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1.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 78(10): 1759-1765, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32544471

ABSTRACT

Synovial chondromatosis (SC) is an infrequent, benign condition of unknown etiology affecting the synovium within articular joints. Often considered a metaplastic process, multiple cartilaginous nodules develop in the confines of the synovial membrane. In time, these cartilage nodules develop into fragments, sometimes detaching from the synovium and, thus, become loose in an adjacent synovial cavity. The temporomandibular joint (TMJ) is an unusual site of involvement, with the extracapsular compromise of the cranial base exceedingly rare. A 68-year-old woman presented with a tender mass to the left TMJ that later proved to be SC. Computed tomography illustrated a rare extension of the lesion into the middle cranial fossa. The multidisciplinary effort to remove the mass in its entirety included both oral and maxillofacial surgical and neurosurgical teams. We have reviewed the presentation, diagnosis, surgical treatment, and outcomes of the present case, with diagnostic images and photomicrographs of the lesion included. We also briefly reviewed the reported studies.


Subject(s)
Chondromatosis, Synovial , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders , Aged , Chondromatosis, Synovial/diagnostic imaging , Chondromatosis, Synovial/surgery , Cranial Fossa, Middle , Female , Humans , Skull Base/diagnostic imaging , Skull Base/surgery , Temporomandibular Joint/diagnostic imaging , Temporomandibular Joint/surgery , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Temporomandibular Joint Disorders/surgery
2.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 78(8): 1418-1426, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32360237

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Tongue cancer is often associated with pain and perineural invasion. The purpose of the present study was to determine the association between tongue pain and otalgia and the microscopic identification of perineural invasion (PNI) in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue (SCCOT). PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was performed of patients with a diagnosis of SCCOT from January 2013 through June 2019. Patients without a history of head and neck cancer, who had SCCOT diagnosed and treated surgically by a single surgeon, were included in the present study. The primary predictor variables were tongue pain and otalgia (presence vs absence of both). Other variables included patient demographic data and TNM stage. The primary outcome variable was the histologic presence of PNI. A χ2 analysis was performed to test for any significant associations between pain, T stage, and overall stage in relation to PNI outcome. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to control for cancer staging variables when testing the association between pain and PNI. RESULTS: The sample included 128 subjects, of whom 76 were men. Their mean age was 60 years. Most patients (n = 97; 75.8%) complained of tongue pain and a few (n = 50; 39.1%) complained of otalgia. The patients with otalgia had a 3.15 times greater odds of PNI when controlling for T stage (P = .016) and 3.68 times greater odds of PNI when controlling for overall stage (P = .007). Increasing T stage and overall stage-with the exception of stage II-were also significantly associated with PNI (P ≤ .05). CONCLUSIONS: Our study has demonstrated a statistically significant association between preoperative otalgia and PNI in a consecutive group of patients presenting with newly diagnosed SCCOT.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell , Earache , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasm Invasiveness , Neoplasm Staging , Pain , Prognosis , Retrospective Studies
3.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 75(8S): e224-e263, 2017 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28728732
4.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 73(12 Suppl): S77-86, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26608157

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To analyze the clinical and radiographic manifestations of nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (NBCCS) with a particular emphasis on the presence, treatment, and outcomes of keratocystic odontogenic tumors (KOTs) in these patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The authors implemented a prospective case series and enrolled a sample of patients with KOTs and NBCCS. The primary study variables were the demographics, treatment, and outcomes of managing KOTs in this sample. Descriptive statistics were computed. RESULTS: The sample was composed of 16 patients (10 male and 6 female; mean age, 24 yr). These patients presented with 32 previously untreated KOTs. Fifteen patients with 31 KOTs consented to surgery that consisted of a total of 61 procedures during the study period. These procedures included 19 primary enucleation and curettage surgeries and 12 marsupialization procedures followed by secondary enucleation and curettage surgeries. During the course of clinical and radiographic follow-up examinations, 14 new primary and 5 persistent KOTs (refractory to enucleation and curettage surgeries) were diagnosed, of which 13 new primary KOTs and 5 persistent KOTs were treated. A total of 51 KOTs (32 primary, 14 new lesions that developed during follow-up, and 5 persistent lesions) were diagnosed, and 15 patients consented to operative treatment of 49 KOTs. Forty-eight enucleation and curettage surgeries were performed for 49 KOTs that showed effective treatment without persistence in 43 cases (90%) during a follow-up period from 2 to 20 years (mean, 7 yr). One resection was performed for a persistent KOT. The 5-year disease-free estimate after primary enucleation and curettage was 86% (95% confidence interval, 74.8-97.4). Other clinical and radiographic stigmata of the syndrome were diagnosed, including calcified falx cerebri, frontal bossing, hypertelorism, multiple basal cell carcinomas, and others. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study identify the variable expressivity of this syndrome and the favorable outcomes of marsupialization and enucleation and curettage of syndromic KOTs.


