Behavioral research supports the efficacy of intervention for reading disability, but the brain mechanisms underlying improvement in reading are not well understood. Here, we review 39 neuroimaging studies of reading intervention to characterize links between reading improvement and changes in the brain. We report evidence of changes in activation, connectivity, and structure within the reading network, and right hemisphere, frontal and sub-cortical regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOperations for intestinal ischemia are frequently done by veterinarians. In equine surgery those conditions commonly producing ischemia are intussusception, volvulus, bowel obstructions, and incarcerated hernias. In an attempt to predict intraoperative bowel viability after the restoration of circulation, a variety of adjuvant methods have been investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Gynecol Obstet
May 1979
Exploration of the neck for primary hyperparathyroidism has increased in our institution, as evidenced by nine patients treated in the past one year, as compared with six in the previous three years. Our experience indicates that methylene blue staining has served as an important adjunct in the localization of abnormal parathyroid glands. No complications were noted intraoperatively or postoperatively as a result of its use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOf 24 dogs subjected to hemorrhagic shock, 12 resuscitated with intravenous infusions containing 2.5 per cent human serum albumin maintained significantly higher, p less than 0.05, serum albumin levels than did 12 others treated with Ringer's lactate solution, with or without 50 per cent dog plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMorbidity and mortality data from patients with bleeding esophagogastric varices treated with portosystemic shunts relate to the clinical status of the patient and to control of hemorrhage both in the immediate postoperative period as well as later. To obtain comparable data following selective infusion of pitressin into the superior mesenteric artery (SMA), records of 23 consecutive patients with cirrhosis, diagnosed by endoscopy as bleeding from varices and treated with SMA pitressin infusions, were reviewed. Twenty-four infusions were performed and hemorrhage was controlled in 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe management of pancreatic pseudocyst was reassessed in fifty-four patients: only sixteen (30 per cent) regressed with nonoperative management; six (11 per cent) died of septic complications; and thirty-two (64 per cent) eventually required operation. Most pseudocysts did not regress with nonoperative therapy, thus emphasizing the need of serial clinical and ultrasonic examination at frequent intervals to detect nonresolution or complications requiring earlier operation than previously advocated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLocal debridement, drainage, and diverting colostomy, with or without primary repair of the rectum, have been considered to be the standard treatment for most rectal injuries, but they are not sufficient for those patients sustaining uncontrollable bleeding or extensive rectal devascularization. This report assessed the indications and results of abdominoperineal resection of the rectum in these patients. Ten patients who were victims of explosive trauma presented with massive perineal injuries and extensive rectal devascularization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResults of ultrasonic monitoring of venous patency and fibrinogen uptake testing were evaluated in ten patients with venous thrombosis receiving heparin therapy. Two propagating venous thromboses were detected 24 to 48 hours before massive pulmonary embolism developed, thus emphasizing the usefulness of these methods for detection of anticoagulation therapy failures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFifty-seven patients with colonic injuries were treated by primary repair with or without exteriorization. Forty-six of these had other associated major intra-abdominal, intrathoracic, and musculoskeletal injuries. All had minimal contamination of the peritoneal cavity and were operated upon within 6 hours of injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA comparison of 99m-technetium albumin aggregated arterial scan and radiographic angiography for detection of shallow intimal carotid artery ulcerations was made in a series of 12 anesthetized dogs, having a total of 16 acute arterial ulcerations. Radiographic angiography showed positive findings related to presence of stenosis or mural thrombosis in 12 instances. Direct visualization of ulceration was only exceptionally encountered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControversy still exists regarding the proper approach to patients with penetrating torso injuries. Mandatory immediate celiotomy and selective observation both have associated risks. Paracentesis with lavage is a rapid, easily performed and readily available technique which can, with a high degree of accuracy, differentiate on initial evaluation those patients with penetrating visceral injuries from those without such injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTechnetium 99m-pyridoxylideneglutamate (99mTc-PG) administered intravenously is excreted by hepatocytes into the bile canaliculi and enters the gallbladder through the cystic duct and consequently, can be used for scanning the hepatobiliary ductal system. A total of 166 patients representing 27 normal subjects, 84 patients referred for investigation for pain in the upper right quadrant of the abdomen and 55 jaundiced patients were evaluated with 99mTc-PG. In normal human volunteers, the agent reached the liver in five minutes, and the common bile duct, gallbladder, and duodenum within 15 minutes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarly changes in serum protein concentration during hemorrhagic shock were evaluated in a series of 20 dogs, following massive bleeding. The serum protein concentration fell faster than did the hematocrit value, with significant changes becoming apparent 15 minutes after hemorrhage, p less than 0.05.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunosuppressive agents are frequently used in transplant recipients for prevention of homograft rejection and in patients with leukemia for treatment of their primary disease. From 1973 to 1975, fifty-nine patients undergoing renal transplantation and forty-one patients with leukemia were treated at the University of California (Davis) Medical Center. Intestinal necrosis and perforation developed in four (7 per cent) of those receiving transplants and in four (10 per cent) of the patients with leukemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical evaluation of hepatobiliary scanning using 99mTc-PG was done in twenty normal volunteers and eighty-three patients with liver and biliary tract disease. Satisfactory images of the biliary tract were obtained using small dosages of this agent. In normal humans, the agent reached the liver in 5 minutes, and the common bile duct, gallbladder, and duodenum in 10 to 20 minutes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTechnetium-99m P.G. cholescintigraphy was performed in 27 human volunteers and 81 patients referred for hepatobiliary tract disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperiments were performed on obligatory bipeds to study the effects of an arteriovenous fistula on a devascularized ischemic limb. Retrograde flow of arterial blood entering the venous system by way of an arteriovenous fistula was demonstrated. Venous valves appeared not to interfere with retrograde arterial flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe basic considerations in the use of an arterio-venous fistula for revascularization of the ischemic extremity have been summarized. Retrograde flow of arterial blood entering the venous system by way of an arteriovenous fistula has been demonstrated in acute and chronic animal experiments. While evidence of significant reversed flow in humans has been shown in a few small series, its occurrence is still controversial.
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