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Introduction: Bronchoscopic lung volume reduction with endobronchial valves (EBV) is an effective procedure for patient with severe emphysema to improve lung function, exercise tolerance, dyspnoea and quality of life. Optimisation of patient and treatment lobe selection is essential for successful EBV outcomes. While clinical selection criteria are rigorous, many centres use a multidisciplinary team and rely on previous clinical experience for the selection process. To aid objective clinical decision making, we present a mathematical model to facilitate patient and target lobe selection.
Methods: A multidisciplinary team reviewed quantitative high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) analysis from 119 patients to select candidates for EBV and to select a treatment lobe. Two logistic regression models, (1) candidacy for EBV placement and (2) target-lobe selection, were developed based on the normalised distributions of the four quantitative HRCT variables (fissure completeness score, per cent of voxel density with HU < -910 and HU < -950, and lobar volumes) across all five lung lobes. An external cohort of 50 patients (25 candidates and 25 non-candidates) was used to validate the prediction model.
Results: Performance measures of the training cohort demonstrated an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.91, accuracy of 81%, sensitivity of 93% and specificity of 78% compared with the multidisciplinary teams' target lobe selection. The validation cohort demonstrated an AUC of 0.89, accuracy of 84%, sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 83% compared with the multidisciplinary team decision making.
Conclusions: Endobronchial valve lung volume reduction remains a potent palliative measure to improve quality of life in patients with hyperinflated emphysema. Our model for target lobe selection harnesses the multidisciplinary experience at a tertiary care centre to objectively select candidates and target lobes to assist clinicians' decision making. Future studies investigating prediction of lobar collapse and functional improvement after target lobe selection using our model are needed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjresp-2024-002903 | DOI Listing |
Eur J Pain
October 2025
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
Background: Pain catastrophising is a maladaptive cognitive-emotional trait linked to greater pain severity and poorer outcomes, yet its neurophysiological correlates remain unclear.
Objectives: We tested whether pain catastrophising amplifies cortical responses to nociceptive input, independent of subjective pain intensity.
Methods: Fifty-two healthy adults underwent EEG during painful laser stimulation (n = 29; mean age 24.
Ann Biomed Eng
September 2025
School of Mechanical Engineering, Ningxia University, Yinchuan, 750021, Ningxia, China.
Purpose: To investigate injury mechanisms and vulnerable regions for severe pulmonary contusion (PC) in astronauts during off-nominal capsule landings, establishing critical injury thresholds.
Methods: Six distinct high-intensity landing scenarios (≤52.1 g) were simulated using a drop-tower test stand and a Hybrid III anthropometric test device(ATD).
CNS Neurosci Ther
September 2025
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Xuan Wu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
Objective: To verify the effectiveness of the parietal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and take advantage of TMS-EEG to assess cortical excitability in patients with minimally conscious states (MCS).
Methods: We enrolled 10 MCS patients who received 10 sessions of 10 Hz rTMS on the parietal cortex for 10 consecutive days and then 10 days of sham stimulation after a 14-day wash-out period. The Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R) and TMS-EEG were used to assess the levels of consciousness and cortical excitability before and after active and sham stimulation, respectively.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg
August 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Niigata Seiro Hospital, 5968-2 Hasuno, Seiro-machi, KitaKanbara-gun, Niigata 957-0124, Japan.
Objective: The recently emerging laser interstitial thermal therapy is becoming a substitute treatment for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) due to its less invasiveness, but it offers lower seizure-free rates than traditional open surgery. Another less invasive stereotactic ablation surgery, that is radiofrequency thermocoagulation, is also an alternative surgical procedure. In particular, magnetic resonance imaging-guided stereotactic radiofrequency thermocoagulation (MRgSRFTC) has shown excellent seizure outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Psychobiol
September 2025
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
Early adversity is a well-established risk factor for psychopathology in youth. Contemporary taxonomies of adversity seek to distill the diverse stressors children face into meaningful categories of experience to enable more precise prediction of risk; however, few studies have tested these models using data-driven approaches in well-characterized, longitudinal samples. Here, we examined the latent structure of early stress across diverse domains of exposure, tested differential associations with psychopathology in adolescence, and investigated frontolimbic functional connectivity as a potential mediator.
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