Subject(s)
Basal Cell Nevus Syndrome/surgery , Jaw Neoplasms/surgery , Odontogenic Tumors/surgery , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Cohort Studies , Curettage/methods , Disease-Free Survival , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Jaw Neoplasms/pathology , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathology , Neoplasms, Second Primary/pathology , Odontogenic Tumors/pathology , Osteotomy/methods , Prospective Studies , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
5.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 71(1): 162-77, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22742956

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine whether the time course of 18-fluorine fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) activity in multiple consecutively obtained 18F-FDG positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scans predictably identifies metastatic cervical adenopathy in patients with oral/head and neck cancer. It is hypothesized that the activity will increase significantly over time only in those lymph nodes harboring metastatic cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A prospective cohort study was performed whereby patients with oral/head and neck cancer underwent consecutive imaging at 9 time points with PET/CT from 60 to 115 minutes after injection with (18)F-FDG. The primary predictor variable was the status of the lymph nodes based on dynamic PET/CT imaging. Metastatic lymph nodes were defined as those that showed an increase greater than or equal to 10% over the baseline standard uptake values. The primary outcome variable was the pathologic status of the lymph node. RESULTS: A total of 2,237 lymph nodes were evaluated histopathologically in the 83 neck dissections that were performed in 74 patients. A total of 119 lymph nodes were noted to have hypermetabolic activity on the 90-minute (static) portion of the study and were able to be assessed by time points. When we compared the PET/CT time point (dynamic) data with the histopathologic analysis of the lymph nodes, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy were 60.3%, 70.5%, 66.0%, 65.2%, and 65.5%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The use of dynamic PET/CT imaging does not permit the ablative surgeon to depend only on the results of the PET/CT study to determine which patients will benefit from neck dissection. As such, we maintain that surgeons should continue to rely on clinical judgment and maintain a low threshold for executing neck dissection in patients with oral/head and neck cancer, including those patients with N0 neck designations.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 , Head and Neck Neoplasms/pathology , Lymph Nodes/diagnostic imaging , Lymph Nodes/pathology , Lymphatic Metastasis/diagnosis , Multimodal Imaging/methods , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Child , Cohort Studies , Female , Forecasting , Head and Neck Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neck , Neck Dissection , Prospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
7.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 19(4): 597-603, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22427539

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The Substitutable Medical Applications, Reusable Technologies (SMART) Platforms project seeks to develop a health information technology platform with substitutable applications (apps) constructed around core services. The authors believe this is a promising approach to driving down healthcare costs, supporting standards evolution, accommodating differences in care workflow, fostering competition in the market, and accelerating innovation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, through the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program, funds the project. The SMART team has focused on enabling the property of substitutability through an app programming interface leveraging web standards, presenting predictable data payloads, and abstracting away many details of enterprise health information technology systems. Containers--health information technology systems, such as electronic health records (EHR), personally controlled health records, and health information exchanges that use the SMART app programming interface or a portion of it--marshal data sources and present data simply, reliably, and consistently to apps. RESULTS: The SMART team has completed the first phase of the project (a) defining an app programming interface, (b) developing containers, and (c) producing a set of charter apps that showcase the system capabilities. A focal point of this phase was the SMART Apps Challenge, publicized by the White House, using http://www.challenge.gov website, and generating 15 app submissions with diverse functionality. CONCLUSION: Key strategic decisions must be made about the most effective market for further disseminating SMART: existing market-leading EHR vendors, new entrants into the EHR market, or other stakeholders such as health information exchanges.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records , Information Storage and Retrieval , Software , User-Computer Interface , Computer Security , Humans , Internet , Systems Integration
8.
AMIA Annu Symp Proc ; : 1012, 2008 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18999098

ABSTRACT

The Continuity of Care Document (CCD), based on HL7 v3, provides a powerful framework to describe structured patient data. To date, few tools exist to manipulate the coded, non-text portions of this document. With documents produced from RMRS, we present a service that searches and displays CCD. Then we evaluate the subjective preference of doctors to different ranking and display algorithms, exploring how most efficiently to display portions of a complex record to the provider.


