Κυριακή 19 Ιουνίου 2022

Lingual Frenectomy Criteria

The term free-tongue is defined as the length of tongue from the insertion of the lingual frenum into the base of the tongue to the tip of the tongue. Clinically acceptable, normal range of free tongue is greater than 16 mm. 

The ankyloglossia can be classified into 4 classes based on Kotlow's assessment as follows; 
Class I: Mild ankyloglossia: 12 to 16 mm, 
Class II: Moderate ankyloglossia: 8 to 11 mm, 
Class III: Severe ankyloglossia: 3 to 7 mm, 
Class IV: Complete ankyloglossia: Less than 3 mm.2 

Class III and IV tongue-tie category should be given special consideration because they severely restrict the tongue's movement. A normal range of motion of the tongue is indicated by the following criteria: The tip of the tongue should be able to protrude outside the mouth; without clefting, the tip of the tongue should be able to sweep the upper and lower lips easily; without straining, when the tongue is retruded, it should not blanch the tissues lingual to the anterior teeth; and the lingual frenum should not create a diastema between the mandibular central incisors.

Ankyloglossia was also found associated in cases with some rare syndromes such as X-linked cleft palate syndrome, Kindler syndrome, van der Woude syndrome, and Opitz syndrome.Nevertheless, most ankyloglossias are observed in persons without any other congenital anomalies or diseases.
The difficulties in articulation are evident for consonants and sounds like "s, z, t, d, l, j, zh, ch, th, dg" and it is especially difficult to roll an "r".



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Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,

Clinical Significance and Molecular Annotation of Cellular Morphometric Subtypes in Lower Grade Gliomas discovered by Machine Learning

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Abstract
BACKGROUND
Lower grade gliomas (LGG) are heterogenous diseases by clinical, histological, and molecular criteria. We aimed to personalize the diagnosis and therapy of LGG patients by developing and validating robust cellular morphometric subtypes (CMS) and to uncover the molecular signatures underlying these subtypes.
METHODS
Cellular morphometric biomarkers (CMBs) were identified with artificial intelligence technique from TCGA-LGG cohort. Consensus clustering was used to define CMS. Survival analysis was performed to assess the clinical impact of CMBs and CMS. A nomogram was constructed to predict 3- and 5- year overall survival (OS) of LGG patients. Tumor mutational burden (TMB), and immune cell infiltration between subtypes were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney test. The double-blinded validation for important immunotherapy-related biomarkers were executed using immunohistochemistry (IHC).
RESULTS
We developed a mac hine learning pipeline to extract CMBs from whole slide images of tissue histology; identifying and externally validating robust CMS of LGGs in multi-center cohorts. The subtypes had independent predicted OS across all three independent cohorts. In the TCGA-LGG cohort, patients within the poor-prognosis subtype responded poorly to primary and follow-up therapies. LGGs within the poor-prognosis subtype were characterized by high mutational burden, high frequencies of copy number alterations, and high levels of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes and immune checkpoint genes. Higher levels of PD-1/PD-L1/CTLA-4 were confirmed by immunohistochemical staining. In addition, the subtypes learned from LGG demonstrates translational impact on glioblastoma (GBM).
CONCLUSIONS
We developed and validated a framework (CMS-ML) for CMS discovery in LGG associated with specific molecular alterations, immune micro-environment, prognosis, and treatment response.
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Effect of new biological patch in repairing intrauterine adhesion and improving clinical pregnancy outcome in infertile women: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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Endometrial fibrosis caused by intrauterine adhesion (IUA) can lead to hypomenorrhea, amenorrhea, and even infertility and abortion. The postoperative recurrence rate of severe IUA remains high, giving rise to...
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Prevalence, outcome, and prevention of congenital cytomegalovirus infection in neonates born to women with preconception immunity (CHILd study).

alexandrossfakianakis shared this article with you from Inoreader

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Abstract
Background
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the leading infectious cause of congenital disabilities. We designed a prospective study to investigate the rate, outcome and risk factors of congenital cytomegalovirus infection (cCMV) in neonates born to immune women, and the potential need and effectiveness of hygiene recommendations in this population.
Methods
The study (NCT03973359) was composed of 2 sequential parts: an epidemiology (Part 1) and a prevent ion (Part 2) study. Performance of Part 2 depended upon a cCMV rate > 0.4%. Women enrolled in Part 1 did not receive hygiene recommendations. Newborns were screened by HCMV DNA testing in saliva and cCMV was confirmed by urine testing.
Results
Saliva swabs were positive for HCMV DNA in 45/9661 newborns and cCMV was confirmed in 18 cases. The rate of cCMV was 0.19% (95% CI: 0.11-0.29%), and three out of 18 infants with cCMV had symptoms of CMV at birth. Age, nationality, occupation and contact with children were similar between mothers of infected and non-infected newborns. Twin pregnancy (OR: 7.2; 95% CI 1.7-32.2; p = 0.037) and maternal medical conditions (OR: 3.9; 95% CI: 1.5-10.1; p = 0.003) appeared associated with cCMV. Given the rate of cCMV lower than expected, the prevention part of the study was cancelled.
Conclusion
Newborns from women with preconception immunity have a low rate of cCMV, which appears to be mostly due to reactivation of the latent virus. Therefore, serological screening in childbearing age would be pivotal to identify HCMV-seropositive women, whose newborns have a low risk of cCMV.
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Vaccine effectiveness of CanSino (Adv5-nCoV) COVID-19 vaccine among childcare workers – Mexico, March–December 2021

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Abstract
Background
Beginning in March 2021, Mexico vaccinated childcare workers with a single-dose CanSino Biologics (Adv5-nCoV) COVID-19 vaccine. Although CanSino is currently approved for use in 10 Latin American, Asian, and European countries, little information is available about its vaccine effectiveness (VE).
Methods
We evaluated CanSino VE within a childcare worker cohort that included 1,408 childcare facilities. Participants were followed during March–December 2021 and tested through SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR or rapid antigen test if they developed any symptom compatible with COVID-19. Vaccination status was obtained through worker registries. VE was calculated as 100% × (1−hazard ratio for SARS-CoV-2 infection in fully vaccinated vs. unvaccinated participants), using an Andersen-Gill model adjusted for age, sex, state, and local viral circulation.
Results
The cohort included 43,925 persons who were mostly (96%) femal e with a median age of 32 years; 37,646 (86%) were vaccinated with CanSino. During March–December 2021, 2,250 (5%) participants had laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, of whom 25 were hospitalized and 6 died. Adjusted VE was 20% (95% CI = 10–29%) against illness, 76% (42–90%) against hospitalization, and 94% (66–99%) against death. VE against illness declined from 48% (95% CI = 33–61) after 14–60 days following full vaccination to 20% (95% CI = 9–31) after 61–120 days.
Conclusions
CanSino vaccine was effective at preventing COVID-19 illness and highly effective at preventing hospitalization and death. It will be useful to further evaluate duration of protection and assess the value of booster doses to prevent COVID-19 and severe outcomes.
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