Publications by authors named "Thomas Beutler"

Background: Examination of ≥12 lymph nodes (LNs) ensures accurate staging in colon cancer. The aim of this study was to compare nodal positivity between sentinel LN mapping (SLNM) and conventional surgery in patients with <12 and ≥12 LNs harvested.

Methods: From 1993 to 2008, 407 and 380 patients with colon cancer underwent SLNM and conventional surgery, respectively.

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Introduction: The requirement for nodal analysis currently confounds the oncological propriety of focused purely endoscopic resection for early-stage colon cancer and complicates the evolution of innovative alternatives such as natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES) and its hybrids. Adjunctive sentinel node biopsy (SNB) deserves consideration as a means of addressing this shortfall.

Methods: Data from two prospectively maintained databases established for multicentric studies of SNB in colon cancer that employed similar methodologies were pooled to establish technique potency selectively in T1/T2 disease (both overall and under optimized conditions) and to project potential clinical impact.

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Background: Sentinel lymph node (SLN) mapping (M) for staging in colorectal cancer (CRCa) remains controversial and needs to be validated. This study analyzes results of SLNM at a multi-institutional level for CRCa.

Methods: Group A patients underwent SLNM with 1 to 3 mL of 1% lymphazurin.

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Purpose: Sentinel lymph node mapping accurately predicts nodal status in > 90 percent of melanoma and breast and colorectal cancers. However, because of anatomic differences, sentinel lymph node mapping of rectal cancers has been considered inaccurate and difficult relative to colon. A prospective study was undertaken to identify differences in sentinel lymph node mapping between patients with colon cancer and those with rectal cancer.

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A new shoulder prosthesis design for proximal humeral fractures has been developed. The rim of the articular component of this prosthesis has several holes to which the bone-tendon junction of the rotator cuff is fixed, to allow an anatomic reconstruction of the glenohumeral unit. The strength of the tuberosity fixation to this prosthesis is investigated in a cadaveric study.

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Current conventional surgical and pathological techniques substantially understage colon cancer. This is evidenced by the fact that a significant subset of patients who are stage I and II at the time of colectomy return with distant metastases and ultimately succumb to the disease within the next 5 years. The identification of more nodes within a specimen and the detailed analysis of lymph nodes with advanced pathological techniques such as immunohistochemistry and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) can improve the staging of colon cancer, but are also associated with tremendous financial, time, and labor constraints.

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The term computer aided orthopedic surgery (CAOS) stands for approaches that aim to improve visibility to the surgical field and increase application accuracy by means of so-called navigation systems alone or in combination with smart end-effectors when carrying out surgical actions. These goals achieved by linking the bony anatomy being operated on with a virtual representation, such as an image dataset. This article introduces the basic principles of CAOS.

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Experimental data suggest that lumbar torsion contributes to lumbar disc degenerative changes, such as instability, spondylolisthesis and spinal canal stenosis. However, some basic mechanical characteristics of the lumbar spine under torsional loading have not yet been reported in detail. For example, the function of the facet joints under combined mechanical loads such as torsion with superimposed flexion or extension postures is an area of interest about which little biomechanical data have been reported.

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Epidermal growth factor plays a key role in late fetal lung development and differentiation as well as in regulating surfactant protein A synthesis, which is involved in innate immunity of the lung. Here we show that human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), a known lung pathogen in connatal and postnatal infection of neonates as well as transplant recipients, completely down-regulates EGF receptor (EGF-R) on the surface of human fetal lung fibroblasts. Inhibition of EGF-R synthesis occurs on the transcriptional rather than on the posttranscriptional level.

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To make a direct biomechanical comparison between the sandblasted and acid-etched surface (SLA) and the machined and acid-etched surface (MA), a well-established animal model for implant removal torque testing was employed, using a split-mouth experimental design. All implants had an identical cylindrical solid-screw shape with the standard ITI thread configuration, without any macroscopic retentive structures. After 4, 8, and 12 weeks of bone healing, removal torque testing was performed to evaluate the interfacial shear strength of each surface type.

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