Subject(s)
Data Display , Forms and Records Control/organization & administration , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/organization & administration , Natural Language Processing , Pattern Recognition, Automated/methods , User-Computer Interface , Algorithms , Artificial Intelligence , Indiana
10.
Int J Med Inform ; 69(2-3): 175-84, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12810121

ABSTRACT

'Open Source' is a 20-40 year old approach to licensing and distributing software that has recently burst into public view. Against conventional wisdom this approach has been wildly successful in the general software market--probably because the openness lets programmers the world over obtain, critique, use, and build upon the source code without licensing fees. Linux, a UNIX-like operating system, is the best known success. But computer scientists at the University of California, Berkeley began the tradition of software sharing in the mid 1970s with BSD UNIX and distributed the major internet network protocols as source code without a fee. Medical informatics has its own history of Open Source distribution: Massachusetts General's COSTAR and the Veterans Administration's VISTA software have been distributed as source code at no cost for decades. Bioinformatics, our sister field, has embraced the Open Source movement and developed rich libraries of open-source software. Open Source has now gained a tiny foothold in health care (OSCAR GEHR, OpenEMed). Medical informatics researchers and funding agencies should support and nurture this movement. In a world where open-source modules were integrated into operational health care systems, informatics researchers would have real world niches into which they could engraft and test their software inventions. This could produce a burst of innovation that would help solve the many problems of the health care system. We at the Regenstrief Institute are doing our part by moving all of our development to the open-source model.


Subject(s)
Medical Informatics Applications , Software , Database Management Systems , Humans , Internet , Software/standards , Software Design
12.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 27(2-3): 207-15, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12620311

ABSTRACT

The integration of medical images as part of the patient record has always been a critical component of documentation and information supporting clinical decisions. In the past two decades the increased number of imaging procedures that allows a more accurate and more specific diagnosis has significantly increased and their role in patient management has grown rapidly. With the evolution toward digital modalities and management of medical images in a fully digital environment with the deployment of enterprise wide Picture Archiving Communication Systems (PACS) a wider and more rapid access to the images by referring physicians and clinicians has become possible. The parallel evolution of electronic medical records (EMR) supporting all other documents and clinical data in electronic format led to the necessity of integrating medial image data with the rest of the patient record. Although the marriage of medical images and patient record data in electronic format seems a very natural and necessary combination it has often been very slow in development due to the lack of standardization and clear understanding of clinical workflows and clinical requirements. Several early implementations demonstrated the added value of combining medical images with the patient record and have shown that the availability of data and images facilitates and improves the accuracy and efficiency of patient management. Recent efforts in industry and the academic community to harmonize and improve the integration of medical images with patient record, with the promotion of new standards and better definitions of clinical workflows and standard mechanism of integration of different types of data into unified data models, has facilitated the deployment of modern EMR. Also, a shift in paradigm due to recent technological revolutions such as the development of the World Wide Web and the concepts of portal servers for accessing data for multiple sources has significantly boosted the trends into open systems which allows easier and more functional integration of medical data from different sources. Furthermore, the emergence of a new strategy for software development, based on open source components, allows software programs to be shared and exchanged between different institutions leading to more rapid deployment of standardized electronic patient record.


Subject(s)
Medical Records Systems, Computerized/organization & administration , Radiology Information Systems/organization & administration , Systems Integration , Diffusion of Innovation , Humans , Software , United States , User-Computer Interface
13.
Radiographics ; 23(1): 267-72, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12533661

ABSTRACT

For its new acute care hospital, the University of California at Los Angeles is evaluating innovative technology involving high-resolution flat panel display devices configured as "network appliances" that can be wall mounted for use in the retrieval and display of medical images and data. Physicians and healthcare providers can log on with wireless handheld computers, which can serve as an identification device as well as a navigational tool for selecting patient records and data. These data are displayed and manipulated on the flat panel display without the need for a keyboard or mouse. A prototype was developed with commercially available image display software, which was modified to allow the remote control of software functions from a handheld device through an infrared communication port. The system also allows navigation through the patient data in a World Wide Web-based electronic patient record. This prototype illustrates the evolution of radiologic facilities toward "shareable" high-quality display devices that allow more convenient and cost-effective access to medical images and related data in complex clinical environments, resulting in a paradigm shift in data navigation and accessibility.


Subject(s)
Computers, Handheld , Radiology Information Systems , Humans , Internet
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