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Factors Affecting Outcomes of Hindfoot Fusion Nails for Acute Injury: A Multicenter Study
Kim, Eugene; Tornetta, Paul; Carlson, Jon B; Schultz, Alex; Wireman, Garrett; Ollivere, Benjamin; Zheng, Amy; Spitler, Clay; Patch, David; White, Tim; Heinz, Nicholas; Stinner, Daniel; Lahurd, Caroline Elizabeth; Ostrum, Robert; Baumann, Charles; Kottmeier, Stephen; Doany, Michael; Krause, Peter; Redlich, Nathan; Egol, Kenneth; Konda, Sanjit; Mir, Hassan; McCaskey, Meghan; Azer, Emil; Kusler, Jace; Beltran, Michael; Mehta, Samir; Masada, Kendall; Hidden, Krystin A; Kuttner, Nicolas
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the effect of joint preparation and patient factors on outcomes and complications in patients treated acutely with hindfoot fusion nails for ankle and pilon fractures. DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective chart review. SETTING/METHODS:Thirteen US trauma centers and 2 UK trauma centers. PATIENT SELECTION CRITERIA/UNASSIGNED:Ankle and pilon fractures (AO-OTA types A-C) from 2010 to 2020 acutely treated definitively with hindfoot fusion nail were reviewed. Patients at least 18 years old and with minimum 6 months follow-up or earlier diagnosis of complication were included. Exclusion criteria included nonambulatory at baseline, prior internal fixation that failed and underwent revision, and prior tibiotalar or subtalar arthrodesis. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND COMPARISONS/UNASSIGNED:The primary outcome was final postoperative ambulatory status. Secondary outcomes were infectious and fracture-related complications. RESULTS:One hundred forty-nine patients (75 men; 74 women; age 20-99; median 63 years) were treated for ankle (104) or pilon (45; 8A, 13B, 24C) fractures. Eighty-five patients (44%) had open fractures and 55 (37%) had diabetes. Thirty-six patients (24%) had joint preparation at the time of surgery. Forty-five (30%) were made weight bearing as tolerated postoperatively; the median time to mobilize was 1.5 days (0-210) and to full weight bearing was 35 days (0-1462). Fifty-seven patients (85%) returned to their preinjury ambulatory status, which was not affected by joint preparation (50% vs. 59%, P = 0.327). Joint preparation led to higher articular fusion rates (94% vs. 24%; P = 0.001) and fewer hardware removals (19% vs. 42%, P = 0.013), but trended toward a higher fracture nonunion rate (19% vs. 8%, P = 0.053). Forty-five patients (30%) had infectious complications, 60 (40%) had a fracture-related complication, and 67 (45%) had additional procedures. Open fractures did not lead to any differences in superficial or deep infection. Insulin-dependent diabetes was associated with higher rates of infectious complications (31% vs. 15%, P = 0.028) and amputation (17% vs. 4%, P = 0.029). CONCLUSIONS:Hindfoot fusion nails for acute ankle and pilon injuries had high complication rates. More complications occurred in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. While 95% regained ambulation, only 57% returned to preoperative status. Joint preparation led to higher rates of articular fusion (94% vs. 24%, P < 0.001) but not fracture union (81% vs. 66%, P = 0.106). LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
PMID: 41685944
ISSN: 1531-2291
CID: 6002592
Characteristics of Patient Portal Usage by Pediatric Emergency Patients
Chen, Christie; Kim, Eugene; Beckford, Saied T; Malia, Laurie
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:We aimed to describe patient and encounter characteristics of patient portal users and nonusers and to evaluate usage of specific portal functions in a pediatric emergency department (PED). METHODS:A single-center retrospective analysis of patients up to 21 years of age at an urban, tertiary care pediatric emergency department was conducted. Portal registration status of patients was analyzed. Relations between variables and usage were evaluated using logistic regression. Portal functions were analyzed for prevalence and timing of usage with respect to the PED encounter. RESULTS:Portal users made up 48.4% of 29,881 patients. Variables associated with portal usage included multiple prior PED visits (aOR 2.19, CI: 2.04-2.35), multiple admissions (aOR 2.61, CI: 2.00-3.46), PED length of stay greater than 6 hours (aOR 1.30, CI: 1.17-1.5,) and patient Hispanic ethnicity (aOR 1.24, CI: 1.13-1.36). Non-English primary language (aOR 0.64, CI: 0.60-0.70) and patient male sex (aOR 0.90, CI: 0.84-0.96) were associated with lower likelihood of usage. About 17% of users viewed laboratory and imaging results during the PED visit, and 67% within 7 days after visit. CONCLUSIONS:Between portal users and nonusers, there are differences with respect to patient sex, ethnicity, primary language, number of prior emergency visits and admissions, and length of stay in the pediatric emergency department. Portals are not commonly accessed during visits but are commonly used to view laboratory and imaging data after the emergency visit.
