1.Analysis of the Effects of Different Delivery Methods on the Levator Ani Muscle of the Pelvic Floor by Transperineal Three - dimensional Ultrasound and TUI Imaging
Zhixian WANG ; Xiaoying LIN ; Haiyun LV
Modern Hospital 2018;18(5):769-771
Objective To investigate the effect of different delivery methods on the levator ani muscle of the pelvic floor by transperineal three-dimensional ultrasound and TUI imaging. Methods 200 cases of pregnant women from August2014 to August 2016 in our hospital were divided into selective cesarean section group (n = 85) and vaginal delivery group (n= 115). The vaginal group, according to the intraoperative lateral segmentation, was further divided into vaginal lateral incision group (n = 65) and vaginal delivery without lateral incision group (n = 50). At the same time, select 80 cases of nulliparous women (volunteers) as control group, relevant indicators by three-dimensional imaging and TUI imaging technique. Results The vaginal delivery without lateral incision group, lateral incision group vaginal delivery and cesarean section group levator hiatus diameter, anteroposterior diameter, perimeter and area were significantly higher than the control group(P<0.05), and vaginal delivery side cut was significantly higher than the other three groups (P<0.05), vaginal delivery in two sub-group and cesarean section group of levator ani muscle thickness were significantly lower than the control group(P<0.05), vaginal delivery in two sub groups were significantly lower than that in the cesarean section group (P<0. 05); vaginal delivery group of levator ani muscle injury rate was significantly higher than that in the cesarean section group (P<0. 05); There was no significant difference in the rate of levator ani muscle injury in vaginal delivery group (P>0.05). Conclusion Compared with cesarean section, vaginal delivery is more obvious in changing the morphology and integrity of levator ani muscle, and vaginal delivery is more obvious than that of vaginal incision.
2.Visual Fixation Assessment in Patients with Disorders of Consciousness Based on Brain-Computer Interface.
Jun XIAO ; Jiahui PAN ; Yanbin HE ; Qiuyou XIE ; Tianyou YU ; Haiyun HUANG ; Wei LV ; Jiechun ZHANG ; Ronghao YU ; Yuanqing LI
Neuroscience Bulletin 2018;34(4):679-690
Visual fixation is an item in the visual function subscale of the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R). Sometimes clinicians using the behavioral scales find it difficult to detect because of the motor impairment in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOCs). Brain-computer interface (BCI) can be used to improve clinical assessment because it directly detects the brain response to an external stimulus in the absence of behavioral expression. In this study, we designed a BCI system to assist the visual fixation assessment of DOC patients. The results from 15 patients indicated that three showed visual fixation in both CRS-R and BCI assessments and one did not show such behavior in the CRS-R assessment but achieved significant online accuracy in the BCI assessment. The results revealed that electroencephalography-based BCI can detect the brain response for visual fixation. Therefore, the proposed BCI may provide a promising method for assisting behavioral assessment using the CRS-R.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Brain
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physiopathology
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Brain-Computer Interfaces
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Consciousness Disorders
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diagnosis
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physiopathology
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Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted
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methods
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Electroencephalography
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methods
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Evoked Potentials
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Female
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Fixation, Ocular
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physiology
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Neurologic Examination
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Pilot Projects
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Severity of Illness Index
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User-Computer Interface