Publications by authors named "Androniki Lamia"

Tinea incognito is a dermatophyte infection with atypical features, due to the use of topical or systemic steroids or other immunosuppressive medications. Delayed diagnosis, spread of the infection to critical body surfaces, resistance to antifungal drugs, and increased costs due to prolonged hospitalization and multiple treatment regimens often complicate tinea incognito. It can affect individuals of all ages and genders, but it is more common in children.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of pulsed magnetic field therapy on peripheral nerve regeneration after median nerve injury and primary coaptation in the rat. Both median nerves were surgically exposed and denervated in 24 female Wistar rats. A microsurgical coaptation was performed on the right side, whereas on the left side a spontaneous healing was prevented.

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The babysitter-procedure might offer an alternative when nerve reconstruction is delayed in order to overcome muscular atrophy due to denervation. In this study we aimed to show that a sensomotoric babysitter-procedure after median nerve injury is capable of preserving irreversible muscular atrophy. The median nerve of 20 female Wistar rats was denervated.

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Article Synopsis
  • There is ongoing debate among microsurgeons about the benefits of connecting sensory nerves in addition to blood vessels during free microvascular flaps.
  • Increased operating time and inconsistent nerve regeneration often lead surgeons to focus only on vascular connections, leaving nerves untreated.
  • Our experience with free microvascular tissue transfer for breast and extremity reconstruction suggests that nerve coaptation generally does not improve outcomes in most flap surgeries.
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