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Dive into the research topics where Markus Rautiainen is active.

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Featured researches published by Markus Rautiainen.


Stem Cells Translational Medicine | 2014

Adipose Stem Cells Used to Reconstruct 13 Cases With Cranio-Maxillofacial Hard-Tissue Defects

George K.B. Sándor; Jura Numminen; Jan Wolff; Tuomo Thesleff; Aimo Miettinen; Veikko Tuovinen; Bettina Mannerström; Mimmi Patrikoski; Riitta Seppänen; Susanna Miettinen; Markus Rautiainen; Juha Öhman

Although isolated reports of hard‐tissue reconstruction in the cranio‐maxillofacial skeleton exist, multipatient case series are lacking. This study aimed to review the experience with 13 consecutive cases of cranio‐maxillofacial hard‐tissue defects at four anatomically different sites, namely frontal sinus (3 cases), cranial bone (5 cases), mandible (3 cases), and nasal septum (2 cases). Autologous adipose tissue was harvested from the anterior abdominal wall, and adipose‐derived stem cells were cultured, expanded, and then seeded onto resorbable scaffold materials for subsequent reimplantation into hard‐tissue defects. The defects were reconstructed with either bioactive glass or β‐tricalcium phosphate scaffolds seeded with adipose‐derived stem cells (ASCs), and in some cases with the addition of recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein‐2. Production and use of ASCs were done according to good manufacturing practice guidelines. Follow‐up time ranged from 12 to 52 months. Successful integration of the construct to the surrounding skeleton was noted in 10 of the 13 cases. Two cranial defect cases in which nonrigid resorbable containment meshes were used sustained bone resorption to the point that they required the procedure to be redone. One septal perforation case failed outright at 1 year because of the postsurgical resumption of the patients uncontrolled nasal picking habit.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 2002

OK-432 (Picibanil) therapy for lymphangiomas in children.

Jussi Laranne; Leo Keski-Nisula; Riitta Rautio; Markus Rautiainen; Mari Airaksinen

Abstract Lymphangiomas are benign, soft tumors that most often affect the head and neck area, usually causing marked cosmetic and functional problems. Treatment options include surgery and a large number of different sclerotherapy agents. Surgical treatment is challenging because of the need for complete excision. The risk of damage to surrounding structures or poor cosmetic results is high. Various sclerotherapy agents have been shown to have minimal effects on lymphangiomas. Their use has been associated with severe systemic, local and cosmetic side effects. OK-432 (Picibanil) is a new and promising form of sclerotherapy. An intracystic injection of OK-432 produces a local inflammatory reaction, which leads to resolution of the lesion. We have treated 11 pediatric lymphangioma patients with OK-432 with excellent results: complete regression in six, marked regression in four and no response in one case. Local swelling should be anticipated, especially when treating lesions near the upper airway. We found OK-432 injections to be safe and effective as a first line of treatment for lymphangiomas.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 1999

Semi-automatic segmentation of computed tomographic images in volumetric estimation of nasal airway

P. Dastidar; Tomi Heinonen; Jura Numminen; Markus Rautiainen; E. Laasonen

Abstract The objective of this study was to determine nasal cavity volumes and cross-sectional profiles from segmented coronal high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) images. Pathological mucosal changes and congenital sinonasal variants were quantitated and three-dimensional (3D) images for determining sinonasal airway diseases evaluated by using the new semiautomatic segmentation software, Anatomatic. Anterior to posterior cross-sectional profiles of the sinonasal airway were obtained from acoustic rhinometry and segmented coronal HRCT images and compared in five patients having complaints of nasal obstruction and chronic sinusitis. Results showed that accurate volumes of air spaces in the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses were obtained. When compared, the cross-sectional profiles of the nasal cavities obtained from acoustic rhinometry and the segmentation technique were similar in the anterior portion, but differed in the posterior portion. The results obtained by coronal HRCT and segmentation were more reliable than those produced with acoustic rhinometry. 3D images acquired from segmented images were found to help make a good pre-operative assessment of the whole sinonasal compartment. Segmentation and volumetric analysis using the Anatomatic technique also proved to be well suited to the evaluation of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinus geometry in patients with sinonasal diseases.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 1992

Ultrastructural changes in human nasal cilia caused by the common cold and recovery of ciliated epithelium.

