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Medicina[JOURNAL]

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Cumulative Surgeon Experience and Anastomotic Leakage After Left-Sided and Segmental Colorectal Resection with Primary Anastomosis: A Seven-Year Single-Center Retrospective Study.

Horváth RS, Moca AE, Gozman-Pop A … +6 more , Rózsa Á, Pacadzisz DR, Maghiar TA, Maghiar OA, Maghiar PB, Maghiar MA

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356163 · Full text

Anastomotic leakage (AL) remains one of the most feared complications following colorectal resection, yet the relationship between cumulative surgeon experience and AL risk remains inconclusive in the literature. Most av... Anastomotic leakage (AL) remains one of the most feared complications following colorectal resection, yet the relationship between cumulative surgeon experience and AL risk remains inconclusive in the literature. Most available evidence originates from high-volume or specialized centers, with limited data from mid-volume Central and Eastern European settings. This study aimed to evaluate the association between cumulative surgeon experience, operative time, and AL risk in a selected sample of colorectal resections with primary anastomosis for both benign and malignant indications, excluding right colectomies, abdominoperineal resections, TaTME, Hartmann's procedures, and stoma-protected anastomoses, within a single-center multi-surgeon setting over a seven-year period. : This retrospective observational study included 315 consecutive adult patients who underwent left-sided or segmental colorectal resection with primary anastomosis for both benign and malignant indications (excluding right colectomy, abdominoperineal resection, TaTME, Hartmann's procedure, and stoma-protected cases) at Békés County Central Hospital, Gyula, Hungary, between January 2018 and December 2024. AL was defined according to ISREC criteria, with only clinically relevant grade B or C leaks recorded as events. The main exposure was cumulative surgeon experience (log2-transformed). The primary analysis used a multivariable generalized estimating equation (GEE) model clustered by surgeon, adjusted for operative time, surgical approach, conversion, wound infection, and resected segment. Eight surgeons participated, with cumulative experience ranging from 50 to 600 cases. Among the 315 patients included, the median age was 68 years, with a male predominance (61.0%); most cases involved malignant pathology (82.9%) and at least one comorbidity (73.3%). The rectosigmoid was the most frequently resected segment (49.8%), and an open approach was used in 58.7% of cases. The overall AL incidence was 7.94% (25/315), with a median onset at postoperative day 5. In the multivariable GEE model, cumulative surgeon experience was not significantly associated with AL risk (OR per doubling 1.12; 95% CI 0.73-1.72; = 0.597), nor was operative time (OR per 10 min 1.03; = 0.294). Wound infection was the only variable significantly associated with AL (OR 3.48; 95% CI 1.06-11.44; = 0.042), although its temporal relationship with AL could not be established from the available data. AL rates by experience category were 8.9%, 7.5%, and 7.9% for surgeons with <100, 100-199, and ≥200 cases, respectively ( = 0.913). AL was associated with a significantly prolonged hospital stay (median 17 vs. 7 days, < 0.001) regardless of surgical approach. : Cumulative surgeon experience was not independently associated with AL risk in the selected sample of colorectal resections with primary anastomosis in this single-center, mid-volume setting. Wound infection emerged as the only variable significantly associated with AL, although its temporal relationship with AL could not be determined and several established confounders, including anastomotic height, BMI, ASA class, and emergency status, were unavailable for adjustment. Considerable inter-surgeon variability was observed irrespective of case volume. These findings highlight the complexity of AL risk and the need for prospective multicenter studies with comprehensive risk adjustment.

Epilepsy in Paediatric Palliative Care: Prevalence, Clinical Correlations and the Development of a Consensus-Based Seizure Management Protocol.

Hizanu Dumitrache M, Salim C, Plesea-Condratovici A … +9 more , Mîndru DE, Duceac Covrig M, Elkan EM, Cristescu Budala CL, Gurzu IL, Moraru PI, Mătăsaru M, Matei MN, Duceac LD

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356162 · Full text

: Seizures and epilepsy are common in children with life-limiting illnesses, particularly in the context of severe neurological impairment. However, data on the clinical profile of these patients in paediatric palliative... : Seizures and epilepsy are common in children with life-limiting illnesses, particularly in the context of severe neurological impairment. However, data on the clinical profile of these patients in paediatric palliative care are limited, and the lack of standardised protocols adapted to this context represents a clinical challenge. To assess the prevalence of epilepsy and associated clinical characteristics in children receiving paediatric palliative care and to develop a clinical protocol for the management of seizures based on expert consensus. : A retrospective observational study was conducted, based on the analysis of clinical data from children registered in a paediatric palliative care service (Lumina Association, Romania). Demographic, diagnostic, neurological status and anticonvulsant treatment data were collected. Based on the results obtained and the existing literature, a clinical protocol was developed using a modified Delphi method approach, involving a multidisciplinary panel of experts and two rounds of evaluation of clinical statements. : A total of 101 patients (54.5% boys and 45.5% girls) were included, with a mean age of 7.2 ± 4.7 years. Epilepsy was documented in 32.7% of patients and was significantly associated with a neurological diagnosis ( = 0.008), severe neurodevelopmental delay ( = 0.032) and severe motor impairment ( = 0.036). The Delphi process led to the validation of 13 clinical recommendations, the majority of which achieved a strong level of consensus (>85%). : Epilepsy is common and closely associated with severe neurological impairment in paediatric palliative care. The integration of systematic neurological assessment and the implementation of a consensus-based clinical protocol can support a more structured approach to seizure management in paediatric palliative care.

Screening for Neurocognitive Abilities Post-COVID (SNAP-COVID): Scale Development and Validation.

