognostic value in predicting recovery after surgery. OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: Whether intramedullary cord T2-weighted MRI SI changes can predict operative outcomes of cervical myeloradiculopathy remains debatable, with only a few prospective studies analyzing the same. METHODS: Forty-six consecutive patients who underwent cervical myeloradiculopathy were included and were followed up for an average of 1 year. Preoperative T2-weighted MRI SI grading was performed for all patients. The correlation between MRI SI changes and age, duration of symptoms, preoperative mJOA score, and mJOA score at 1-year follow-up were analyzed. RESULTS: Fifteen patients had single-level (21.73%) or double-level (10.86%) prolapsed discs; 54.34% had degenerative cervical spondylosis with canal stenosis or multilevel disc prolapse and 13.07% had ossified posterior longitudinal ligaments. The mean age was 56.17±9.53 years (range, 35–81 years). The mean baseline mJOA score was 10.83±2.58 (range, 6–16), which postoperatively improved to 13.59±2.28 (range, 8–17; p<0.001). There was a statistically significant correlation between mJOA score at 1 year and MRI T2 SI grading (p=0.017). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with longer symptom durations had high grades of intramedullary cord T2-weighted MRI SI changes. Age and preoperative neurological status were not significantly correlated with the existence of intramedullary cord SI changes. However, patients without or with mild and diffuse intramedullary cord T2-weighted MRI SI changes had better postoperative neurological recovery than those with sharp and focal SI changes.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Constriction, Pathologic
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Data Collection
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Intervertebral Disc Displacement
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Longitudinal Ligaments
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
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Orthopedics
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Prognosis
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Prolapse
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Prospective Studies
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Retrospective Studies
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Spondylosis
3.Effectiveness of Conventional Drug Therapy of Plaque Psoriasis in the Context of Consensus Guidelines: A Prospective Observational Study in 150 Patients.
Ashok Kumar GUPTA ; Shyam Sunder PANDEY ; Bajrangprasad Laxminarayan PANDEY
Annals of Dermatology 2013;25(2):156-162
BACKGROUND: Evidence for superior outcome by adhering to therapy guidelines is imperative to their acceptance and adaptation for the optimal management of disease variants. OBJECTIVE: Comparative study of prospective outcomes in simultaneous consideration of independent variables in groups of 150 patients of plaque psoriasis either treated adhering to or in digression of standard guidelines. METHODS: The psoriasis area severity index (PASI) and the dermatology life quality index (DLQI), prior to and after three months of uninterrupted therapy were examined in treatment groups among 150 patients. Recovery rates of 75% or more in PASI were compared. Independent variables were also examined for their bearing on the outcome. RESULTS: The vast majority was early onset disease phenotype. All three treatment regimens when administered in adherence to the guidelines yielded significantly superior rates of defined recovery both in PASI and DLQI. Compromise of the therapeutic outcome appeared in high stress profiles, obesity, female sex and alcohol, tobacco or smoking habit. CONCLUSION: Conventional drug therapy of plaque psoriasis yields superior outcome by adhering to the consensus guidelines. Psychiatric address to stress must be integral and special considerations for phenotypic/syndromic variants is emphasized for effective therapy of psoriasis.
Consensus
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Dermatology
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Female
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Humans
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Obesity
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Phenotype
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Prospective Studies
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Psoriasis
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Quality of Life
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Smoke
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Smoking
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Tobacco
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Ursidae