1.Rupture of a Right Internal Iliac Artery Aneurysm after Coil Embolization and an Exclusion Operation
Toshio Baba ; Kiyofumi Morishita ; Shunsuke Oohori ; Kousuke Ujihira
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2012;41(4):178-181
The patient, a 80-year-old man, had undergone aneurysmectomy and graft replacement of the right external iliac artery aneurysm and coil embolization and exclusion of the right internal iliac artery aneurysm in 2007. Computed tomography showed a rupture of the right internal iliac artery aneurysm in 2010. We performed aneurysmectomy and occlusion of the gluteal artery. The patient had a satisfactory postoperative course.
2.Oral health-related quality of life in patients with implant treatment.
Yukumi KANEHIRA ; Korenori ARAI ; Toshiki KANEHIRA ; Keina NAGAHISA ; Shunsuke BABA
The Journal of Advanced Prosthodontics 2017;9(6):476-481
PURPOSE: Patient-reported outcomes are increasingly commonly used as a method of evaluating treatments. This cross-sectional study aimed to evaluate implant treatment from the perspective of patient-reported outcomes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Subjects were 804 patients who visited the Department of Oral Implantology at Osaka Dental University. The participants were categorized into a pre-implant group and a post-implant group. They were further categorized into five subgroups based on the number of occlusal supports provided by the remaining teeth according to the Eichner classification. The participants answered a basic questionnaire and the General Oral Health Assessment Index (GOHAI) questionnaire, an oral health-related quality of life (QOL) scale. GOHAI scores were compared according to the number of occlusal supports within each group and between the two groups. RESULTS: The results revealed a significant difference in terms of the number of occlusal supports within the pre-implant group; GOHAI scores decreased as the number of occlusal supports decreased (P < .001). However, no significant difference was observed in GOHAI scores in terms of the number of occlusal supports in the post-implant group (P>.05). GOHAI scores significantly improved in both pre- and post-implant groups in all occlusal support subgroups (P < .001). CONCLUSION: GOHAI scores decrease as occlusal support is lost. However, implant treatment performed in areas of loss improves the GOHAI score when occlusal support is restored.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Classification
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Humans
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Methods
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Oral Health
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Quality of Life*
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Tooth