Nikolaou F, Solomou I, Loizidou M … +4 more , Papettas P, Giorgoudi E, Lofitou K, Constantinidou F

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356161 · Full text

: The neurocognitive sequelae of COVID-19 have attracted attention as part of post-COVID condition (PCC), yet standardized tools for screening and quantifying PCC-related cognitive impairment remain scarce. The present s... : The neurocognitive sequelae of COVID-19 have attracted attention as part of post-COVID condition (PCC), yet standardized tools for screening and quantifying PCC-related cognitive impairment remain scarce. The present study aimed to develop and validate the Screening for Neurocognitive Abilities Post-COVID (SNAP-COVID), a self-report questionnaire designed to capture current symptom burden and perceived changes in cognitive functioning relative to pre-COVID status in a Greek-speaking sample. : Data collection occurred in three phases between August 2024 and February 2025. Dataset A ( = 27) was used for test-retest reliability. Dataset B ( = 300) was used for exploratory factor analysis (EFA), reliability testing, and convergent validity analyses with the Brain Fog Scale (BFS). Dataset C ( = 317) was used for independent validation through confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). : Initial EFA of the 30-item SNAP-COVID scale suggested a four-factor model, yet further item refinement yielded a robust three-factor, 24-item solution: (1) General Cognitive Functions (17 items, α = 0.948), (2) Sensory Hypersensitivity (4 items, α = 0.829), and (3) Language and Communication (3 items, α = 0.950). The total scale demonstrated excellent internal consistency (α = 0.95). Convergent validity was evident by significant correlations between SNAP impact scores and BFS scores (r = -0.442, < 0.001). CFA confirmed the three-factor structure with acceptable fit indices (χ(249) = 677.29, < 0.001; CFI = 0.882; TLI = 0.869; RMSEA = 0.074; SRMR = 0.032). : The SNAP-COVID scale is a reliable and valid instrument. Its multidimensional structure captures global and domain-specific difficulties, addressing a critical gap in post-infectious cognitive assessment.

The Effect of Pediatric Liver Transplantation on Depression Levels in Children and the Potential Role of Liver Enzymes as Biomarkers.

Suren S, Yavuz Baskiran D, Tulum I … +2 more , Baskiran A, Yilmaz S

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356160 · Full text

: This study aimed to examine the level of depression in children who had undergone pediatric liver transplantation and to evaluate the potential role of liver enzymes as biomarkers of depression. : The study was conduct... : This study aimed to examine the level of depression in children who had undergone pediatric liver transplantation and to evaluate the potential role of liver enzymes as biomarkers of depression. : The study was conducted with 50 pediatric liver transplant recipients followed at the Liver Transplantation Institute of İnönü University, and data were collected through face-to-face interviews. The Personal and Transplant Information Form, Child Revised Impact of Event Scale, and Patient Health Questionnaire-Depression were used as data collection tools. In addition to descriptive statistics, Student's -test, Mann-Whitney U test, correlation analyses, and regression analyses were performed. : The median PHQ-9 score was 1.00 (Q1-Q3: 0.00-5.00), indicating generally low levels of depression. A significant positive correlation was found between CRIES and PHQ-9 scores (r = 0.414, < 0.01). In contrast, no consistent significant associations were observed between liver enzyme levels and depression scores in multivariate analyses, although bilirubin showed a modest negative correlation with PHQ-9 scores. In the multivariate analysis, although the overall regression model was not statistically significant, the CRIES score showed an individual association with PHQ-9 scores within the model (B = 0.117, = 0.037). : Liver enzymes cannot be considered strong biomarkers of depression in pediatric liver transplant recipients; however, post-traumatic stress symptoms may be an important clinical indicator for assessing psychological adjustment.

Association Between Cirrhosis and Acute or Severe Limb Ischemic Events Among Hospitalizations with Peripheral Artery Disease: A National Inpatient Sample Analysis.

Salman O, Bou Sanayeh E, Itani H … +6 more , Lahoud C, Wei C, Mustafa A, Raghunathan A, Moussa E, Amor MMI

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356159 · Full text

: Acute or severe limb ischemic events are limb- and life-threatening complications of peripheral artery disease (PAD). Although cirrhosis is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder associated with endothelial dys... : Acute or severe limb ischemic events are limb- and life-threatening complications of peripheral artery disease (PAD). Although cirrhosis is increasingly recognized as a systemic disorder associated with endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, and altered hemostatic balance, its relationship with coding-defined limb ischemic events among individuals with PAD remains poorly defined. We investigated whether cirrhosis is independently associated with coding-defined acute or severe limb ischemic events among hospitalized adults with PAD. : We performed a retrospective discharge-level analysis of the National Inpatient Sample from 2016 to 2018. Adult hospitalizations with PAD were identified using ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes and stratified according to the presence or absence of cirrhosis. The primary outcome was coding-defined acute or severe limb ischemic events. Multivariable logistic regression was used to evaluate the association between cirrhosis and acute or severe limb ischemic events after adjustment for demographic and cardiovascular comorbidities. Propensity-score matching was additionally performed to balance baseline characteristics between hospitalizations with and without cirrhosis. : Among 276,702 hospitalizations with PAD, 5942 had cirrhosis. Before matching, cirrhosis was independently associated with higher odds of acute or severe limb ischemic events after multivariable adjustment (odds ratio [OR] 1.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.35-1.60; < 0.001). After 1:1 propensity-score matching, 5883 matched pairs were analyzed. The association between cirrhosis and acute or severe limb ischemic events persisted in the matched cohort, with cirrhosis remaining significantly associated with increased odds of these events (OR 1.41, 95% CI 1.24-1.60; < 0.001). : In this large discharge-level analysis of hospitalizations with PAD, cirrhosis was independently associated with higher odds of coding-defined acute or severe limb ischemic events. These findings suggest that cirrhosis may represent an underrecognized vascular risk amplifier in PAD. Further prospective studies are needed to validate this association, clarify underlying mechanisms, and determine whether cirrhosis may improve PAD risk stratification.

Clinical Outcomes and Re-Splinting in Pediatric Dental Trauma Managed with Titanium Trauma Splints: Insights from a Hospital-Based Retrospective Study.