Markus Rautiainen; Heikki Kiukaanniemi; Juhani Nuutinen; Yrjö Collan

Changes in the ultrastructure of human respiratory cilia caused by the common cold were studied in 12 patients. The nasal mucosa was studied three times: on the first or second day after the beginning of symptoms, and 1 week and 3 weeks after the first biopsy. The damage was most severe at 1 week. The most remarkable finding was the loss of cilia and ciliated cells. However, the ultrastructure was usually normal, without any increase in tubular anomalies, as compared with the normal material of the previous reports. Three weeks after the beginning of the disease the number of cilia and ciliated cells had increased to nearly normal. However, as a sign of regeneration, immature short cilia (0.7 to 2.5 μm in length) were often seen. The ciliary orientation was uniform, dynein arms were normal, and there was no increase in the number of tubular anomalies. The results suggest that the impaired mucociliary function during viral infections is due to the loss of cilia and ciliated cells, rather than to ultrastructural anomalies in the cilia. The development of tubular anomalies and random ciliary orientation may require more extensive exposure to factors affecting ciliary function.


Laryngoscope | 2011

Acute supraglottitis in adults in Finland: Review and analysis of 308 cases

Argyro J. Bizaki; Jura Numminen; Jussi‐Pekka Vasama; Jussi Laranne; Markus Rautiainen

The aim of this article is to study the clinical features, management, and outcome in adult patients with acute supraglottitis.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 1995

Scanning electron microscopy findings of human respiratory cilia in chronic sinusitis and in recurrent respiratory infections.

Elina Toskala; Juhani Nuutinen; Markus Rautiainen

Acute and chronic infections cause morphological changes in the respiratory mucosa. The ultrastructure of human respiratory mucosa was studied by scanning electron microscopy from the maxillary sinuses of 28 patients, with chronic sinusitis, from middle turbinates of 60 patients, with recurrent respiratory infections, and from healthy sphenoidal sinuses of 31 patients. A loss of ciliated cells and an increasing number of nonciliated columnar cells with microvilli were seen in 62 per cent of the maxillary sinus mucosa. Ciliary disorientation was seen in 81 per cent of the chronically infected sinus mucosa and eight per cent in the healthy sphenoidal sinuses. Also metaplasia and extrusion of epithelial cells were prominent in chronic infections. Compound cilia were seen in 52 per cent of the samples from patients with chronic sinusitis and in 31 per cent of the healthy sphenoidal sinuses. Short cilia were often seen in infected mucosa indicating ciliogenesis.


American Journal of Rhinology | 2002

Correlation between rhinometric measurement methods in healthy young adults.

Jura Numminen; Mikko Ahtinen; Heini Huhtala; Jussi Laranne; Markus Rautiainen

The most common rhinometric measurement methods used in modern rhinology are acoustic rhinometry, rhinomanometry, and nasal peak expiratory flow (PEF) rate. In this prospective study, we wanted to clarify whether the parameters given by these three methods in the same subject support each other and can be used simultaneously in clinical practice. We also wanted to define the dimensions of normal nasal geometry and function based on these three methods. The rhinometric measurements were done in 249 healthy white subjects consisting of 171 women and 78 men. The geometry was analyzed with regard to body mass index (BMI) and smoking habits. The result could be used as some kind of reference value for the same kind of patient cohort as when rhinological pathology is investigated. The measurements obtained by acoustic rhinometry showed only statistically significant correlations between the measured volume and minimal cross-sectional area in the nasal cavities (r = 0.959). Rhinomanometry showed only a statistically significant correlation between the measured resistance in expiration and inspiration (r = 0.977). Acoustic rhinometry, rhinomanometry, and nasal PEF did not show any correlations and the BMI did not have any effect on the results. Although the smoking group was relatively small in this cohort, the rhinometric methods showed smaller nasal cavity volume, higher resistance, and lower nasal PEF values. Based on these results, we recommend the use of these three rhinometric methods as independent instruments in rhinological examinations. However, in the pathological nose, e.g., smokers, the methods show equal changes in measurements. It is important to measure at least acoustic rhinometry and rhinomanometry at the same time in clinical practice to achieve good quality of examinations.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 1997

