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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Patientens självskattade perioperativa smärta vid lokalbedövningsmetoden wide awake och traditionell lokalbedövningsmetod vid handkirurgiska ingrepp : en jämförande pilotstudie

Axelsson, Åsa January 2016 (has links)
Handen har en mycket central roll för människans funktion och benämns ofta som hjärnans förlängning mot världen. Huvudsyftet inom handkirurgi är att vid skador, återskapa handens funktion för att förbättra människans livskvalité. De flesta operationer inom handkirurgi sker i någon form av lokalanestesi och majoriteten kräver blodtomhet i operationsområdet. Dagens former av lokalanestesi medför vissa begränsningar av operationstiden då trycket av blodtomhetsmanschetten orsakar smärta och obehag för patienten. Då det vid vissa handkirurgiska operationer är av stor fördel för operationsresultatet att patienten är vaken och vid uppmaning aktivt kan medverka vid operationen är det bra med vaken patient och därför bra om generell anestesi kan undvikas. Genom att bedöva patienten med en buffrad lokalbedövningsblandning med adrenalin kan patienten bli bedövad samtidigt som blodtomhet uppnås i operationsområdet, patienten behåller sin rörelseförmåga och kan på så sätt medverka vid operationen. Denna metod kallas Wide Awake. Syftet: Syftet med denna studie var att jämföra patientens smärtskattning vid Wide Awake lokalbedövningsmetod och den nuvarande lokalbedövningsmetoden som används vid handkirurgiska kliniken, samt beskriva patientens smärtupplevelse vid båda metoderna. Metod: Studien utfördes som en pilotstudie med både kvalitativ och kvantitativ ansats, en så kallad mixad metod. Tjugo forskningspatienter följdes under operationsprocessen med numeriskt kvantitativt protokoll där smärtskattningsdata samlades in och analyserades enligt Mann-Whitney U test. Ett uppföljande samtal dagen efter operation gjordes och sammanställdes med en manifest innehållsanalys enligt Graneheim och Lundman. Resultat: Studien visar på en skillnad i smärtupplevelse där patienter som opereras i Wide Awake lokalbedövningsmetod upplever mindre smärta och obehag än patienter som opereras i nuvarande lokalbedövningsmetod. Slutsats: Slutsatsen av denna studie visar på att Wide Awake är en bedövningsform som är lindrigare ur smärtsynpunkt för patienten vid mindre handkirurgiska ingrepp än den nuvarande traditionella lokalbedövning som används idag på handkirurgiska kliniken.
2

Biomolecular Aspects of Flexor Tendon Healing

Berglund, Maria January 2010 (has links)
Flexor tendon injuries in zone II of the hand (i.e. between the distal volar crease and the distal interphalangeal joint) can be costly for both the afflicted individual and society because of the high cost of a long rehabilitation period, complicated by tendon ruptures or scarring with adhesion formation, causing impaired range of motion. The aim of the present thesis was to characterize more fully the deep flexor tendon, the tendon sheath and their response to injury in a rabbit model in order to find potential targets to improve the outcome of repair. The intrasynovial rabbit deep flexor tendon differed from the extrasynovial peroneus tendon in the expression of collagens and transforming growth factor-β1 gene expression. Differences were also found in collagen III and proteoglycans between regions of the flexor tendon subjected to either compressive or tensile load. After laceration and subsequent repair of the flexor tendon, a shift in collagen gene expression from type I to type III occurred. Proteoglycans were generally increased with the notable exception of decorin, a potential inhibitor of the profibrotic transforming growth factor-β1 which was markedly increased during the first two weeks after repair in tendon tissue but remained unaltered in the sheaths. Both vascular endothelial growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor mRNA levels remained essentially unaltered, whereas insulin-like growth factor-1 increased later in the healing process, suggesting potential beneficial effects of exogenous addition, increasing tendon strength through stimulating tenocyte proliferation and collagen synthesis. Matrix metalloproteinase-13 mRNA levels increased and remained high in both tendon and sheath, whereas there was only a transient increase of matrix metalloproteinase-3 mRNA in tendon. We could also demonstrate a significant increase of the proportion of myofibroblasts, mast cells and neuropeptide containing nerve fibers in the healing tendon tissue, all components of the profibrotic myofibroblast-mast cell-neuropeptide pathway. / Biomolecular aspects of flexor tendon healing
3

