Publications by authors named "O Garcia Izquierdo"

This report presents the case of a 25-year-old male with an infected tibial diaphyseal nonunion caused by a bone transport procedure carried out to treat an open fracture the patient had sustained 10 years before referral to our hospital. After an initial radical debridement, a bone defect was created, which was subsequently obliterated by placement of an antibiotic-impregnated cement spacer and Stimulan beads and covered by an anterolateral thigh flap. As the patient refused to wear an external fixator and his osseous biology was not amenable to a Masquelet procedure, a decision was made to apply the Capanna technique as soon as the infection healed.

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External male genitalia have rarely been evaluated on fetal ultrasound. Apart from visualization of the penis for fetal sex determination, there are no specific instructions or recommendations from scientific societies. This study aimed to review the current knowledge about prenatal diagnosis of the scrotum and internal structures, with discussion regarding technical aspects and clinical management.

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Fetal sex discordance is an entity that is becoming more frequent due to the expansion of the cfDNA for prenatal diagnosis. Its incidence can be estimated in 1/1500-2000 pregnancies, a frequency as high as that of some common chromosomopathies. The causes of this phenomenon are multiple and diverse, ranging from laboratory errors to important pathologies such as disorders of sexual differentiation.

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Postnatal penile length is a reliable, standardized, and widely used marker for the diagnosis of genitourinary pathology, as well as genetic and hormonal disorders. In contrast, prenatal diagnosis has not been developed equally and there is a lack of relevant literature. Our objective is to review the studies on fetal penile length, and apply findings to clinical practice.

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There is a general consensus that the pathogenesis for Kienböck's disease remains uncertain, though it is probably related to nonphysiologic stress transmission across the lunate, acting in concert with one of several possible vascular abnormalities. Most surgical treatments focus on mechanical aspects rather than real physiopathology, but in the recent years several articles have shown the utility of vascularized grafts in the treatment of Kienböck's disease, especially in its early stages. The authors present a case of a successfully reconstruction of a IIIA stage Kienböck's disease with an osteochondral vascularized graft from medial femoral condyle.

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