Ferrés-Amat E, Herrera-Martínez S, Díaz-Martínez C … +4 more , Maura-Solivellas I, Campillay MJ, Valdivia-Gandur I, Ferrés-Padró E

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356158 · Full text

: Traumatic dentoalveolar injuries (TDI) in children often require urgent stabilization using splints. Titanium trauma splints (TTS) represent a practical option; however, pediatric evidence from hospital-based emergency... : Traumatic dentoalveolar injuries (TDI) in children often require urgent stabilization using splints. Titanium trauma splints (TTS) represent a practical option; however, pediatric evidence from hospital-based emergency settings remains limited. This study describes the clinical and contextual characteristics of children treated with TTS and explores factors associated with early complications and splint stability. : A retrospective observational cohort study was conducted at a Pediatric Dentistry Service, including children with TDI managed with TTS and followed for a minimum of three months. Clinical records were reviewed to collect demographic, contextual, and clinical variables. Early complications and the need for re-splinting were recorded, and associations between selected variables and outcomes were analyzed. : Seventy-three patients (64.4% male; mean age 10.29 ± 2.99 years) and 127 traumatized teeth (98.4% permanent) were included. A predominance of school-based injuries was observed (52.1%). The most frequent injury types were subluxation (39.1%), avulsion (26.6%), and extrusion (16.4%). A longer interval between trauma and splint placement was associated with inflammatory root resorption ( = 0.011), although this finding should be interpreted with caution given the limited number of events. Mixed-dentition splints showed a higher likelihood of requiring re-splinting (OR = 12.23; 95% CI: 1.18-126.60); however, this estimate was imprecise and should be interpreted as an exploratory signal. Overall, 90.4% of patients completed treatment with a single splint. : Within the limitations of this retrospective observational cohort, TTS showed satisfactory short-term clinical stability in pediatric traumatic dental injuries. Longer time between trauma and splint placement was associated with inflammatory root resorption, while mixed-dentition splints emerged as a potential signal of increased re-splinting. These findings are exploratory and hypothesis-generating and require confirmation in future studies.

Biomechanical and Tomographic Outcomes in Pediatric Keratoconus Treated with Conventional Epithelium-Off Corneal Collagen Cross-Linking.

Pop RN, Nicula PA, Nicula CA … +2 more , Nicula DV, Pop B

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356157 · Full text

: Pediatric keratoconus may progress rapidly, and treatment decisions are often made before prolonged observation is possible. This study evaluated 24-month visual, tomographic, pachymetric, and biomechanical outcomes af... : Pediatric keratoconus may progress rapidly, and treatment decisions are often made before prolonged observation is possible. This study evaluated 24-month visual, tomographic, pachymetric, and biomechanical outcomes after conventional epithelium-off corneal collagen cross-linking (CXL) using Pentacam tomography and Corvis ST dynamic Scheimpflug analysis. : This single-center observational longitudinal cohort included 28 eyes of 23 patients aged 13-18 years treated at the OCULENS Clinic, Cluj-Napoca, Romania, between 2019 and 2023. Because the study had no untreated or alternative-treatment control group, postoperative changes were interpreted as associations after CXL rather than as proof of causality. Baseline, 6-, 12-, and 24-month values were analyzed for UCVA, BCVA, Kmax, thinnest pachymetry, SP-A1, deformation amplitude (DA), first and second applanation times (A1T and A2T), highest concavity (HC) radius, and BAD-D. Repeated-measures ANOVA was used after assessment of within-eye difference normality; findings were interpreted cautiously because the analysis was eye-based, the cohort was small, and multiple outcomes were examined. : UCVA improved from 0.53 ± 0.16 to 0.44 ± 0.16 logMAR and BCVA from 0.31 ± 0.11 to 0.25 ± 0.11 logMAR (both < 0.001). Mean Kmax decreased modestly from 54.36 ± 3.11 D to 53.41 ± 2.79 D, while SP-A1 increased from 84.69 ± 4.75 to 97.39 ± 5.11 (both < 0.001). Thinnest pachymetry showed early postoperative thinning followed by partial recovery by 24 months. DA decreased, A1T increased, A2T decreased, HC radius increased, and BAD-D decreased significantly. Kmax and SP-A1 were inversely correlated at all visits (r = -0.714 to -0.773; all < 0.001), but these correlations were considered exploratory. Post-24-month retreatment and keratoplasty-related events were recorded descriptively and were not included in the formal 24-month model. : Within the prespecified 24-month analytic window, conventional epithelium-off CXL was associated with stabilization, modest visual and tomographic improvement, and a concordant biomechanical stiffening signal. The results should be interpreted as cautious observational findings rather than definitive evidence of long-term stability, because of the small sample, eye-level analysis, absence of a control group, limited follow-up, and lack of formal repeatability testing.

Association of Cervical Disease and Metabolic Comorbidities with Adhesive Capsulitis in Patients with Shoulder Pain: A Multivariate Analysis.

