Publications by authors named "Schwentker A"

Background: The objective of this meta-analysis was to examine the effectiveness of keloid intralesional excision (KILE) in preventing recurrence. Treatment of keloids using surgical excision alone leads to high rates of recurrence. To date, there are no widely accepted guidelines for keloid treatment, and a multitude of adjunctive therapies are used to reduce recurrence.

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Purpose: This study aimed to assess both nonsurgical and operative treatment outcomes of pediatric and young adult patients with thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) at a tertiary care pediatric hospital.

Methods: A retrospective chart review of patients diagnosed with TOS, who were seen between January 2010 and August 2022 at a tertiary care pediatric hospital, was conducted. Collected pre- and postoperative data included symptoms, provocative testing (ie, Roo's, Wright's, and Adson's tests), participation in sports or upper-extremity activities, additional operations, and surgical complications.

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Bile acid (BA) metabolism is a complex system that includes a wide variety of primary and secondary, as well as conjugated and unconjugated BAs that undergo continuous enterohepatic circulation (EHC). Alterations in both composition and dynamics of BAs have been associated with various diseases. However, a mechanistic understanding of the relationship between altered BA metabolism and related diseases is lacking.

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Background: In patients with microtia, auricular reconstruction is ideally performed promptly to prevent impaired socialization during formative childhood years. The earliest viable age for reconstruction is widely accepted from 7-10 years of age, as full auricular size is achieved around age 8, with some variability dependent on sex. This retrospective study aims to provide an auricular growth curve that accounts for age and sex, enhancing the individualized approach to ear reconstruction.

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Article Synopsis
  • Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) is a neurological disease mainly affecting young children, first identified in 2014, with case spikes every two years around late summer to fall.
  • Diagnosis of AFM is often delayed, leading to inadequate evaluation and high rates of both acute and chronic morbidity.
  • In response to varying treatment timelines at their facility, authors created a comprehensive protocol for evaluating and managing pediatric AFM patients, aiming to standardize care and encourage multidisciplinary approaches across healthcare centers.
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Trichodysplasia spinulosa is a rare disorder caused by the ubiquitous trichodysplasia spinulosa-associated polyomavirus (TSPyV) and characterized clinically by predominately centrofacial, but often generalized, folliculocentric papules with protuberant keratinaceous spines. Although seroprevalence reaches up to 70% in adult populations, TSPyV causes clinical manifestations in a small percentage of patients who are immunosuppressed. Diagnosis can be made using typical clinical and histologic features, SV40T antibody immunostaining, and PCR of various tissues including the keratinaceous spine, skin, serum, urine, and CSF.

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Porokeratosis ptychotropica is an unusual variant of porokeratosis characterized by papules and plaques located on the buttocks and gluteal cleft and showing multiple coronoid lamellae on histology. In this case report, we present the longitudinal clinical course of porokeratosis ptychotropica in a pediatric patient with individual red-brown hyperkeratotic lesions that enlarged and became confluent prior to surgical intervention. We also discuss the etiology of porokeratosis ptychotropica and review current as well as future treatment options for the disease.

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The blistering disease recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB) is caused by mutations in the gene encoding collagen VII (COL7), which forms anchoring fibrils that attach the epidermis to the dermis. Cutaneous gene therapy to restore COL7 expression in RDEB patient cells has been proposed, and cultured epithelial autograft containing COL7-modified keratinocytes was previously tested in clinical trials. Because COL7 in normal skin is expressed in both fibroblasts and keratinocytes, cutaneous gene therapy using a bilayer skin substitute may enable faster restoration of anchoring fibrils.

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Purpose: Brachial plexus birth injuries with multiple nerve root avulsions present a particularly difficult reconstructive challenge because of the limited availability of donor nerves. The contralateral C7 has been described for brachial plexus reconstruction in adults but has not been well-studied in the pediatric population. We present our technique and results for retropharyngeal contralateral C7 nerve transfer to the lower trunk for brachial plexus birth injury.

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Background: Hypertrophic scar formation is unpredictable and poorly understood, afflicting both the pediatric and adult populations. Treatment methods with conservative and invasive approaches have low rates of compliance and high rates of morbidity. The purpose of this study was to test a reproducible scar model and investigate a new technique of scar modification through the use of adipose- derived progenitor stromal cells (ASCs).

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Microtia is a genetic condition affecting the external ears and presents clinically along a wide spectrum: minimally affected ears are small with minor shape abnormalities; extremely affected ears lack all identifiable structures, with the most extreme being absence of the entire external ear. Multiple genetic causes have been linked to microtia in both animal models and humans, which are improving our understanding of the condition and may lead to the identification of a unified cause for the condition. Microtia is also a prominent feature of several genetic syndromes, the study of which has provided further insight into the possible causes and genetic mechanisms of the condition.

