1.Development and application of portably minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device for abdominally warfare trauma
Ze WANG ; Hao CUI ; Runkai CHEN ; Zhen YUAN ; Bo WEI ; Jianxin CUI
China Medical Equipment 2024;21(10):29-35
Objective:To design and develop a portably minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device for abdominally warfare trauma,which aimed at a scene of rescue environment at frontline,and its feasibility was evaluated preliminarily through animal experiment.Methods:Based on the actual demands of the rescue environment at frontline,a set of portably minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device for abdominally warfare trauma(abbreviation:minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device)was researched,developed and assembled,which included portably integrated host,disposable flexible lens of endoscope,disposable apparatus of minimally invasive surgery,extendable channel device of avoiding pneumoperitoneum and so on.A male Bama miniature pig was selected,and it received two different surgeries included portably minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device,and conventionally laparoscopic surgery after it received general anesthesia.The damage controls included hemostasis of intraoperative parenchyma organ,sealing and repairing of gastrointestinal perforation and drainage of indwelling catheter in abdominal and pelvic cavity between two groups were compared,and the difference of the mobility performance between them also was compared.The operational evaluation of minimally invasive surgery of damage control surgery and the potential of its clinical conversion were conducted.Results:Compared to conventional laparoscopy,this minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device had better mobility,and the transfer time of this device was(3.3±1.0)min,which was significantly shorter than(14.5±3.2)min of conventional laparoscopy,and the difference of that between two device was significant(t=-5.786,P<0.05).The minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device could successfully realize a series of operation of damage control surgery included exploration,flushing,suction,hemostasis,repair and drainage under the pneumoperitoneum or without pneumoperitoneum,which operation was safety and feasibility.Conclusion:The portably minimally invasive diagnostic and therapeutic device for abdominally warfare trauma can realize integration and optimization,and mobility and portability on the basis of the current laparoscopic platform,which can successfully realize the operation of damage control surgery.It has favorable application prospects and capabilities of clinical conversion.
2.A comparative study of mid- and long-term effectiveness of patellar resurfacing or non-resurfacing in primary total knee arthroplasty.
Te LIU ; Ye TAO ; Junlei SONG ; Chengqi JIA ; Runkai ZHAO ; Jun FU ; Jiying CHEN ; Ming NI
Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery 2024;38(12):1451-1457
OBJECTIVE:
To compare the mid- and long-term effectiveness of patellar resurfacing versus non-resurfacing in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA).
METHODS:
Twenty-six patients who underwent bilateral TKA between March 2013 and September 2015 were selected as the study subjects. One side was randomly chosen for patellar resurfacing (resurfacing group), and the other side was not (control group). There were 4 males and 22 females, the age ranged from 51 to 65 years, with an average of 59 years. According to Kellgren-Lawrence classification, there were 21 cases of grade Ⅳ and 5 cases of grade Ⅲ in both knees. There was no significant difference in the surgical side, and preoperative clinical and functional scores of the Knee Society Score (KSS), visual analogue scale (VAS) score, and the composition ratio of anterior knee pain localization points between the two groups ( P>0.05). The operation time, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative abnormal signs such as patellar clunk, feeling of constraint, patellar tendon weakness, crepitus, or snow-on-glass sensation, and the occurrence of complications were recorded and compared. Patient subjective evaluations included Forgotten Joint Score (FJS) and the degree of difficulty in high-level knee activities (including flexion with load bearing, going upstairs, going downstairs, squatting and standing up, kneeling, knee extension, and crossing legs for 7 items); KSS clinical/functional scores and VAS scores were used to evaluate the recovery of knee joint function, and the location of anterior knee pain was determined by a localization diagram.
RESULTS:
The operation time of the resurfacing group was significantly longer than that of the control group ( P<0.05), and there was no significant difference in intraoperative blood loss between the two groups ( P>0.05). All patients' incisions healed by first intention; the hospital stay ranged from 8 to 23 days, with an average of 12.6 days. All patients were followed up 9-11 years, with an average of 9.7 years. Except for 1 case who died of multiple organ failure due to internal diseases at 9 years after operation and 5 cases with incomplete radiological data, the rest 20 patients were assessed radiologically and found that 1 side of the knee joint in the control group had patellar dislocation; the remaining patients had no prosthetic failure (fracture, loosening, displacement, etc.), patellar fracture, patellar necrosis, patellar instability, patellar tendon rupture, prosthetic revision, etc. No patients had reoperations due to patellar-related complications or anterior knee pain in both knee joints. At 2 years postoperatively and at last follow-up, there was no significant difference in the incidence of abnormal signs such as patellar clunk, feeling of constraint, patellar tendon weakness, crepitus, or snow-on-glass sensation, the incidence of high-level knee activity difficulty, and the composition ratio of anterior knee pain localization between the two groups ( P>0.05). The KSS clinical scores, functional scores, and VAS scores of both groups significantly improved compared to preoperative ones ( P<0.05); there was no significant difference in the comparison between the two groups at the two time points postoperatively ( P>0.05). At 2 years postoperatively and at last follow-up, there was no significant difference in FJS scores between the two groups ( P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
Patellar resurfacing or not has similar mid- and long-term effectiveness in primary TKA.
Humans
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/methods*
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Female
;
Patella/surgery*
;
Aged
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Range of Motion, Articular
;
Knee Joint/surgery*
;
Knee Prosthesis
;
Pain Measurement
;
Osteoarthritis, Knee/surgery*
;
Pain, Postoperative/etiology*
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Recovery of Function
4.Analysis of etiology and biochemical markers of acute liver failure in children
Haiyan FU ; Xiaoming WANG ; Yali WANG ; Jianxiao ZHANG ; Jingping LI ; Xin ZHAO ; Junying LIU ; Runkai YIN ; Rui CHEN ; Limin YANG
Journal of Clinical Pediatrics 2015;(10):841-845
ObjectiveTo explore the etiology and biochemical markers of acute liver failure (ALF) in children.Methods The cause and the biochemical markers of ALF in children who were treated in December 2014 to January 2011 were ana-lyzed retrospectively.ResultsA total of 67 children were enrolled, including 31 females and 36 males. According to the cause of the disease, the children were divided into non-genetic metabolic group, genetic metabolic group, and cryptogenic group. In the non-genetic metabolic group (29 cases, 43.28%) there were 12 cases of drug-induced ALF, 5 cases of Reye syndrome, 3 cases of hemophagocytic syndrome, 3 cases of herpes simplex virus infection, 2 cases of autoimmune hepatitis, one of case mushroom poisoning one case of hepatitis A virus infection, one case of cytomegalovirus infection and one case of sepsis respectively. In the genetic metabolic group (14 cases, 20.90%) there were 6 cases of Wilson’s disease, 2 case of glycogen storage disease, 2 of cas-es progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, 2 cases of neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis caused by citrin deifciency, one case of very long-chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase deifciency and one case of primary carnitine deifciency. In the cryptogenic group there were 24 cases (35.82%). The serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), albumin, blood glucose level and AST/ALT were statistically signiifcantly different in genetic metabolic group from in non-genetic me-tabolism disease group and cryptogenic group, (P<0.05). The genetic metabolic group had the lowest levels of serum ALT, AST, albumin and glucose while the genetic metabolic group had the highest ratio of AST/ALT.ConclusionsThe etiology of ALF in children are complex. Genetic metabolic disease should be considered when the child with ALF has no signiifcantly elevated ALT, extremely high ratio of AST/ALT, combined with hypoproteinemia and hypoglycemia.

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