Achieving bone union remains a significant clinical dilemma. The use of osteoinductive agents, specifically bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), has gained wide attention. However, multiple side effects, including increased incidence of cancer, have renewed interest in investigating alternatives that provide safer, yet effective bone regeneration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Historically, there has been limited evidence and no clear consensus suggesting best practices for perioperative buprenorphine management (PBM). Previously published PBM strategies included a wide variation in dosing, complexity, and clinical decision making points. Importantly, there are limited published algorithms reporting corresponding patient outcomes data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiofrequency ablation (RFA), a minimally invasive procedure for pain reduction, is increasingly used for managing chronic neck pain and headaches. This article offers a concise overview of cervical spine RFA. In the context of RFA, heat is applied to specific nerve tissues to interrupt pain signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile interfacial regions often occupy a relatively small portion of a system, physical and chemical processes often proceed differently within them. It is therefore useful to identify interfacial regions to answer many questions in physical chemistry. Thermodynamic phases are often described by their density and local structure; therefore, interfacial regions can then be defined as regions with densities and structures that deviate from the properties of the neighboring phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough transforaminal epidural injections have long been used for radicular pain, there is no universal standard injection approach to the neural foramen. The intervertebral foramen and its surrounding structures comprise an anatomically sensitive area that includes bone and joint structures, the intervertebral disk, blood vessels (in particular, the radicular arteries), the epidural sheath, and the spinal nerve root. Given the relatively high risk of inadvertent injury or injection to these nearby structures, image guidance for transforaminal epidural steroid injections (TFESIs) is standard of care.
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