PMID: 41633959
ISSN: 1535-1815
CID: 5999812
The transcription factor EBF1 non-cell-autonomously regulates cardiac growth and differentiation
Kim, Eugene E; Shekhar, Akshay; Ramachandran, Jayalakshmi; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Liu, Fang-Yu; Zhang, Jie; Fishman, Glenn I
Reciprocal interactions between non-myocytes and cardiomyocytes regulate cardiac growth and differentiation. Here, we report that the transcription factor Ebf1 is highly expressed in non-myocytes and potently regulates heart development. Ebf1-deficient hearts display myocardial hypercellularity and reduced cardiomyocyte size, ventricular conduction system hypoplasia, and conduction system disease. Growth abnormalities in Ebf1 knockout hearts are observed as early as embryonic day 13.5. Transcriptional profiling of Ebf1-deficient embryonic cardiac non-myocytes demonstrates dysregulation of Polycomb repressive complex 2 targets, and ATAC-Seq reveals altered chromatin accessibility near many of these same genes. Gene set enrichment analysis of differentially expressed genes in cardiomyocytes isolated from E13.5 hearts of wild-type and mutant mice reveals significant enrichment of MYC targets and, consistent with this finding, we observe increased abundance of MYC in mutant hearts. EBF1-deficient non-myocytes, but not wild-type non-myocytes, are sufficient to induce excessive accumulation of MYC in co-cultured wild-type cardiomyocytes. Finally, we demonstrate that BMP signaling induces Ebf1 expression in embryonic heart cultures and controls a gene program enriched in EBF1 targets. These data reveal a previously unreported non-cell-autonomous pathway controlling cardiac growth and differentiation.
PMCID:10652039
PMID: 37787076
ISSN: 1477-9129
CID: 5606432
Unusual Cause of Severe Tricuspid Regurgitation: Tricuspid Leaflet Annular Tear Following Remote Motor Vehicle Accident [Case Report]
Bamira, Daniel G; Dwivedi, Aeshita; Bhatla, Puneet; Halpern, Dan; Vainrib, Alan F; Kim, Eugene; Zias, Elias; Saric, Muhamed
Tricuspid regurgitation (TR) is an uncommon and underdiagnosed complication of blunt chest trauma. Typical mechanisms include torn chordae, papillary muscle rupture, and radial leaflet tear. We describe an unusual case of traumatic TR due to circumferential avulsion of the anterior tricuspid leaflet from the tricuspid annulus and the crucial role of multimodality imaging in its diagnosis and treatment. (Level of Difficulty: Intermediate.).
PMCID:8299867
PMID: 34317128
ISSN: 2666-0849
CID: 4949442
Isl1 Regulation of Nkx2.1 in the Early Foregut Epithelium Is Required for Trachea-Esophageal Separation and Lung Lobation
Kim, Eugene; Jiang, Ming; Huang, Huachao; Zhang, Yongchun; Tjota, Natalie; Gao, Xia; Robert, Jacques; Gilmore, Nikesha; Gan, Lin; Que, Jianwen
The esophagus and trachea arise from the dorsal and ventral aspects of the anterior foregut, respectively. Abnormal trachea-esophageal separation leads to the common birth defect esophageal atresia with or without trachea-esophageal fistula (EA/TEF). Yet the underlying cellular mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we combine Xenopus and mouse genetic models to identify that the transcription factor Isl1 orchestrates trachea-esophageal separation through modulating a specific epithelial progenitor cell population (midline epithelial cells [MECs], Isl1+ Nkx2.1+ Sox2+) located at the dorsal-ventral boundary of the foregut. Lineage tracing experiments show that MECs contribute to both tracheal and esophageal epithelium, and Isl1 is required for Nkx2.1 transcription in MECs. Deletion of the chromosomal region spanning the ISL1 gene has been found in patients with abnormal trachea-esophageal separation. Our studies thus provide definitive evidence that ISL1 is a critical player in the process of foregut morphogenesis, acting in a small progenitor population of boundary cells.
