Publications by authors named "Gona A"

Objective: To present clinical experiences in managing sphenoid sinus lesions at Al Nahdha Hospital, Oman with a focus on diagnostic challenges and surgical outcomes.

Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on six cases of sphenoid sinus lesions treated with endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS). Diagnostic modalities included contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), followed by histopathological confirmation.

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Background: Prematurity is the strongest predictor of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Most previous studies investigated additional risk factors by conventional statistics, while the few studies applying artificial intelligence, and specifically machine learning (ML), for this purpose were mainly targeted to the predictive ability of specific interventions. This study aimed to apply ML to identify, among routinely collected data, variables predictive of BPD, and to compare these variables with those identified through conventional statistics.

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Background: Serous otitis media is a recognised presentation of Eustachian tube dysfunction secondary to post-nasal space pathology. Post-nasal space biopsies are commonly taken in patients with isolated serous otitis media, despite normal nasendoscopy findings, without robust evidence for doing so. This study examined cases of unilateral serous otitis media with effusion in adults.

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Background: Individuals with superior semi-circular canal syndrome often describe vestibular symptoms elicited by loud sounds, as well as other pressure-induced symptoms. They also often report other symptoms, including autophony, hyperacusis, cognitive dysfunction, spatial disorientation, anxiety and migraine headaches. Symptoms occur due to the presence of a 'third window' created by the dehiscence of the superior semi-circular canal.

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Drug-induced osteoporosis is a significant health problem and many physicians are unaware that many commonly prescribed medications contribute to significant bone loss and fractures. In addition to glucocorticoids, proton pump inhibitors, selective serotonin receptor inhibitors, thiazolidinediones, anticonvulsants, medroxyprogesterone acetate, aromatase inhibitors, androgen deprivation therapy, heparin, calcineurin inhibitors, and some chemotherapies have deleterious effects on bone health. Furthermore, many patients are treated with combinations of these medications, possibly compounding the harmful effects of these drugs.

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Calcium binding protein (CaBP) immunoreactivity in the cerebellum of bullfrogs was examined, concentrating on cells associated with the auricular lobe. While anti-calretinin and anti-parvalbumin also immunoreacted with the same cell populations, anti-calbindin exhibited the most robust and typical pattern of immunostaining. Calbindin immunoreactivity was observed in various populations of cells in the auricular lobe and interauricular granular band of the cerebellum, in the cerebellar peduncle, and in a bundle of interauricular commissural fibers which course through the dorsal, marginal, part of the molecular layer.

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Calbindin-immunoreactive Purkinje cells were identified in the cerebella of frog tadpoles that had been treated with thyroxine to accelerate metamorphosis. The dorsal part of the cerebellar plate contained the full complement of Purkinje cells which were all CaBP-immunoreactive, while in the ventral part of the cerebellum Purkinje cells acquired CaBP-immunoreactivity only after several days of thyroxine treatment. The ventral group of Purkinje cells was separated from the dorsal group by a distinct gap, which is the site of a shallow sulcus in adult frogs.

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This study was undertaken to determine the effects of extremely low frequency (ELF; 60 Hz) electromagnetic (EM) fields on somatic growth and cortical development, as well as biochemical and morphological maturation, of the rat neopallium. On the fifth day of pregnancy, female rats were put in pairs into plastic cages that were housed in a specially constructed apparatus for irradiation under three separate sets of combination and intensity: 1) 1 kV/m and 10 gauss; 2) 100 kV/m and 1 gauss; and 3) 100 kV/m and 10 gauss. The dams were exposed for 23 h daily, from days 5 through 19 postconception, after which they were returned to cages outside the exposure apparatus until they littered.

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The effects of extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic (EM) fields on the maturation of the rat cerebellum were studied. Newborn rats were exposed to 60 Hz electric and magnetic fields under three different combinations in a specially constructed apparatus. The pups were irradiated for 7-8 h daily, with a 30-min interruption for nursing.

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Growth rates of rat tendon fibroblasts cultured in a three-dimensional carbon fiber matrix were compared with those of cells cultured on standard flat culture plates. The carbon fiber has been used as a tissue scaffold for tendon and ligament repair in animal and clinical studies. While cell growth on the culture plates appears to follow a growth curve containing a lag phase, a log phase, and plateau phase of growth, cell growth in the fiber matrix was characterized by a suppressed log phase of growth.

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This study examines the origin of cells in the interauricular granular band (iagb) in the cerebellum of the frog tadpole during early stages of development by means of histological and autoradiographic methods. Premetamorphic bullfrog tadpoles were exposed to multiple doses of 3H-thymidine (10 microCi/g body weight per exposure) at developmental stages ranging from 1 week to 1 year and were killed at either 6 or 12 months of age. The autoradiographic data were examined to determine the time when cells of the iagb were generated.

