06), respectively, with no additional pain relief benefits beyond these points. ISB reduced postoperative opioid consumption up to 12 hours, decreased postoperative nausea and vomiting at 24 hours, and expedited postanesthesia care unit and hospital discharge. The type, dose, and volume of local anesthetic used did not affect the results. CONCLUSIONS: ISB can provide effective analgesia up to 6 hours with motion and 8 hours at rest after shoulder surgery, with no demonstrable benefits thereafter. Patients who receive an ISB can suffer rebound pain at 24 hours but later experience similar
pain severity compared with those who do not receive an ISB. ISB can also provide an opioid-sparing Salubrinal inhibitor effect and reduce opioid-related PKC inhibitor side effects in the first 12 and 24 hours postoperatively, respectively. These findings are useful to inform preoperative risk-benefit discussions regarding ISB for shoulder surgery.”
“CD20 expression is associated with early recurrence and inferior survival in precursor-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients treated with chemotherapy. Whether CD20 influences outcomes after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is unknown. We analyzed CD20 expression on blasts at diagnosis in 157 patients who underwent allo-HSCT in the first complete remission (57%) or the second complete remission (43%). Of 125 evaluable patients, 71 were
>= 20 years of age. CD20 expression was observed in 58 patients (46%; 52% of children, 39% of adults). There was no association between age, Ph+ status, white blood cell count at diagnosis, and CD20 positivity. After allo-HSCT, disease-free survival at 5 years was 48% for all patients, 55% (95% confidence
interval 40%-67%) for CD20(+) patients, and 43% (95% confidence interval 30%-54%) for CD20(-) patients (P = .15). Relapse did not differ between the groups. These results can serve as a reference to evaluate incorporation of anti-CD20 therapeutics to HSCT for the CD20(+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia subset. Clinical trial numbers for www.clinicaltrials.gov are NCT00365287, NCT00305682, and NCT00303719. (Blood. 2011; 117(19): 5261-5263)”
“Acute mesenteric ischaemia (AMI) is a lethal disease with an increasing incidence. Despite C59 order the availability of effective treatment, AMI remains a vascular emergency with over 60% mortality rate mainly due to late diagnosis. The difficulty in diagnosing this fatal condition stems from non-specific clinical and laboratory findings and lack of appropriate imaging study. Our aim was to test a non-invasive method of identifying AMI using PET.\n\nThe study was conducted in normal pigs (n = 14), sham-operated pigs (n = 4) and pigs undergoing ischaemia and reperfusion of intestine (n = 6). Liver blood flow was imaged by H(2) (15)O PET and liver blood content by C(15)O PET. Both scans were performed during intestinal ischaemia and during reperfusion.\n\nAMI was identified by PET imaging of hepatic perfusion and blood pool.