Lee CH, Yoon S, Yang JH … +4 more , Choi MH, Moon MH, Kim KB, Kang SW

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356156 · Full text

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of adhesive capsulitis (AC) is estimated to be 2-5% in the general population. However, the etiology of AC remains unclear. Among the various proposed factors, the precise role of cervical dise... BACKGROUND: The prevalence of adhesive capsulitis (AC) is estimated to be 2-5% in the general population. However, the etiology of AC remains unclear. Among the various proposed factors, the precise role of cervical disease, and the severity of cervical degeneration, in the development of AC has not been fully elucidated. This study aimed to analyze the contribution of cervical disease to AC in patients with shoulder pain. METHODS: A total of 409 patients who visited the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine for shoulder pain were retrospectively reviewed. The outcome variable was the presence of AC. In addition to cervical disease, other independent variables affecting AC, including sex, diabetes, obesity, dyslipidemia, thyroid disease, immobilization after surgery, rotator cuff tear, subacromial spur, and shoulder joint osteoarthritis were reviewed. To compare the two groups, an independent -test or chi-square test was performed for continuous and categorical data. Multivariate regression analysis was used to assess the effects of independent factors on AC, adjusting for confounders. RESULTS: Among the 409 patients, 176 (43.0%) were diagnosed with AC. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that diabetes (OR 3.03, 95% CI 1.55-5.91, = 0.001) and cervical disease (OR 3.03, 95% CI 1.75-5.25, < 0.001) were significantly associated with increased odds of AC. In contrast, increasing age (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.92-0.98, = 0.007), dyslipidemia (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.31-0.98, = 0.044), and postoperative immobilization (OR 0.64, 95% CI 0.41-0.99, = 0.046) were associated with decreased odds of AC. The prevalence of AC increased with the severity of cervical degeneration. CONCLUSION: In patients with shoulder pain, diabetes and cervical disease were positively associated with AC, whereas age, dyslipidemia, and postoperative immobilization showed inverse associations. These findings suggest that both metabolic and cervical factors may contribute to the development of AC, highlighting the importance of considering cervical pathology in patients with shoulder pain.

Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation in Brachial Plexus Birth Injury Rehabilitation: A Systematic Review.

Celbek B, Hoşbay Z, Urhun Keleş E … +2 more , Berköz HÖ, Yüksel A

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356155 · Full text

: Brachial plexus birth injury (BPBI) is a peripheral nerve injury occurring during birth that may result in upper-extremity weakness and functional impairment. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effects of neu... : Brachial plexus birth injury (BPBI) is a peripheral nerve injury occurring during birth that may result in upper-extremity weakness and functional impairment. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effects of neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) on motor function, muscle strength, range of motion, and upper-extremity function in children with BPBI. : This systematic review was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines and registered in PROSPERO. PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science, PEDro, and the Cochrane Library were searched from inception to 5 May 2026. Only randomized controlled trials were included. Methodological quality was assessed using the PEDro scale, and risk of bias was evaluated using the RoB 2 tool. : Seven randomized controlled trials involving 197 participants were included. Several studies reported improvements in shoulder abduction, elbow flexion, wrist extension, muscle strength, and motor function following NMES compared with conventional therapy. The combination of NMES and constraint-induced movement therapy demonstrated favorable outcomes in functional performance. However, substantial heterogeneity was observed across studies regarding participant characteristics, NMES parameters, treatment duration, and outcome measures. The certainty of evidence ranged from low to very low. : Current evidence suggests that NMES may serve as a potential adjunct to conventional rehabilitation in children with BPBI. However, given the low to very low certainty of the evidence, high risk of bias, and substantial clinical and methodological heterogeneity among the included studies, definitive clinical recommendations cannot currently be made. Future well-designed randomized controlled trials using standardized protocols, consistent outcome measures, and longer follow-up periods are warranted.

Effect of a Topical Thrombin-Carboxymethyl Starch Hemostatic Agent on Perioperative Hemoglobin Course: A Propensity Score-Matched Study.

Park D, Koh HS, Moon JW … +1 more , Choi YH

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356154 · Full text

: With contemporary blood management strategies substantially reducing transfusion rates after total knee arthroplasty (TKA), conventional endpoints such as transfusion incidence and estimated blood loss may have limited... : With contemporary blood management strategies substantially reducing transfusion rates after total knee arthroplasty (TKA), conventional endpoints such as transfusion incidence and estimated blood loss may have limited sensitivity for evaluating adjunctive hemostatic interventions. As postoperative anemia evolves dynamically over time, hemoglobin kinetics and cumulative anemia burden may offer more informative measures of treatment effect. This study evaluated whether implementation of a topical thrombin-carboxymethyl starch hemostatic agent within a standardized modern blood management protocol was associated with smaller early postoperative hemoglobin decline and lower cumulative anemia burden after TKA. : In this single-center, retrospective, pre-post observational study, consecutive patients aged 50 years or older undergoing primary unilateral TKA for osteoarthritis before and after implementation of a thrombin-carboxymethyl starch topical hemostatic agent were compared. Perioperative management was otherwise standardized and unchanged. Patients were matched 1:1 using propensity scores derived from eight prespecified covariates. Co-primary endpoints were hemoglobin change from baseline to postoperative day 1 and day 2, and cumulative anemia burden quantified by the area under the hemoglobin-deficit curve from POD 0 to POD 13 was assessed as a key secondary endpoint. : Of 564 patients assessed for eligibility, 328 met the inclusion criteria, and 70 propensity score-matched pairs were included in the final analysis. Unless otherwise specified, the outcomes reported below were analyzed in these 70 matched pairs. In the matched cohort, the intervention group had a lesser hemoglobin decrease at postoperative day (POD) 1 than the control group (2.12 ± 0.97 vs. 2.42 ± 0.98 g/dL), corresponding to a paired mean difference of 0.30 g/dL (95% CI, 0.08-0.52; = 0.008). The between-group difference at POD 2 was not statistically significant (paired mean difference, 0.15 g/dL; 95% CI, -0.03 to 0.33; = 0.10). The area under the hemoglobin-deficit curve from POD 0 to POD 13 was lower in the intervention group (18.6 ± 5.2 vs. 21.3 ± 5.6 g/dL × day), with a paired mean difference of 2.7 g/dL × day (95% CI, 0.9-4.5; = 0.004). Estimated total blood loss, formula-derived hidden blood loss, and transfusion rates did not differ significantly between groups. : Use of a thrombin-carboxymethyl starch topical hemostatic agent was associated with modest attenuation of early postoperative hemoglobin decline and lower cumulative anemia burden after TKA, without significant differences in estimated blood loss or transfusion occurrence. Hemoglobin kinetics and cumulative anemia burden may provide complementary outcome measures in contemporary low-transfusion practice, although these findings should be interpreted cautiously given the observational design and low transfusion event rate.