Functional vs. Radical Maxillary Surgery. Failures after Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery

Matti Penttilä; Markus Rautiainen; J. Pukander; M. Kataja

Randomized FES or Caldwell-Luc (C-L) operations were performed in 150 patients suffering from chronic maxillary sinusitis during 1987-1989. Follow-up examination was done for 143 patients (95%) 1 year postoperatively. Although 15 patients had already deceased, questionnaires were obtained from 128 patients (85%) 5-9 years after operation. One year after surgery 51% of the C-L patients and 77% of the FES patients reported no symptoms or distinct improvement in their global symptoms, whereas 5-9 years postoperatively 82% of the C-L and 76% of the FES patients reported this outcome, respectively. Thirteen C-L operated patients (18%) and 14 FES patients (20%) have been reoperated during 7-9 years follow-up. In most cases revision surgery was done for polyposis or maxillary sinusitis. In the long term, altogether 21 patients (28%), including 14 reoperated patients, were failures after FES. These included also 4 patients with global symptoms unchanged at late inquiry and 3 other patients, though getting better, reported unwillingness for FES operation if they had known the result beforehand.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 1986

A method for measuring the orientation (“beat direction”) of respiratory cilia

Markus Rautiainen; Y. Collan; J. Nuutinen

SummaryWe have created a method for measuring the orientation of cilia in the respiratory epithelium. Ciliary orientation is the direction perpendicular to the plane defined by the central tubules of the cilia and is an estimate of ciliary beat direction. Ciliary orientation can be estimated by measuring the angle between the plane defined by the central tubules and a reference line. The standard deviation of these measurements describes the variation present in the beat directions of the cilia. The reference line must be so chosen that the majority of measurements falls at about the middle of the 0°–180° range. We tested measurements by using both a glass angle measure and a semiautomatic image analyzer (IBAS I). The latter approach was faster and more reproducible. We made our measurements of normal tissues on samples obtained from two healthy adult non-smokers. Measurements were made in four areas of each sample, with 59–110 cilia in each. The differences between the maximum and minimum angles of the ciliary orientation in the same area varied from 167.9° to 85.4° from the reference line. The standard deviation varied from 18.0° to 35.4° and we consider this to be a normal variation in ciliary orientation. Of the cilia, 57% were within a standard deviation of 20°.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 1990

Ciliary orientation in the “immotile cilia” syndrome

Markus Rautiainen; Y. Collan; J. Nuutinen; B.A. Afzelius

SummaryCiliary orientation was studied in 43 patients with the “immotile cilia” syndrome. Twenty-four of these patients had total situs inversus. One mucosal specimen was taken from uterine cervical epithelium, 2 were from bronchial mucosa and 40 from nasal mucosa. The orientation of the cilia was measured from micrographs using a semiautomatic image analyzer (IBAS I). The results from patients were compared with those of 10 control subjects. The mean standard deviation and its standard deviation of the angles of ciliary orientation was 39.7° ± 9.2° in 43 patients and 27.4° ± 4.3° in the control group. The difference between the groups is highly significant statistically (P ≤ 0.001). However, there were no statistically significant differences in the standard deviations of ciliary orientation between the fields sectioned near the cell membrane or near the ciliary tip. We were also unable to find any significant differences in the standard deviations of the ciliary angles in the specimens taken from brush biopsies and excisional biopsies. There were also no statistically significant differences between the standard deviations of the ciliary angles for the groups with or without situs inversus. If 35° is considered to be the limit value for the mean standard deviation between normal and pathological specimens in our total material, this would give a specificity of 0.90 and a sensitivity of 0.72.

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