1.Triple plating of tibia in a complex bicondylar tibial plateau fracture.
Atin JAISWAL ; Naiman-Deepak KACHCHHAP ; Yashwant S TANWAR ; Birendra KUMAR ; Sachin K YADAV
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2014;17(3):183-186
High-energy tibial plateau fracture poses a significant challenge and difficulty for orthopaedic surgeons. Fracture of tibial plateau involves major weight bearing joint and may alter knee kinematics. Anatomic reconstruction of the proximal tibial articular surfaces, restoration of the limb axis (limb alignment) and stable fixation permitting early joint motion are the goals of the treatment. In cases of complex bicondylar tibial plateau fractures, isolated lateral plating is frequently associated with varus malalignment and better results have been obtained with bilateral plating through dual incisions. However sometimes a complex type of bicondylar tibial plateau fractures is encountered in which medial plateau has a biplaner fracture in posterior coronal plane as well as sagittal plane. In such fractures it is imperative to fix the medial plateau with buttressing in both planes. One such fracture pattern of the proximal tibia managed by triple plating through dual posteromedial and anterolateral incisions is discussed in this case report with emphasis on mechanisms of this type of injury, surgical approach and management.
Adult
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Bone Plates
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Humans
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Male
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Tibia
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surgery
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Tibial Fractures
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surgery
2.A hybrid method for fundamental heart sound segmentation using group-sparsity denoising and variational mode decomposition
V G SUJADEVI ; Neethu MOHAN ; S Sachin KUMAR ; S AKSHAY ; K P SOMAN
Biomedical Engineering Letters 2019;9(4):413-424
Segmentation of fundamental heart sounds–S1 and S2 is important for automated monitoring of cardiac activity including diagnosis of the heart diseases. This pa-per proposes a novel hybrid method for S1 and S2 heart sound segmentation using group sparsity denoising and variation mode decomposition (VMD) technique. In the proposed method, the measured phonocardiogram (PCG) signals are denoised using group sparsity algorithm by exploiting the group sparse (GS) property of PCG signals. The denoised GS-PCG signals are then decomposed into subsequent modes with specific spectral characteristics using VMD algorithm. The appropriate mode for further processing is selected based on mode central frequencies and mode energy. It is then followed by the extraction of Hilbert envelope (HEnv) and a thresholding on the selected mode to segment S1 and S2 heart sounds. The performance advantage of the proposed method is verified using PCG signals from benchmark databases namely eGeneralMedical, Littmann, Washington, and Michigan. The proposed hybrid algorithm has achieved a sensitivity of 100%, positive predictivity of 98%, accuracy of 98% and detection error rate of 1.5%. The promising results obtained suggest that proposed approach can be considered for automated heart sound segmentation.
Benchmarking
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Diagnosis
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Heart Diseases
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Heart Sounds
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Heart
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Methods
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Michigan
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Washington
3.Is long term storage of cryopreserved stem cells for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation a worthwhile exercise in developing countries?.
Santhosh Kumar DEVADAS ; Minal KHAIRNAR ; Sumathi S HIREGOUDAR ; Shashank OJHA ; Sachin PUNATAR ; Alok GUPTA ; Anant GOKARN ; Pallavi BHOLE ; Sadhana KANNAN ; Navin KHATTRY
Blood Research 2017;52(4):307-310
BACKGROUND: Stem cell units (SCUs) that are cryopreserved prior to both autologous and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants (for donor lymphocyte infusion) remain unused or partially used several times, and become an increased burden to blood banks/SCU repositories. Because of the scarcity of data regarding the duration for which the storage is useful, there is no general consensus regarding disposal of SCUs. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective audit of SCU utilization in 435 patients who planned to undergo either autologous stem cell transplantation (auto-SCT) (N=239) or allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) (N=196) at a tertiary cancer care center between November 2007 to January 2015. RESULTS: Our cohort consisted of 1,728 SCUs stored for conducting auto-SCT and 729 SCUs stored for conducting donor lymphocyte infusions (DLIs) after allo-SCT. Stem cells were not infused in 12.5% of patients who had planned to undergo auto-SCT, and 80% of patients who underwent allo-SCT never received DLI. Forty-one percent of SCUs intended for use in auto-SCT remained unutilized, with a second auto-SCT being performed only in 4 patients. Ninety-four percent of SCUs intended for carrying out DLIs remained unused, with only minimal usage observed one year after undergoing allo-SCT. CONCLUSION: The duration of storage of unused SCUs needs to be debated upon, so that a consensus can be reached regarding the ethical disposal of SCU.
Cohort Studies
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Consensus
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Cryopreservation
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Developing Countries*
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Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation*
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Hematopoietic Stem Cells*
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Humans
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Lymphocytes
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Retrospective Studies
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Stem Cell Transplantation
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Stem Cells*
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Tissue Donors