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Showing 3 results for Sheidaei

Farahvash Mr, Yegane Ra, Farahvash B, Sheidaeian M, Masoomi M,
Volume 67, Issue 3 (5 2009)
Abstract

Normal 0 false false false EN-GB X-NONE AR-SA MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 !mso]> ject classid="clsid:38481807-CA0E-42D2-BF39-B33AF135CC4D" id=ieooui> Background: Trauma is the 2nd cause of mortality in Iran, after cardiovascular diseases. In traumatic patients, head and neck and face skeletal fracture is common. The most common facial fracture is mandible fracture and the least common is frontal fracture. Complications due to orbital fracture are more devasting than the other fractures in face.
Methods: These descriptive cross sectional studies are designed on 92 patients with orbital fractures in a referral educational trauma center, Imam Khomeini hospital, Tehran, Iran. Sample size was the patients who referred to this hospital with orbital fracture during the ten years period (1986-2000).
Results: In this study 74 patients were male and 18 patients were female. Mean age of patients was 30 years. The most common cause of orbital fracture was motor vehicle accident which was seen in 38 patients.46 patients had fracture in left orbit and 44 patients in right. Isolated orbital fracture was seen in 38 patients and 54 patients had concomitant trauma and fracture in the other organs. Management of orbital fracture was reduction of displaced bone fragment and fixation for osteosynthesis. The most common methods for osteosynthesis was fixation with miniplate which used in 53 patients and then reconstruction of orbital floor and roof with autologus bone graft. The most common complications due to orbital fracture was related to eyes that were seen in 20 patients.
Conclusion: Face fractures are a piece of all problems in multiple trauma patients as the tip of iceberg. Concomitant injuries are the concealed part of this iceberg. Early detection of orbital fracture and immediate treatment that prevent the future complications and deformities due to orbital fractures.


Armaghan Kazeminejad, Nooshin Izadpanahi, Somayeh Sheidaei, Samira Sadeghi, Maryam Ghasemi,
Volume 78, Issue 10 (January 2021)
Abstract

Background: Dermatophyte is a group of keratinophilic fungi that cause various skin lesions depending on the affected area. Dermatophytosis is usually diagnosed by clinical manifestation and confirmed by direct microscopy or fungal culture. There might be diagnostic difficulty with the presence of atypical dermatophytosis. Atypical dermatophytosis presents with clinical appearances ranging from eczematous, psoriasiform, pustular lesions, and others, that interferes with early diagnosis and disturbs patient’s life quality. Genital dermatophytosis is an uncommon presentation of cutaneous fungal infection; moreover, its manifestation without the involvement of the inguinal area, and simulating wart is a rare sign. In this study, we introduce a rare case of dermatophytosis with a wart-like appearance that was restricted to the skin of the genitalia.
Case Presentation: A 24-years-old woman was referred to the academic dermatology clinic of Boo- Ali SINA Hospital in Sari, Iran, in November 2019 with a 9-month complaint of verrucous and pruritic plaque in the genital area that previously misdiagnosed as wart with no response to treatment. The dermatologist requested a review of the previous pathology documents for diagnosing dermatophytosis. The pathologists reexamined the relevant paraffin-embedded skin tissue block of the patient. By Periodic acid-Schiff staining, some fungal elements had been found in the horny layers of the epidermis, so dermatophytosis was confirmed. Based on this diagnosis, terbinafine was prescribed and the patient responded well to this treatment after four weeks.
Conclusion: Although the occurrence of genital dermatophytosis with the verrucous appearance and without involvement of groin is a rare finding, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis. In each case suspected of genital dermatophytosis, direct examination or fungal culture for definite diagnosis and prevention of delay in the appropriate treatment is required.

Ali Sheidaei, Alireza Abadi, Fatemeh Nahidi, Farzaneh Amini, Farid Zayeri, Nafiseh Gazrani,
Volume 79, Issue 1 (April 2021)
Abstract

Background: Statistical models are used to investigate the relationship between variables in statistical studies. Considering the variety of statistical models, finding the most suitable model is a complex work. This study aimed to compare different models in the treatment of infants' colic and the misspecification of specificity.
Methods: This randomized clinical trial was conducted on 100 infants with colic in the pediatric clinic of Amir Kabir Hospital in Arak, the intervention and control groups were randomly divided into two groups. The collection and analysis of the data was performed in 2016. After teaching massage to mothers of the intervention group, they were asked to perform massage on infants three times a day during the week. In the control group, mothers can relieve the symptoms of colic by shaking the infant. Parents recorded the number and severity of crying daily in the checklist. Finally, by using different models, R software, SAS, and goodness of fit, the best model was introduced.
Results: In the massage group, the mean crying intensity of infants with colic decreased from 5.01 units on the first day to 2.47 units on the seventh day. On the other hand, the difference in mean sleep time changed from 1.81 hours in favor of the shaking group on the first day to 1.26 hours in favor of the massage group on the seventh day. Also, the severity of crying in the infants of the massage group was significantly higher than the impulse group. Regarding the grace of marginal models, the first-order self-return correlation structure was the best grace and for some variables, the model had random effects with a gamma distribution for the random component.
Conclusion: Massage can reduce infants' colic. Statistically, in the case of a nonlinear model, the variance of estimates is more than estimated to be influenced by the misspecification of the correlation structure.


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