Polymer-Infiltrated Ceramic Network Versus Smart Bioactive Self-Curing Composite for Cervical Restorations in Professional Ballet Dancers: A 24-Month Split-Mouth Randomized Controlled Trial.

Timoshina M, Mironov S, Dorofeev A … +7 more , Shakaryants A, Danshina S, Zakharova K, Grishaeva K, Kazumova A, Timoshin A, Sevbitov A

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356153 · Full text

: Professional ballet dancers endure high occlusal loads, increasing cervical defect prevalence. Conventional composites fail frequently under such conditions. This randomized clinical trial (RCT) compared 24-month perfo... : Professional ballet dancers endure high occlusal loads, increasing cervical defect prevalence. Conventional composites fail frequently under such conditions. This randomized clinical trial (RCT) compared 24-month performance of a polymer-infiltrated ceramic network (PICN, VITA Enamic) versus a self-curing bioactive composite (Stela) for cervical restorations. : Twenty professional ballet dancers (40 cervical defects: 21 carious, 19 abfraction) were enrolled in a paired split-mouth RCT. Each received one PICN inlay and one self-curing composite restoration on two non-adjacent defects. Restorations were assessed at 6, 12, and 24 months using United States Public Health Service (USPHS) criteria (primary: marginal integrity) and a dye penetration test. Secondary outcomes included secondary caries, hypersensitivity, and Oral Health Impact Profile-14 (OHIP-14). Statistical tests: McNemar, Fisher's exact, Kaplan-Meier, log-rank (α = 0.05). : At 24 months, marginal integrity (USPHS Alpha) was maintained in 91% of PICN restorations for carious defects and 89% for abfraction defects, compared to 70% and 50% for self-curing composite, respectively. No PICN restoration failed (0%). Self-curing composite failures were 20% (carious) and 30% (abfraction) (exploratory uncorrected = 0.031; non-significant after correction). Dye penetration was lower for PICN in abfraction defects (11% vs. 60%, adjusted = 0.048) but not in carious defects (9% vs. 30%, adjusted = 0.317). Kaplan-Meier survival favoured PICN (log-rank = 0.001); 24-month survival probability: PICN 100% (95% CI: 83-100%), self-curing composite 75% (95% CI: 55-95%). No secondary caries or serious adverse events occurred. : PICN hybrid ceramic provided superior marginal integrity and zero failures over 24 months in cervical restorations of professional ballet dancers, outperforming the self curing composite. Within this high-risk population, PICN inlays are recommended for abfraction defects. However, because the study was conducted exclusively in professional ballet dancers, direct extrapolation to the general population should be made with caution. The self-curing composite may be considered for carious defects when light curing is problematic, but patients should be informed of higher failure risk. Longer studies are needed.

Synthetic Sweeteners and Human Health: An Overview of Health Risks, Vulnerable Populations, and Effects on Key Biological Systems.

Ivanova S, Dyankov S, Nalbantova V … +3 more , Shishmanova-Doseva M, Slavova I, Saracheva K

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356152 · Full text

: Nowadays synthetic sweeteners are widely used as sugar substitutes in beverages, processed foods, and pharmaceutical products, largely due to their low caloric content and perceived benefits for weight management and g... : Nowadays synthetic sweeteners are widely used as sugar substitutes in beverages, processed foods, and pharmaceutical products, largely due to their low caloric content and perceived benefits for weight management and glycemic control. Their consumption has increased markedly over recent decades, paralleling global efforts to reduce added sugar intake and combat obesity and diabetes. This review examines the regulation of artificial sweeteners, their impact on vulnerable populations, and the increased concern about their health effects, including metabolic effects, effects on gut microbiota and neurological and behavioral issues. : A comprehensive search was performed across multiple electronic databases, including PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, to identify studies relevant to synthetic sweeteners and human health. : While considered safe, artificial sweeteners are linked to potential influence on hormonal responses, affecting glucose homeostasis and insulin secretion, as well as effects on gut microbiota composition and glucose metabolism. However, the results reveal inconsistencies of the impact of artificial sweeteners on vulnerable populations, as well as their effects on the human gut microbiota, neurological behavior and endocrine effects and evidence remain limited. : Continuous human trials, post-market surveillance and regulatory evaluations are therefore essential to ensure the safety of sugar substitutes for consumers' health.

SFTPB Expression Predicts Favorable Survival in Lung Adenocarcinoma but Poor Prognosis in Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

Kim S, Hong H, Lee JH

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356151 · Full text

: Surfactant protein B (SFTPB) is a surfactant-associated protein secreted by alveolar type II epithelial cells that plays a critical role in maintaining alveolar stability and surface tension. Although SFTPB is closely... : Surfactant protein B (SFTPB) is a surfactant-associated protein secreted by alveolar type II epithelial cells that plays a critical role in maintaining alveolar stability and surface tension. Although SFTPB is closely associated with pulmonary epithelial differentiation, its clinical significance in different non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) subtypes remains unclear. This study investigated the clinicopathologic and prognostic significance of SFTPB expression in lung adenocarcinoma (AD) and lung squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) using The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset. : SFTPB mRNA expression data and clinicopathologic information were obtained from TCGA cohorts of AD and SCC patients. Patients were stratified into high- and low-expression groups according to median SFTPB expression levels. Associations between SFTPB expression and clinicopathologic variables were analyzed, and correlation analyses were performed with major oncogenic genes. Overall survival (OS) and relapse-free survival (RFS) were evaluated using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and log-rank testing. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression analyses were performed after adjustment for age, sex, and pathological stage. : In AD, high SFTPB expression was significantly associated with lower pathologic stage ( = 0.011) and lower N stage ( = 0.006). SFTPB expression showed significant negative correlations with EGFR (R = -0.140, = 0.002) and BRAF (R = -0.177, < 0.001) and a positive correlation with TP53 (R = 0.128, = 0.004). Patients with high SFTPB expression demonstrated significantly improved OS compared with those with low expression ( < 0.001) while a trend toward prolonged RFS was observed without statistical significance ( = 0.089). Multivariate analysis confirmed high SFTPB expression as an independent favorable prognostic factor in AD (HR = 0.551, 95% CI = 0.405-0.748, < 0.001). In SCC, high SFTPB expression was also significantly associated with lower pathologic stage ( = 0.009) and lower N stage ( = 0.007). SFTPB expression showed significant negative correlations with SOX2 (R = -0.176, < 0.001), PIK3CA (R = -0.143, = 0.002), and TP53 (R = -0.101, = 0.026). In contrast to AD, high SFTPB expression was significantly associated with poorer OS ( = 0.026), whereas no significant difference in RFS was observed ( = 0.307). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that high SFTPB expression was an independent adverse prognostic factor in SCC (HR = 1.347, 95% CI = 1.028-1.767, = 0.031). : SFTPB expression is significantly associated with clinicopathologic characteristics and molecular signatures in both AD and SCC. However, its prognostic implications differ according to histologic subtype. High SFTPB expression independently predicts favorable survival in AD but unfavorable survival in SCC, suggesting distinct lineage-specific biological roles in NSCLC. These findings support SFTPB as a subtype-specific prognostic biomarker reflecting differential differentiation states and lineage context in NSCLC.

Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation in Cancer Patients: A Contemporary Review of the Specific Challenges, the Outcomes, Risk Stratification, and Decision-Making.

Keramida K, Mavraganis G, Masoura C … +3 more , Aznaouridis K, Androutsopoulou V, Tsioufis K

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356150 · Full text

The coexistence of cancer and severe aortic stenosis (AS) is increasing as a result of population aging and substantial improvements in cancer survival. Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has transformed the... The coexistence of cancer and severe aortic stenosis (AS) is increasing as a result of population aging and substantial improvements in cancer survival. Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has transformed the management of AS; however, patients with active malignancy or a history of cancer remain markedly under-represented in pivotal randomized trials. This under-representation has resulted in persistent uncertainty regarding patient selection, risk stratification, and the expected benefit of TAVI in this growing and clinically heterogeneous population. This review provides a comprehensive and contemporary synthesis of the evidence on TAVI in patients with cancer, integrating cardiovascular (CV), oncologic, and geriatric perspectives. Available data on epidemiological overlap, cancer-specific procedural challenges, and short- and long-term outcomes following TAVI are critically examined, with particular emphasis on distinctions between active cancer and cancer survivorship. Key modifiers of risk and benefit-including prior thoracic radiotherapy, competing thrombotic and bleeding risk, immunosuppression, frailty, sarcopenia, and nutritional status-are discussed in detail. Limitations of conventional surgical risk scores in oncology populations are highlighted, underscoring the need for individualized assessment beyond traditional CV metrics. Across registries and meta-analyses, TAVI is associated with high procedural success and comparable short-term outcomes in patients with and without cancer. Excess mortality observed during mid- and long-term follow-up is driven predominantly by non-CV causes related to malignancy rather than valve-related complications. Importantly, patients with cancer in remission demonstrate outcomes similar to those of non-cancer populations, whereas prognosis in active cancer is strongly influenced by disease stage, biology, and competing risks. Overall, cancer diagnosis alone should not preclude consideration of TAVI. Optimal management requires multidisciplinary, goal-oriented decision-making that integrates oncologic prognosis, functional status, and patients' priorities. As cancer survivorship continues to expand, prospective studies, integrated risk stratification tools, and closer alignment between cardio-oncology and structural heart programs are essential to guide evidence-based and equitable care.

Early Detection of Transient Hypoparathyroidism After Total Thyroidectomy: A Single-Center Preliminary Study.

Marian M, Rosu M, Tarta C … +7 more , Dobrescu A, Brebu D, Faur IF, Korodi A, Faur IA, Bunceanu S, Stoian D

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356149 · Full text

: Post-thyroidectomy hypoparathyroidism (hypoPTH) is the most common complication of total thyroidectomy. Transient hypoPTH was defined as postoperative day 1 (POD1) intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) < 15 pg/mL and/or sym... : Post-thyroidectomy hypoparathyroidism (hypoPTH) is the most common complication of total thyroidectomy. Transient hypoPTH was defined as postoperative day 1 (POD1) intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) < 15 pg/mL and/or symptomatic hypocalcemia (<8.0 mg/dL), requiring supplementation, resolving within six months. We evaluated POD1 calcium, PTH, and their combination; identified preoperative predictors; and compared absolute with percent-change metrics. : Participants comprised a retrospective single-center cohort of 380 consecutive adults undergoing total thyroidectomy between January 2023 and December 2025. Multivariable logistic regression identified preoperative predictors, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis evaluated POD1 biomarkers. Because both biomarkers are part of the outcome definition, a pre-specified sensitivity analysis re-evaluated POD1 PTH and ΔPTH against PTH-independent outcomes (POD1-calcium-defined hypocalcemia and permanent hypoPTH). Subgroups examined malignancy and central neck dissection (CND). : The cohort comprised 193 males (50.8%) and 187 females (49.2%), with a median age of 53 years (IQR 38-69). Indications were multinodular goiter (45.0%), differentiated thyroid cancer (37.9%), Graves' disease (15.0%) and recurrent disease (2.1%). CND was performed in 9.5% of patients. Transient and permanent hypoPTH occurred in 132 (34.7%) and 11 (2.9%) patients. Thyroid gland weight was the sole independent preoperative predictor (OR 0.982, 95% CI 0.969-0.995, = 0.008), with smaller glands conferring higher risk. Against the composite outcome, POD1 calcium and PTH yielded AUCs of 0.997 and 0.991 (combined 1.000), reflecting partial circularity. In the decoupled-outcome sensitivity analysis, POD1 PTH retained good-to-excellent discrimination for severe hypocalcemia (AUC 0.943) and permanent hypoPTH (AUC 0.976). Malignant cases showed a greater relative PTH decline than benign cases (-53.7% vs. -38.5%, = 0.013) despite comparable absolute POD1 values, and CND did not increase risk. : Combined POD1 calcium and PTH provided strong biochemical confirmation of transient hypoPTH, but the composite-outcome AUCs reflect internal definitional consistency rather than independent predictive performance; the decoupled-outcome AUCs (0.93-0.98) are the conservative benchmark. Thyroid gland weight was an inverse risk modifier with limited stand-alone utility. Multicenter prospective validation is required.

