Articles: middle-aged.
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Hepatic sarcomatoid carcinoma is a rare liver malignancy with atypical clinical symptoms and a high degree of malignancy. To improve the understanding of this disease, we collected the clinical and pathological data of 14 patients with hepatic sarcomatoid carcinoma admitted to the First Affiliated Hospital and Second Affiliated Hospital of Bengbu Medical College from 2011 to 2021 and reviewed the relevant literature. The clinical and pathological data of 14 patients with hepatic sarcomatoid carcinoma were collected from the electronic medical record system of the 2 hospitals. ⋯ Hepatic sarcomatoid carcinoma is more common in middle-aged and elderly patients, especially men, and has no characteristic clinical manifestations. Imaging examination and B-ultrasound-guided liver biopsy + immunohistochemistry can help diagnose. Radical surgery is the preferred method for hepatic sarcomatoid carcinoma, and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy is expected to prolong patient survival.
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Postoperative ischemic stroke in middle-aged and elderly patients with hip or knee arthroplasty remains a major postoperative challenge, little is known about its incidence and risk factors. This study sought to create a nomogram for precise prediction of ischemic stroke after hip or knee arthroplasty. Discharge data of all middle-aged and elderly patients undergoing primary hip or knee arthroplasty from May 2013 to October 2020 were queried. ⋯ The calibration curves for the probability of ischemic stroke showed optimal agreement between the probability as predicted by the nomogram and the actual probability (Hosmer-Lemeshow test: P = .818). We developed a practical nomogram that can predict the risk of ischemic stroke for middle-aged and elderly patients with hip or knee arthroplasty. This model has the potential to assist clinicians in making treatment recommendations.
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Chronic pain, cognitive deficits, and pain-related disability are interrelated. The prevalence of chronic pain and undiagnosed cognitive difficulties in middle age and older adults is increasing. Of the cognitive systems, executive function and episodic memory are most relevant to chronic pain. We examined the hypothesis that cognitive screening composite scores for executive function and memory would negatively associate with pain intensity and pain disability in a group of middle-aged and older adults with knee pain with or at risk for osteoarthritis. ⋯ The results of the current study demonstrates associations between pain metrics and cognitive domain scores within a common cognitive screening tool.
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AbstractParaspinal (erector spinae and multifidus) and psoas muscles contribute to spinal stability, but no study has yet examined the relationship between muscle mass and recurrent lumbar disc herniation (rLDH). The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of psoas and paraspinal muscle mass on recurrent Lumbar disc herniation (LDH). This retrospective study included 49 patients with LDH (22 men, 27 women; mean age: 59.9 years; range 32-80) who underwent discectomy and partial laminectomy without fusion and underwent both pre- and postoperative magnetic resonance imaging. ⋯ In the rLDH group, patients were younger (52.6 years vs 68.2 years; P = .001), segmental instability was more common (50.0% vs 4.3%; P = .001), and the CSA, LMM, CSASMI, and LMMSMI of psoas muscles were larger (5851.59 mm2 vs 4264.93 mm2, 5456.59 mm2 vs 4044.77 mm2, 18.77 cm2/m2 vs 13.86 cm2/m2, and 17.52 cm2/m2 vs 12.98 cm2/m2; P < .01 for all 4 variables). On multivariate logistic regression, age and segmental instability were independent risk factors for rLDH (odds ratio 0.886 and 18.527; P = .01 and P = .02, respectively). In middle-aged and elderly patients with lumbar disc herniation, relatively younger age, segmental instability, and greater psoas muscle mass may be risk factors for recurrence.
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Background: Palliative care is underutilized due in part to fear and misunderstanding, and depression might explain variation in fear of palliative care. Objective: Informed by the socioemotional selectivity theory, we hypothesized that older adults with cancer would be less depressed than younger adults, and subsequently less fearful of utilizing palliative care. Setting/Subjects: Patients predominately located in the United States with heterogeneous cancer diagnoses (n = 1095) completed the Patient-Reported Outcomes Information System (PROMIS) Depression scale and rated their fear of palliative care using the Palliative Care Attitudes Scale (PCAS). ⋯ An indirect effect (β = -0.04, standard error = .01, 95% confidence interval: -0.06 to -0.02) suggested that depression severity may account for up to 40% of age-associated differences in fear of palliative care. Conclusions: Findings indicate that older adults with cancer are more likely to favor palliative care, with depression symptom severity accounting for age-related differences. Targeted interventions among younger patients with depressive symptoms may be helpful to reduce fear and misunderstanding and increase utilization of palliative care.