In 2001, the Norwegian National Health Administration introduced a system that allows patients to choose the public hospital at which they are to be treated. This increased the importance of hospital Websites, as they are used by patients to select a service. In 2002 we rated the Websites of general hospitals in Norway in two ways. Rating 1 was based on a Norwegian set of quality criteria for Websites; 16 items were evaluated to give a maximum score of 32. For rating 2, we used the top five items ranked by cancer patients or their relatives in a previous study, which were weighted and gave a maximum score of 27. Fifty-four (82%) of the 66 public general hospitals in Norway had a Website on the Internet. Information about departments and treatments offered was sparse. Information on prices was almost completely absent. About a third of the Websites were searchable. Quality, as scored by summing ratings 1 and 2, was related to the type of hospital. The mean scores were: university hospitals, 38.8; central hospitals, 30.3; local hospitals, 29.2; and other hospitals, 21.1. On the whole, the hospitals' Websites were not impressive, in view of the competition between hospitals for patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/1357633042026260 | DOI Listing |
Aim: Successful deep brain stimulation (DBS) requires precise electrode placement. However, brain shift from loss of cerebrospinal fluid or pneumocephalus still affects aim accuracy. Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) provides absolute spatial sensitivity, and intraoperative cone-beam computed tomography (iCBCT) has become increasingly used in DBS procedures.
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May 2024
Sincan Eğitim ve Araştırma Hastanesi.
Aim: The aim of the study is to determine sac volume based on radiological examinations in patients undergoing surgery for myelomeningocele (MMC) and to investigate the relationship of sac volume with hydrocephalus and Chiari malformation type 2 (CM) with a view to determining the optimum length of follow-up and recommend a treatment plan.
Material And Methods: The present study involved the retrospective review of radiologic examinations and medical files of 81 patients who underwent surgery for myelomeningocele between 2015 and 2022 in the neurosurgery clinic of Ankara Training and Research Hospital. Then, MMC sac volumes were measured and the statistical relationship of these measurements with the Evans Index, progressive enlargement of the ventricles after sac repair and CM was investigated.
Aim: The aim of this study is to assess associated cerebral supratentorial anomalies in patients who underwent myelomeningocele repair in hopes of developing a better morphological apprehension of the forebrain's anomalies in this category of patients.
Material And Methods: This retrospective observational study assessed 426 pediatric patients who underwent myelomeningocele repair between January 2013 and December 2020. Cranial MRIs with T1- and T2-weighted sequences were obtained as part of the postoperative assessment to determine the presence of associated supratentorial anomalies in pediatric patients following myelomeningocele repair.
Aim: We investigated the short- term results of dynamic/semi-rigid stabilization in patients with cervi-cal spinal stenosis and compare them with patients for which decompression and posterior cer-vical fusion was performed.
Material And Methods: 28 patients were included in this study. Group 1 was the semi-rigid group (four male, ten fe-male), group 2 was the fusion group (nine male, five female).
Aim: Many combinations of inflammation-based markers have been reported their prognostic ability. The prognostic value of albumin-to-gama-glutamyltransferase ratio (AGR), an inflammation-related index, has been identified for several cancers. However, the predictive value of AGR for high-grade glioma patients remains unclear.
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