Post-Treatment MRI Features on First Follow-Up Imaging in Diffuse Gliomas After Near-Total Resection: A Real-World Exploratory Cohort Study.

Blidaru TC, Mitrea D, Garofil ND … +6 more , Spătaru IR, Marin RM, Zaharia MC, Pintilie SR, Strilciuc S, Papacocea IR

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356148 · Full text

: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is essential for monitoring patients with diffuse gliomas after surgery and adjuvant therapy. However, the prognostic significance of imaging findings observed on the first post-treatme... : Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is essential for monitoring patients with diffuse gliomas after surgery and adjuvant therapy. However, the prognostic significance of imaging findings observed on the first post-treatment MRI remains incompletely defined in routine clinical practice. This study aimed to evaluate whether MRI features identified on the first post-treatment examination are associated with recurrence-free survival after near-total resection (NTR), defined for this real-world cohort as ≥80% volumetric tumor removal (which differs from the RANO Resect Group definition of GTR). : Consecutive adult patients with histologically confirmed diffuse gliomas diagnosed between 2021 and 2024 were screened for eligibility ( = 283) and classified according to the 2021 WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System. The first post-treatment MRI was defined as the earliest follow-up examination performed after completion of all initially planned therapy (surgery alone in patients without indication for adjuvant therapy; post-radiotherapy ± chemotherapy in the remaining patients), and not the immediate postoperative scan. Patients with available first post-treatment MRI were included ( = 149), resulting in a final cohort of 139 cases after exclusion of outliers. The evaluated MRI corresponded to the first follow-up examination after treatment (mean interval ~120 days after surgery). Logistic regression models were used to assess associations between post-treatment MRI features and recurrence-free survival at one and two years after NTR, with exploratory analyses for reoperation and reirradiation. : Residual tumor identified on the first post-treatment MRI was associated with lower odds of recurrence-free survival (RFS) at one and two years after NTR. Postoperative functional status also demonstrated an independent association with tumor control. Other imaging variables showed associations in univariable analyses but did not remain independent predictors after adjustment. Exploratory analyses of reoperation and reirradiation suggested additional clinical influences, including patient age. : In this real-world cohort with heterogeneous tumor subtypes and treatment regimens, residual tumor on first follow-up MRI was the most consistent imaging correlate of reduced RFS, alongside postoperative functional status. These hypothesis-generating findings should be validated in stratified, prospective cohorts.

Prognostic Implications of Combined p53 and Mismatch-Repair Immunophenotypes in Uterine Carcinosarcoma.

Kilic Bagir E, Kucukgoz Gulec U, Unal I … +4 more , Kussever E, Alagoz AS, Vardar MA, Gumurdulu D

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356147 · Full text

: Uterine carcinosarcoma (UCS) is a rare and highly aggressive gynecologic malignancy with poor clinical outcomes and limited therapeutic options. This study investigated the prognostic significance of molecular subgroup... : Uterine carcinosarcoma (UCS) is a rare and highly aggressive gynecologic malignancy with poor clinical outcomes and limited therapeutic options. This study investigated the prognostic significance of molecular subgroups defined by p53 expression and mismatch repair (MMR) status in UCS. : This retrospective study included 51 patients with uterine carcinosarcoma who underwent surgical treatment between 2010 and 2023. Immunohistochemical analyses were performed to evaluate p53 expression (wild-type vs. aberrant) and MMR status (intact vs. deficient). Patients were classified into four molecular subgroups: p53wt/MMR-intact ( = 15), p53abn/MMR-intact ( = 24), p53wt/MMR-deficient ( = 9), and p53abn/MMR-deficient ( = 3). Clinicopathological characteristics, overall survival (OS), and disease-free survival (DFS) were analyzed. Additional component-specific analyses were performed for carcinomatous and sarcomatous tumor elements. : The median follow-up period was 34 months, and the overall mortality rate was 51.0%. Patients with p53wt/MMR-deficient tumors demonstrated the most favorable outcomes, with a mean OS of 92.9 ± 22.1 months and a mortality rate of 33.3%. In contrast, the p53abn/MMR-intact subgroup showed the poorest survival outcomes (mean OS: 54.4 ± 11.6 months; mortality rate: 62.5%). Although Kaplan-Meier survival analysis did not demonstrate statistically significant differences between molecular subgroups ( = 0.783), distinct prognostic trends were observed. Multivariate Cox regression analysis identified age and lymph node involvement as independent predictors of both OS and DFS. Component-specific analyses demonstrated significant associations between aberrant p53 expression in the carcinomatous component and epithelial subtype distribution ( = 0.025) as well as myometrial invasion patterns ( = 0.040). : Combined p53/MMR-based immunohistochemical classification demonstrated distinct prognostic trends in uterine carcinosarcoma. These findings suggest that molecular stratification could support risk assessment and therapeutic decision-making in UCS. Larger prospective multicenter studies are warranted to validate these findings and clarify their potential clinical implications.

Statin-Associated Muscle Symptoms and Myotoxicity: A Clinically Oriented Narrative Review with a Practical Prevention, Evaluation, and Management Algorithm.