Neuroprotection and axonal regeneration after peripheral nerve injury

Welin, Dag January 2010 (has links)
Following microsurgical reconstruction of injured peripheral nerves, severed axons are able to undergo spontaneous regeneration. However, the functional result is always unsatisfactory with poor sensory recovery and reduced motor function. One contributing factor is the retrograde neuronal death, which occurs in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and in the spinal cord. An additional clinical problem is the loss of nerve tissue that often occurs in the trauma zone and which requires “bridges” to reconnect separated nerve ends. The present thesis investigates the extent of retrograde degeneration in spinal motoneurons and cutaneous and muscular afferent DRG neurons after permanent axotomy and following treatment with N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC). In addition, it examines the survival and growth-promoting effects of nerve reconstructions performed by primary repair and peripheral nerve grafting in combination with NAC treatment. In adult rats, cutaneous sural and muscular medial gastrocnemius DRG neurons and spinal motoneurons were retrogradely labeled with fluorescent tracers from the homonymous transected nerves. Survival of labeled neurons was assessed at different time points after nerve transection, ventral root avulsion and ventral rhizotomy. Axonal regeneration was evaluated using fluorescent tracers after sciatic axotomy and immediate nerve repair. Intraperitoneal or intrathecal treatment with NAC was initiated immediately after nerve injury or was delayed for 1-2 weeks. Counts of labeled gastrocnemius DRG neurons did not reveal any significant retrograde cell death after nerve transection. Sural axotomy induced a delayed loss of DRG cells, which amounted to 43- 48% at 8-24 weeks postoperatively. Proximal transection of the sciatic nerve at 1 week after initial axonal injury did not further increase retrograde DRG degeneration, nor did it affect survival of corresponding motoneurons. In contrast, rhizotomy and ventral root avulsion induced marked 26- 53% cell loss among spinal motoneurons. Primary repair or peripheral nerve grafting supported regeneration of 53-60% of the motoneurons and 47-49% of the muscular gastrocnemius DRG neurons at 13 weeks postoperatively. For the cutaneous sural DRG neurons, primary repair or peripheral nerve grafting increased survival by 19-30% and promoted regeneration of 46-66% of the cells. Regenerating sural and medial gastrocnemius DRG neurons upregulate transcription of peripherin and activating transcription factor 3. The gene expression of the structural neurofilament proteins of high molecular weight was significantly downregulated following injury in both regenerating and non-regenerating sensory neurons. Treatment with NAC was neuroprotective for spinal motoneurons after ventral rhizotomy and avulsion, and sural DRG neurons after sciatic nerve injury. However, combined treatment with nerve graft and NAC had significant additive effect on neuronal survival and also increased the number of sensory neurons regenerating across the graft. In contrast, NAC treatment neither affected the number of regenerating motoneurons nor the number of myelinated axons in the nerve graft and in the distal nerve stump. In summary, the present results demonstrate that cutaneous sural sensory neurons are more sensitive to peripheral nerve injury than muscular gastrocnemius DRG cells. Moreover, the retrograde loss of cutaneous DRG cells taking place despite immediate nerve repair would still limit recovery of cutaneous sensory functions. Experimental data also show that NAC provides a highly significant degree of neuroprotection in animal models of adult nerve injury and could be combined with nerve grafting to further attenuate retrograde neuronal death and to promote functional regeneration.
4

Hand Injury from Powered Wood Splitters

Lindqvist, Aron January 2010 (has links)
The purpose of this study on hand injury from powered wood splitters was to describe injury epidemiology and anatomy, to rate injury severity, to evaluate the outcome after injury and to describe factors of possible importance for the occurrence of injury. By searching a computerized patient registry, 131 patients injured by wood splitters from 1995 to 2001 were identified. Information was obtained from hospital records and radiographs, a written questionnaire and a structured telephone interview. Injury severity was rated according to the Hand Injury Severity Scoring System (HISS system) and the Injury Severity Score (ISS). Outcome was evaluated with the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand outcome questionnaire (DASH) and, in 26 of the most severely injured patients, with the Sollerman test. Forty-six percent of the injuries occurred during April or May. Wedge splitters caused 82 % of all injuries and most often injured the index finger, while screw splitters caused 18 % of all injuries and most often injured the metacarpus. Screw splitters caused palmar perforation and thumb avulsion. Sixty-three percent of all patients had an amputation or devascularising injury. The reliability of HISS rating was good. The mean Hand Injury Severity Score (HISS) was 63 which is equivalent to a severe hand injury. The mean ISS was 3.7. Nineteen percent of patients had minor, 31 % had moderate, 23 % had severe and 27 % had major injury according to the HISS system. Children had more severe injuries than adults. There was no significant difference regarding HISS or DASH scores between wedge and screw splitter injuries. The mean DASH score was 15, indicating moderate residual sequelae, but patients without sequelae and patients with grave sequelae were found in all HISS severity grades. There was a weak but significant correlation between the HISS and DASH scores. The mean Sollerman score in the injured hand was 66, indicating significantly impaired hand function. Twenty-nine percent of splitters were home-made. Very few machines had the safety measures required by European Standards. Children were present during splitting in at least 15 % of cases. Not being alone at the machine was one cause of wedge splitter injury. Glove use was one cause of screw splitter injury. Hand injury from powered wood splitters is a significant problem. Many of the injuries are severe, and cause long term sequels and impairment of hand function. Prevention is essential and should focus on unsafe machines and dangerous patterns of use.

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