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Idiopathic facial aseptic granuloma (IFAG), originally termed pyodermite froide du visage, describes a generally asymptomatic facial nodule presenting in childhood with clinical resemblance to pyoderma or cystic, granulomatous, or vascular lesions. Clinical understanding is constantly evolving, with recent observations indicating that IFAG may represent a subtype of childhood rosacea. We present a case of IFAG associated with eyelid chalazions in a 19-month-old boy.

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Background: Our complete understanding of hypertrophic scarring is still deficient, as portrayed by the poor clinical outcomes when treating them. To address the need for alternative treatment strategies, we assess the swine animal burn model as an initial approach for immature scar evaluation and therapeutic application.

Methods: Thermal contact burns were created on the dorsum of 3 domestic swine with the use of a branding iron at 170°F for 20 seconds.

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We present 4 patients, 4 months to 10 years of age, with thoracic outlet syndrome. All were referred to the brachial plexus clinic. Three patients were diagnosed with vascular thoracic outlet syndrome after clinical evaluation and diagnostic imaging.

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The authors have treated over 500 consecutive pediatric patients with voluminous hemangiomas (thickness of over 10 mm), since 1996. They were all treated with intralesional laser therapy using the potassium, titanyl, phosphate (KTP) laser. Since the initiation of KTP laser therapy for deep hemangiomas in 1996, the authors have significantly modified their treatment regimen.

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Bariatric surgery has evolved as an effective and relatively safe treatment for morbid obesity. With nearly every region of the body as a potential operative site and an unprecedented number of surgical procedures available, we must give attention to thoughtful perioperative management. Bariatric surgery is a life-changing event for the morbidly obese patient, and the body contouring that follows weight loss often has an equally profound effect.

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NO produced by both iNOS and eNOS plays many important roles in wound healing, from the inflammatory phase through to scar remodeling. NO has cytostatic, chemotactic, and vasodilatory effects during early wound repair, regulates proliferation and differentiation of several cell types, modulates collagen deposition and angiogenesis, and affects wound contraction. The data accumulated thus far indicates that the timing, level, and site of NO production are highly coordinated in normal wound repair.

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Nitric oxide (NO) can either prevent or promote apoptosis, depending on cell type. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that NO suppresses ultraviolet B radiation (UVB)-induced keratinocyte apoptosis both in vitro and in vivo. Irradiation with UVB or addition of the NO synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME) increased apoptosis in the human keratinocyte cell line CCD 1106 KERTr, and apoptosis was greater when the two agents were given in combination.

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Background: Pregnancy during general surgery residency has traditionally been discouraged.

Methods: In 2001, using an approved protocol, we anonymously surveyed 25 residents (PGY3 level or greater) concerning their experiences working with each other during episodes of resident pregnancy and maternity leave.

Results: From 1995 to 2001, 13 of 59 residents in general surgery were female (22%).

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Wound healing involves platelets, inflammatory cells, fibroblasts, and epithelial cells. All of these cell types are capable of producing nitric oxide (NO), either constitutively or in response to inflammatory cytokines, through the activity of nitric oxide synthases (NOSs): eNOS (NOS3; endothelial NOS) and iNOS (NOS2; inducible NOS), respectively. Indeed, pharmacological inhibition or gene deletion of these enzymes impairs wound healing.

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Elucidation of the many roles of nitric oxide (NO) in homeostasis and disease states has uncovered many areas where manipulation of NO production would be of therapeutic benefit. Recent advances in gene transfer technology and the cloning of the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) gene have led to the development of strategies for gene therapy to increase NO production for the treatment of disorders ranging from vascular restenosis to impaired wound healing. This review summarizes the current status of iNOS gene therapy research.

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The aim of this investigation was to develop a model for studying the chronic effects of radiation on wound healing in the rat. Six months after rats received a single radiation exposure of 20 Gy, a random-pattern dorsal skin flap was elevated. Two weeks after the flap was elevated, irradiated animals showed diminished scar formation and wound breaking strength, as compared with controls (P < 0.

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The partially avulsed second toe of a 3-year-old girl was successfully revascularized using a digital artery transfer from the adjacent third toe. The technique is explained and discussed.

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We superimposed extreme hypercapnia (arterial Pco2 400-450 mmHg) immediately before and during incomplete cerebral ischemia to distinguish the role of intracellular pH (pHi) and bicarbonate [( HCO3-]i) in postischemic metabolic and electrophysiological recovery. Incomplete global ischemia was produced in seven anesthetized dogs by 30 min of intracranial hypertension followed by 4 h of reperfusion. ATP, phosphocreatine (PCr), and pHi were measured with 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and [HCO3-]i was calculated from the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation using the measured pHi and sagittal sinus Pco2.

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