Introduction: In one-third of all abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs), the aneurysm neck is short (juxtarenal) or shows other adverse anatomical features rendering operations more complex, hazardous and expensive. Surgical options include open surgical repair and endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) techniques including fenestrated EVAR, EVAR with adjuncts (chimneys/endoanchors) and off-label standard EVAR. The aim of the UK COMPlex AneurySm Study (UK-COMPASS) is to answer the research question identified by the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment (NIHR HTA) Programme: 'What is the clinical and cost-effectiveness of strategies for the management of juxtarenal AAA, including fenestrated endovascular repair?'
Methods And Analysis: UK-COMPASS is a cohort study comparing clinical and cost-effectiveness of different strategies used to manage complex AAAs with stratification of physiological fitness and anatomical complexity, with statistical correction for baseline risk and indication biases.
Aims: To investigate how diagnostic radiology on-call work is conducted by trainees out of hours, and to explore how this on-call experience may be improved from a trainee perspective.
Materials And Methods: A nationwide online questionnaire was distributed to each radiology training scheme. A trainee on the diagnostic on-call rota completed the questionnaire on behalf of the scheme.
Aim: To assess safety and efficiency of the Cheshire & Merseyside Collaborative, the largest trainee led on-call service in the UK, based on discrepancy rates and time taken to issue reports.
Materials & Methods: All studies reported by the collaborative in a 4-week period were evaluated for discrepancy and the time taken to issue a report. These figures were compared against the Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) guidelines and a recent national audit of discrepancy rates.
Rather than consider endometriosis as an enigmatic disease, reading John Sampson's two theories/mechanisms explains virtually all cases affecting the female. It is true that Sampson's most recent publication, in 1940, which talks about retrograde menstruation via the fallopian tubes, clearly fails to explain many types of endometriosis, particularly that located in extra-pelvic sites. However, his earlier publications of 1911 and 1912, on radiographic studies of hysterectomy specimens that had been injected with various gelatin/bismuth/pigment mixtures examining the unique uterine vasculature, were more important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA recent article supports our longstanding view that all intramural fibroids can cause disturbance of uterine function. This may be reflected in the symptom of menorrhagia or fertility-related issues, as well as pregnancy losses at all gestational stages. However, it was disappointing that there was no reference to either the mechanism by which fibroids disturb uterine function nor to the gynaecologist who described this more than 100 years ago, namely John Sampson.
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