PMCID:6919560
PMID: 31813798
ISSN: 1878-1551
CID: 4250122
T2-weighted MRI-derived textural features reflect prostate cancer aggressiveness: preliminary results
Nketiah, Gabriel; Elschot, Mattijs; Kim, Eugene; Teruel, Jose R; Scheenen, Tom W; Bathen, Tone F; Selnæs, Kirsten M
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the diagnostic relevance of T2-weighted (T2W) MRI-derived textural features relative to quantitative physiological parameters derived from diffusion-weighted (DW) and dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI in Gleason score (GS) 3+4 and 4+3 prostate cancers. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:) were calculated from index tumours delineated on the T2W, DW, and DCE images, respectively. The association between the textural features and prostatectomy GS and the MRI-derived parameters, and the utility of the parameters in differentiating between GS 3+4 and 4+3 prostate cancers were assessed statistically. RESULTS:. The combined texture-MRI parameters yielded higher classification accuracy (91%) than the individual parameter sets. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:T2W MRI-derived textural features could serve as potential diagnostic markers, sensitive to the pathological differences in prostate cancers. KEY POINTS/CONCLUSIONS:• T2W MRI-derived textural features correlate significantly with Gleason score and ADC. • T2W MRI-derived textural features differentiate Gleason score 3+4 from 4+3 cancers. • T2W image textural features could augment tumour characterization.
PMID: 27975146
ISSN: 1432-1084
CID: 4004162
The Transcription Factor Early B-cell Factor 1 is Critical for Proper Formation of the Cardiac Ventricular Conduction System [Meeting Abstract]
Kim, Eugene; Shekhar, Akshay; Zhang, Jie; Liu, Fang-Yu; Young, Wilson; Fishman, Glenn I
ISI:000390591600004
ISSN: 1524-4571
CID: 2411402
Lipomatous Atrial Septal Hypertrophy: A Review of Its Anatomy, Pathophysiology, Multimodality Imaging, and Relevance to Percutaneous Interventions
Laura, Diana M; Donnino, Robert; Kim, Eugene E; Benenstein, Ricardo; Freedberg, Robin S; Saric, Muhamed
Lipomatous atrial septal hypertrophy (LASH) is a histologically benign cardiac lesion characterized by excessive fat deposition in the region of the interatrial septum that spares the fossa ovalis. The etiology of LASH remains unclear, though it may be associated with advanced age and obesity. Because of the sparing of the fossa ovalis, LASH has a pathognomonic dumbbell shape. LASH may be mistaken for various tumors of the interatrial septum. Histologically, LASH is composed of both mature and brown (fetal) adipose tissue, but the role of brown adipose tissue remains unclear. In interventional procedures requiring access to the left atrium, LASH may interfere with transseptal puncture, as traversing the thickened area can reduce the maneuverability of catheters and devices. This may cause the needle to enter the epicardial space, causing dangerous pericardial effusions. LASH was once considered a contraindication to percutaneous device closure of atrial septal defects because of an associated increased risk for incorrect device deployment. However, careful attention to preprocedural imaging and procedural intracardiac echocardiography enable interventional cardiologists to perform procedures in patients with LASH without serious complications. In this review article, the authors describe anatomic and functional aspects of LASH, with emphasis on their roles in percutaneous interventions.