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This study examines the time of origin of cells in the external granular layer (EGL) in the frog cerebellum during early stages of development. Premetamorphic bullfrog tadpoles were given multiple intraperitoneal injections of 3H-thymidine (10 microCi/g body weight per injection) at developmental stages ranging from 4 weeks to 1 year and were killed at either 6 or 12 months of age. Autoradiograms were analyzed to determine the time when cells of the EGL were generated by an examination of the labeling pattern in the neuroepithelial cap where EGL cells were presumably formed and in the EGL into which they migrated.

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Granule cell maturation in the cerebellum of bullfrog tadpoles was studied during both spontaneous and thyroxine-induced metamorphosis by using electron microscopy and Golgi-impregnated preparations. The production of cerebellar microneurons, a majority of which are granule cell precursors, was quantitatively compared during spontaneous and thyroxine-induced metamorphosis by using stereological methods and biochemical measurements of DNA. Granule cell migration and differentiation appeared morphologically similar during spontaneous and thyroxine-induced metamorphosis.

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Stellate cell development was studied in the bullfrog cerebellum during spontaneous and thyroxine-induced metamorphosis using the Golgi-Kopsch method and electron microscopy. Cells that possessed axosomatic synapses and resembled stellate cells were present even in the incipient molecular layer of the cerebellum in the premetamorphic tadpole. These cells may have originated from the early, transient wave of external granule cells that have been reported in the cerebellum of premetamorphic tadpoles in the first 6 months of development, and may constitute the variant population of stellate cells that are present later during development or the degenerating cells that have been observed during metamorphosis as scattered dying cells in the molecular layer.

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Antiserum prepared against rat renal calcium-binding protein (CaBP) was used with the unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique to localize the 28,000 molecular weight CaBP in the cerebellum of the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana. Whole brains of premetamorphic tadpoles and adults were fixed in Bouin's solution for 2 or 24 h and embedded in paraffin. 8-microns parasagittal sections were prepared and treated by the PAP method.

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Filamentous carbon is currently being used as an implant material for tendon and ligament repair in humans. This material acts as a scaffold for the organization of new fibrous tissue growth. Primary cultures of rat tendon fibroblast cells (1 degrees RTF cells) were grown on carbon, Dacron, polyethylene and Nylon fibers in vitro.

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Purkinje cell maturation during thyroxine-induced metamorphosis in premetamorphic bullfrog tadpoles was studied using electron microscopy and Golgi (silver-impregnated) preparations. Cerebella from tadpoles were examined following 1, 2, or 3 weeks of thyroxine treatment. Particular attention was paid to possible differences between the two populations of Purkinje cells previously described, i.

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Transient formation of the cerebellar external granular layer (EGL) occurs during metamorphosis in frog tadpoles and is dependent on thyroid hormone. Late prometamorphic bullfrog tadpoles at similar stages of development were thyroidectomized and then killed after 1 month and 2 months during the fall and winter. The cerebellum was studied by qualitative and quantitative light microscopy.

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The development and organization of Purkinje cell axons and their collaterals was studied in the bullfrog using the Golgi-Kopsch method. In the tadpole, axonal collaterals are few and usually unbranched. In the adult, however, intracortical axonal collaterals of Purkinje cells are more numerous, and they form a meager supraganglionic plexus and a more extensive infraganglionic plexus.

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The maturation of Purkinje cells in the cerebella of both thyroxine (T4)-induced and normally metamorphosing tadpoles was studied by transmission electron microscopy, with particular reference to the perikaryal changes. During the latter part of the prometamorphic phase, many Purkinje cells showed hypertrophied apical cones filled with mitochondria, Golgi elements and rosettes of ribosomes. In early metamorphic climax, the perikaryal cytoplasm displayed stratification, with an inner zone of perinuclear Nissl bodies and an outer region of neurotubules.

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Ultrastructural studies of the ventricular surface of the frog cerebellum showed regional differences. In the midline region of the adult cerebellum was found a band of profusely ciliated squamous ependymal cells. In the rest of the cerebellum the ependymal cells were columnar and each had a single cilium.

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The Purkinje cells of the premetamorphic frog tadpole cerebellum were studied with the transmission electron microscope. At this stage of histogenesis, when the external granular layer is yet to be formed, their maturational state varied greatly from randomly oriented cells with a thin rim of cytoplasm to well-formed cells with an abundance of organelle-rich cytoplasm and well-developed dendrites. The well-developed cells were seen in the apical (marginal) region of the cerebellar plate and the poorly developed cells in the basal region.

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The development of Purkinje cell dendrites was studied in the bullfrog from premetamorphic tadpoles to 10-week-old postmetamorphic frog-lets by the Golgi-Kopsch method. In this species two distinct patterns of arbor formation may be seen, which appear to be related to differences in the timing of initial dendritic development. In Purkinje cells that begin development in early tadpole stages, the dendritic tree is elaborated by continuous and concomitant growth and branching, a process by which the developing arbor expands in both height and width.

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Maturational changes of the cerebellum of frog tadpoles were studied with the electron miscroscope. In the premetamorphic tadpole, parallel fiber-like processes (PFP) were present in the incipient molecular layer, long before the appearance of the external granular layer (EGL). These PFP showed synaptic contacts with the precociously developed Purkinje cell dendrites.

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