Epelde F

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356146 · Full text

: Muscle symptoms are the most visible adverse event attributed to statins, but terminology is often imprecise. Most patients report myalgia or nonspecific aches, whereas objective myopathy, inflammatory or necrotizing m... : Muscle symptoms are the most visible adverse event attributed to statins, but terminology is often imprecise. Most patients report myalgia or nonspecific aches, whereas objective myopathy, inflammatory or necrotizing myositis, rhabdomyolysis, and anti-HMGCR immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy are uncommon and clinically distinct entities. To provide a clinically oriented narrative synthesis of statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS) and severe statin-associated myotoxicity, and to propose a practical prevention, evaluation, and management algorithm. The classification of muscle events is used to standardize terminology and avoid diagnostic confusion, not to create a new formal taxonomy. : A clinically oriented narrative review was performed using PubMed, Google Scholar, and major society documents published from January 2021 to April 2026. Eligible sources addressed SAMS, statin myopathy/myositis, rhabdomyolysis, anti-HMGCR immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy, nocebo/drucebo effects, pharmacogenetics, drug interactions, diagnosis, or management. The final evidence set comprised 55 verifiable sources, including blinded randomized or n-of-1/crossover evidence; meta-analyses; clinical statements and reviews; pharmacovigilance analyses; pharmacogenetic guidance; mechanism-focused reviews; anti-HMGCR series; and lipid-lowering guideline/treatment studies. Because the review was narrative, no pooled estimate or formal PRISMA screening log was generated. : Blinded evidence indicates only a small absolute excess of muscle pain with statins, concentrated mainly in the first year of therapy, and that most muscle symptoms reported during statin therapy are not pharmacologically caused by the statin. N-of-1 and crossover trials show that symptom intensity is often similar during statin and placebo periods, consistent with an important nocebo/drucebo contribution. Severe muscle toxicity can nevertheless occur, especially when systemic statin exposure is increased by a high dose, interacting drugs, frailty, renal or hepatic impairment, hypothyroidism, transporter or metabolic genotypes, or intense unaccustomed exercise. Statin choice matters chiefly through dose, pharmacokinetics, and interaction burden. : SAMS are common as reported clinical problems, but confirmed statin-caused muscle injury is substantially less frequent than routine clinical attribution suggests. Permanent discontinuation should be reserved for carefully assessed cases. A structured approach-baseline risk assessment, selective CK measurement, exclusion of alternative causes, correction of modifiable risks, dechallenge/rechallenge, statin switching, dose reduction, and combination with non-statin therapy-preserves cardiovascular benefit while protecting the rare patient with genuine toxicity.

The Oral-Gut Microbiome Connection in Patients with Periodontitis: A Systematic Review.

Anton D, Băciuț M, Almășan O

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356145 · Full text

: This study aims to evaluate the recent literature on the oral-gut connection in the context of periodontal disease, emphasizing the significance of systemic risk associated with chronic inflammation. This review explor... : This study aims to evaluate the recent literature on the oral-gut connection in the context of periodontal disease, emphasizing the significance of systemic risk associated with chronic inflammation. This review explores whether chronic inflammation resulting from periodontal disease can induce systemic conditions through alterations in the gut microbiome and whether periodontal treatment may contribute to overall health improvement. : A systematic database search was performed using pre-established search strategies. Searches were conducted in three databases between 1 and 20 October 2025. A total of 578 articles were screened for eligibility based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Two authors agreed on the selection process used. The methodological quality of the included studies was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale and the Risk of Bias 2 Tool. : Eleven studies were considered eligible for inclusion in the review. The gut microbiome is similar to the oral microbiome in patients with periodontitis. Gut microbial shifts may drive systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction. Tooth loss and gum disease are linked to alterations in the gut bacteria, potentially compromising the intestinal barrier permeability. In contrast, the presence of natural teeth may prevent oral-gut bacterial transmission. Changes in the gut microbiota are correlated with improvements in periodontal status after non-surgical periodontal therapy. : The evidence presented in this review supports an association between periodontitis, oral-gut microbial alterations, and systemic inflammatory conditions. However, most available studies are observational, limiting causal inference. Targeted modulation of the gut microbiome may represent a promising area for future research, but its clinical applicability remains inconclusive.

Occupational and Lifestyle Factors of Male and Female Infertility Patients: Do They Impact ART Success?

Micić J, Andjić M, Dotlić J … +10 more , Ivanović K, Trklja A, Plešinac J, Maslovarić M, Mihajlović B, Šurlan L, Protić I, Tulić L, Bila J, Stojnić J

Medicina (Kaunas) · 2026 Jun · PMID 42356144 · Full text

: Numerous risk factors for both female and male fertility have been established including age, ovarian reserve, infertility cause, occupational and lifestyle factors. The objective of our study was to determine the infl... : Numerous risk factors for both female and male fertility have been established including age, ovarian reserve, infertility cause, occupational and lifestyle factors. The objective of our study was to determine the influence of occupational and lifestyle factors on assisted reproduction (ART) outcomes at a Serbian referral tertiary center. : The study included all consecutive infertile couples undergoing ART at the Clinic for Ob/Gyn University Clinical Center Belgrade, from January 2019 to January 2022. Inclusion criteria comprised primary and unexplained infertility, age ≤ 45 years, body mass index ≤ 30 kg/m and undergoing fresh autologous ART cycles. All patients filled in the socio-epidemiological questionnaire that analyzed their lifestyle and habits. Medical history data and data regarding the current ART cycle were taken from patient records. The primary outcome was clinical pregnancy. : Our study included 501 couples (women and men) with infertility undergoing ART. Clinical pregnancy was achieved in 22.2% of examined patients. Achieving clinical pregnancy in the ART cycle for women was associated with younger age and use of vitamins, minerals, and trace elements, whereas younger age and absence of chronic illnesses were the most important factors for male partners. When women and men were assessed together as couples, achieving clinical pregnancy correlated only with the use of vitamins, minerals and trace-elements by both partners. : This study confirmed that some occupational and lifestyle factors were associated with clinical pregnancy after ART in patients with unexplained primary infertility and normal BMI.
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