PMID: 27288088
ISSN: 1097-6795
CID: 2136702
Diffusion-weighted MRI for early detection and characterization of prostate cancer in the transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate model
Hill, Deborah K; Kim, Eugene; Teruel, Jose R; Jamin, Yann; Widerøe, Marius; Søgaard, Caroline D; Størkersen, Øystein; Rodrigues, Daniel N; Heindl, Andreas; Yuan, Yinyin; Bathen, Tone F; Moestue, Siver A
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To improve early diagnosis of prostate cancer to aid clinical decision-making. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) is sensitive to water diffusion throughout tissues, which correlates with Gleason score, a histological measure of prostate cancer aggressiveness. In this study the ability of DW-MRI to detect prostate cancer onset and development was evaluated in transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate (TRAMP) mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:T2 -weighted and DW-MRI were acquired using a 7T MR scanner, 200 mm bore diameter; 10 TRAMP and 6 C57BL/6 control mice were scanned every 4 weeks from 8 weeks of age until sacrifice at 28-30 weeks. After sacrifice, the genitourinary tract was excised and sectioned for histological analysis. Histology slides registered with DW-MR images allowed for validation of DW-MR images and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) as tools for cancer detection and disease stratification. An automated early assessment tool based on ADC threshold values was developed to aid cancer detection and progression monitoring. RESULTS:The ADC differentiated between control prostate ((1.86 ± 0.20) × 10(-3) mm(2) /s) and normal TRAMP prostate ((1.38 ± 0.10) × 10(-3) mm(2) /s) (P = 0.0001), between TRAMP prostate and well-differentiated cancer ((0.93 ± 0.18) × 10(-3) mm(2) /s) (P = 0.0006), and between well-differentiated cancer and poorly differentiated cancer ((0.63 ± 0.06) × 10(-3) mm(2) /s) (P = 0.02). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:DW-MRI is a tool for early detection of cancer, and discrimination between cancer stages in the TRAMP model. The incorporation of DW-MRI-based prostate cancer stratification and monitoring could increase the accuracy of preclinical trials using TRAMP mice.
PMID: 26559017
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 4004142
Experience from the ACE study in treating peripheral vessel embolization using large-volume Ruby coils [Meeting Abstract]
Teigen, C; Moyle, H; Patel, R; Fischman, A; Kim, E; Baxter, B; Quarfordt, S; Heck, D; Klucznik, R; Diaz, O; Reeves, A; Abraham, M; Madarang, E; Zwiebel, B; Brant-Zawadzki, M; Peck, W; Nguyen, B; Whitaker, L; Gailloud, P; Hagino, R; Liu, K; Moskovitz, J D; Luong, E; Lai, J; Kuo, S S; Hak, S S; Nguyen, N; Bose, A; Sit, S P
Purpose: The Penumbra RubyTM Coil system is a generation of novel large-volume platinum detachable coils designed for arterial and venous embolization in the peripheral vasculature. Recent literature describes the impact of packing density on the stability of recanalization.1 Herein, initial data from the multicenter Aneurysm Coiling Efficiency (ACE) registry aims to validate the system's safety and efficacy in relation to high packing density and sustainable occlusion in the periphery. Material and Methods: Patients were treated at 13 centers using the Ruby Coil system between March 2012 and January 2015. Data compiled from the first 68 cases included 7 splenic, 11 renal, 3 mesenteric, 1 iliac, and 1 hepatic artery aneurysms; 7 AVMs; 6 fistulae; 4 varices; and 28 vessel sacrifices. Results: For aneurysms only, median number of coils placed was 6 and mean packing density was 28% (N=40). Post-treatment distribution of Raymond occlusion scores were Class I (91.3%), II (4.3%), and III (4.3%). At 6 months, scores were Class I (92.9%) and II (7.1%). For vessel sacrifices, all 28 had successful coil embolization. Median number of coils placed was 2.5, and mean fluoroscopy time was 21 min. Thirteen patients with 6-month follow-up demonstrated stable or ongoing occlusion. For all 68 patients, no procedural SAEs were recorded. Follow-up is ongoing. Conclusion: Using Ruby resulted in a high mean packing density and complete post-procedure occlusion, which remained stable at the 6-month follow-up. 1JVIR 2013;24:1798
EMBASE:72059892
ISSN: 0174-1551
CID: 1839872