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find Author "CHENG Zhen" 2 results
  • Prevention and Treatment of Complications after Impacted Tooth Extraction: An Overview of Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses

    Objective To evaluate the relevant systematic reviews/meta-analyses that focused on the prevention and treatment of complications after impacted tooth extraction. Methods The systematic reviews/meta-analyses on the prevention and treatment of complications after impacted tooth extraction were searched in PubMed, The Cochrane Library, CBM, CNKI and WanFang Data from inception to September 30th, 2012, and a total of 15 professional journals and the references of included studies were also retrieved manually. Two reviewers screened the literature according to the inclusion criteria and extracted the data. Then the AMSTAR was used to evaluate the quality of the included studies, and the GRADE system was used to evaluate the quality of evidence. Results A total of twelve relevant systematic reviews/meta-analyses were included, of which five focused on the prevention and treatment of dry socket, six on the prevention of swelling, seven on the prevention and treatment of pain, six on the prevention of limitation of mouth opening, two on the prevention of infection, three on the prevention of bleeding, and one on the treatment of nerve damage after tooth extraction. Based on AMSTAR, seven studies were minor limitations and five studies were moderate limitations. Based on GRADE system, two was high quality of evidence, twelve were moderate, nine were low, and seven were very low. Conclusion Currently, the systematic reviews/meta-analyses on the prevention and treatment of complications after impacted tooth extraction can provide some references for clinical practice, which should be combined with the real condition by clinical doctors when making an evidence-based decision. However, it also suggests performing more high quality and large sample studies to prove this conclusion.

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  • The first clinical verification of near-infrared fluorescence projection navigation technology in liver cancer surgery

    Objective The aim of this article is to verify the clinical effect of the near-infrared fluorescent liver cancer surgery projection navigation system without display screen. Methods Three patients who need to undergo open hepatectomy for liver cancer in the Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University from March 2021 to May 2021 were included, verifying the accuracy, stability, and time delay effect of the self-developed near-infrared fluorescence projection navigation system for the location of tumor in surgeries. Results The intraoperative tumor location could be accurately displayed by the near-infrared fluorescence projection system and there was no significant difference between the location of the tumor displayed by intraoperative ultrasound. The tumor location displayed by the near-infrared fluorescence projection system was not influenced by the tumor movement and had no visual-time delay. Postoperative pathology confirmed that the projection range was consistent with the tumor range. Conclusion This near-infrared fluorescence projection technology innovates the intraoperative tumor imaging mode and can accurately navigate open hepatectomy in small sample trials, and it is expected to achieve wide clinical application through subsequent iterative optimization and verification.

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