Åke Nyström
Umeå University
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Featured researches published by Åke Nyström.
Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1992
Knut Segerström; Per Bjerle; Sten Graffman; Åke Nyström
Six factors that may increase the likelihood of swelling of the arm after treatment of breast cancer were investigated in 136 patients who had undergone treatment. The highest incidence of oedema was among patients who had received radiotherapy in high doses with few fractions to the axilla (60%), and in patients with a history of one or more infections in the arm on the operated side (89%). Overweight, oblique surgical incision, infection in the arm, and radiotherapy correlated with arm swelling. The age of the patient and whether the operation had been done on the dominant or non-dominant side correlated less with the incidence of oedema.
Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1992
G. Lindström; Åke Nyström
33 patients with non-union of the carpal scaphoid were diagnosed by X-ray examination two to 37 years following the original trauma. All of the patients could be contacted and summoned for a re-examination ten to 17 years later. X-rays revealed a 100% incidence of progressive radio-carpal osteoarthritis. It is concluded that freedom of pain is not a reliable prognostic indicator, and that all patients with non-union of the carpal scaphoid are likely to benefit from surgical treatment of the pseudarthrosis. The only exception to this rule might be the patient in whom the radio-carpal joint is already deteriorated by an advanced degenerative arthritis.
Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1990
G. Lindström; Åke Nyström
In a retrospective study of 229 patients with healed fractures of the waist of the scaphoid, the incidence and development of post-traumatic radiocarpal arthrosis was studied. With a minimum follow-up period of seven years, 5.2% of patients showed radiological evidence of radiocarpal arthrosis. It is concluded that an alteration of the carpal dynamics, due to deformation and shortening of the scaphoid, is the most likely cause of post-traumatic arthrosis after primary healing of scaphoid fractures.
Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1993
Clas Backman; Åke Nyström; Per Bjerle
Cold induced arterial vasospasm was studied in ten patients with single digit replantation, by measuring finger systolic pressure at different finger temperatures. Each patient was examined three times; within 2 weeks of surgery, after 1 year and after 3 years. The replantations were performed using long arterial and venous grafts. Cold-related vasospasm is established during the first year after trauma, and thereafter seems to be persistent. It is concluded that the subjective cold intolerance, which affects all patients after digital amputation regardless of whether replantation is performed or not, is partly due to vasospasm. It is less pronounced in patients without pathological vasospasm in the replanted digit. Cold intolerance is likely to decrease during the first 2 years after replantation, but not to disappear completely.
Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1983
Thor Söderberg; Åke Nyström; Göran Hallmans; Jan Hultén
The long-term results following 36 surgically and 34 conservatively treated fingertip amputations with bone exposure are presented in a retrospective study. Surgery did not produce better results even though it was performed by skilled hand surgeons. The advantages of the conservative (mainly adhesive zinc tape) treatment method are pointed out. The regenerative capacity of the amputated fingertip is shown and discussed.
Pain | 2000
Bram R. Kaufman; Elisabet Nyström; Sherdil Nath; Guy Foucher; Åke Nyström
This report presents seven patients with severe disability established at the time of a peripheral nerve block. In most of the cases, the injection was administered as a routine procedure by an experienced anesthesiologist. The patient histories suggest that the condition, which can be resistant to all treatment, in most cases could have been avoided if careful attention had been given to the occurrence of pain during the nerve block. It is likely that the risk of devastating iatrogenic disability can be minimized if a few basic principles are respected during the administration of peripheral nerve blocks.
Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1997
M. Lithell; C. Backman; Åke Nyström
The subjective symptoms called “post-traumatic cold intolerance” were analysed in a study of 40 patients with a history of digital trauma (amputation, neurovascular laceration, or comminuted fracture requiring surgical reconstruction). The patients were individually interviewed to obtain detailed information about perception of each symptom as well as the pattern of symptoms of posttraumatic cold intolerance. The study confirmed the high incidence of the condition and its potentially disabling nature. Although the individual symptoms described by the patients have a limited number of categories, the subjective expression of cold intolerance is too varied to allow an adequate definition or assessment to be based on any single symptom or group of symptoms.
Journal of Hand Surgery (European Volume) | 1991
Mats Hagberg; Åke Nyström; Bo Zetterlund
A follow-up study was conducted in forty-one men (fifty-five hands) treated surgically for carpal tunnel syndrome. The number of hours of vibration exposure and exactly which hand tool was used were recorded and each tool was categorized according to vibration level. The patients were divided into a low exposure and a high exposure group. Age at surgery, mean distal latency in the median nerve, and the duration between onset of symptoms and surgery were similar for the two groups. Only one patient experienced nocturnal paresthesia at follow-up in the low exposure group in contrast to twelve in the high exposure group. This corresponded to an age-standardized odds ratio (relative risk) of eighteen for nocturnal paresthesia after surgery in the high exposure group, with the low exposure group as referents. Previous vibration exposure may influence the recovery after carpal tunnel surgery.
Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1998
M. Lithell; C. Backman; Åke Nyström
Cold Intolerance is a common reason for disability after hand injury. In this study of posttraumatic cold intolerance, 20 patients with a history of digital replantation were matched with 20 control subjects who had not undergone replantation. The incidence and intensity of cold-related symptoms among patients in the two groups was investigated through the use of individual interviews and a grading scale for self-assessment of symptoms. The analysis of data indicates that although the pattern of symptoms may vary, the condition is neither more common nor more disabling among those who have undergone digital replantation. Cold intolerance after digital replantation seems, therefore, to be defined by the initial trauma and not by the subsequent reconstructive surgery.
Scandinavian Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery | 1995
Clas Backman; Åke Nyström; Christer Backman; Per Bjerle
Nineteen patients each of whom had had a single digit replanted were examined after replantation. The arterial reconstruction had been done with long grafts (n = 10) or short grafts or no graft (n = 9). The effect of local or whole body cooling on the replanted and uninjured opposite digits was monitored (9-46 months after the replantation), and the patients were given a questionnaire (9-95 months after replantation) designed to explore the development of their cold related symptoms in relation to time. All patients were troubled by cold intolerance, and improvement occurred in only 60% of the cases. Pathological (vasospastic) arterial reactions to cold measured as finger systolic pressure, were less common after replantation with long grafts. Perceived cold intolerance was significantly more pronounced in the group of patients (60%) who had evidence of cold induced arterial spasm in the replanted finger.