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Ten-Patient Feasibility Study Shows Safety And Potential For Non-Invasive Deep Brain Ablation
InSightec Ltd. announced that a team at the University Children"s Hospital Zurich has completed a feasibility study testing the use of non-invasive transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound surgery (MRgFUS) for the treatment of neuropathic pain. Ten adult patients diagnosed with chronic neuropathic pain successfully underwent non-invasive deep brain ablation surgery (central lateral thalamotomy) with transcranial MRgFUS and showed improvement in pain scores and reduction of pain medication with no adverse effects at three months follow-up. This is the first study in the world to test non-invasive transcranial focused ultrasound as a treatment modality for functional brain disorders.

Gonorrhoea Down 11%, UK
The Health Protection Agency has reported an 11% decrease in the total number of new gonorrhoea infections diagnosed in the UK last year from 18,649 infections in 2007 to 16,629 in 2008 - the lowest number of new infections recorded since 1999.
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Terrence Higgins Trust Tells Gay Men To Learn Their ABCs On World Hepatitis Day
Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) is encouraging gay men to learn more about hepatitis A, B and C today - World Hepatitis Day (May 19).
Cardiovascular

The Necessity Of Adrenalectomy At The Time Of Radical Nephrectomy: A Systematic Review

UroToday.com - We undertook a systematic review of the literature in reference to the use of ipsilateral adrenalectomy at the time of radical nephrectomy for the treatment of renal cell carcinoma. Important in the understanding of this is accurately defining.. ..the incidence of solitary, synchronous, ipsilateral adrenal involvement ..the ability of preoperative imaging to detect this ..the morbidity of removal of the adrenal ..the likelihood of identifying preoperative risk factors for adrenal involvement ..survival outcomes with and without adrenalectomy While quoting levels of supporting evidence we attempted to systematically investigate these aspects of the debate. We found that the historical benefit of ipsilateral adrenalectomy does not support it as a standard practice in all patients. The incidence of solitary, synchronous, ipsilateral adrenal involvement, which is potentially curable with ipsilateral adrenalectomy at the time of nephrectomy, is much lower than previously thought at 1 - 5%. Cross-sectional imaging in the current era is accurate in ruling out adrenal involvement but does carry a significant likelihood of false positives. Imaging outcomes are likely to improve with technical advances in imaging. The morbidity and mortality of ipsilateral adrenalectomy are generally minimal, but in those with metastatic disease, especially those developing metachronous contralateral adrenal metastasis, the impact of adrenal insufficiency can be devastating. In direct comparison, disease-specific and overall survival for individuals undergoing radical nephrectomy, with or without adrenalectomy, are similar. Those with multiple high-risk primary tumor features, including high stage/large lesions, upper pole location, multifocality and/or venous invasion may be considered for concomitant adrenalectomy because of the increased prevalence of adrenal metastasis. However, identifying all of these factors preoperatively may be difficult. The survival of those with lymph node positive or metastatic disease is poor regardless of whether adrenalectomy is performed. In these individuals, decisions regarding adrenalectomy should be based upon the desire or indication for cytoreduction. If nephrectomy is warranted, then adrenalectomy could be considered depending on the normality of the adrenal on preoperative imaging, but the benefit should be weighed against the risk of adrenal insufficiency. There is evidence for a survival advantage in patients with isolated adrenal metastasis. This group comprises no more than 2% of patients undergoing surgery for renal cancer. Written by Rebecca O"Malley, MD and Samir S. Taneja, MD as part of Beyond the Abstract on UroToday.com UroToday - the only urology website with original content written by global urology key opinion leaders actively engaged in clinical practice. To access the latest urology news releases from UroToday, go to: www.urotoday.com Copyright © 2009 - UroToday


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