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17 pages, 869 KB  
Systematic Review
Prediction Models for Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation After Cardiac Surgery: A Systematic Review and Critical Appraisal
by Bryam López Tuesta, Yerson Alberca-Naira, Jhair Alexander Leon-Rodriguez, Jonathan Rodriguez-Pratto, Jose D. Andrade-Saavedra, Franck J. Calderon-Chilet, Carlos A. Sarmiento-Maldonado, Oriana Rivera-Lozada, Cesar Bonilla-Asalde and Joshuan J. Barboza
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 5255; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15135255 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) is a frequent complication after cardiac surgery and is associated with increased morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, and higher healthcare costs. Numerous multivariable prediction models have been developed to estimate individual risk; however, their methodological robustness, validation status, and clinical [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) is a frequent complication after cardiac surgery and is associated with increased morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, and higher healthcare costs. Numerous multivariable prediction models have been developed to estimate individual risk; however, their methodological robustness, validation status, and clinical transportability remain uncertain. This systematic review aimed to critically evaluate the methodological quality, validation strategies, and predictive performance of multivariable prediction models developed to estimate the risk of postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) after cardiac surgery. Methods: In accordance with PRISMA 2020 guidelines, we conducted a comprehensive search of PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase from inception to July 2025. Studies that developed or externally validated multivariable prediction models for POAF in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery were eligible. Data extraction was performed using the CHARMS checklist, and methodological quality was assessed with PROBAST. Model performance was summarized descriptively, focusing on discrimination (C-statistic/AUC), calibration reporting, and validation strategies. Results: A total of 39 studies were included. Most models were based on logistic regression, whereas a minority employed Cox regression or machine learning techniques. Reported discrimination ranged from 0.60 to 0.98, demonstrating substantial heterogeneity in predictive performance. Calibration was inconsistently reported. Six studies performed external validation. According to PROBAST, 32 of 39 studies (82%) were rated at high risk of bias, predominantly within the analysis domain due to inadequate handling of overfitting, insufficient events-per-variable ratios, and limited validation procedures. Conclusions: Existing prediction models for POAF show variable discrimination but are frequently limited by high risk of bias, inadequate validation, and incomplete calibration assessment, thereby restricting their clinical applicability. Future research should prioritize rigorous external validation, transparent reporting in accordance with TRIPOD recommendations, and methodological strategies that enhance model generalizability and transportability across diverse surgical populations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coronary Intervention: Current Strategies and Future Directions)
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14 pages, 1674 KB  
Article
Outcomes and Decision-Making Following Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Within a Multidisciplinary Neuroprognostication Pathway in a Tertiary Cardiac Intensive Care Unit
by Guilherme Movio, Uzma Sajjad, Dana Prisenznakova, Emma Beadle, Daryl Perilla, Soyun Choi, Lauren Woolford, Marco Mion, Ayush Mohan, Maxwell Damian, Branimir Nevajda, Saneesh Suresh, John R. Davies, Maria Rita Maccaroni and Thomas R. Keeble
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 5252; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15135252 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Neuroprognostication after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) remains clinically challenging, particularly when withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (WLST) is considered. International guidelines recommend delayed, multimodal assessment, but real-world descriptions of how this is operationalised within multidisciplinary pathways remain limited. Methods: We conducted a single-centre [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Neuroprognostication after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) remains clinically challenging, particularly when withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (WLST) is considered. International guidelines recommend delayed, multimodal assessment, but real-world descriptions of how this is operationalised within multidisciplinary pathways remain limited. Methods: We conducted a single-centre retrospective observational cohort study of adults admitted to a tertiary cardiac arrest centre intensive care unit following OHCA between June 2022 and December 2025. Patients were conveyed according to the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society OHCA pathway; therefore, this was a selected cardiac arrest centre cohort enriched for shockable rhythms and suspected reversible cardiac causes, rather than an unselected OHCA population. Patients who remained unconscious at ≥72 h following a sedation hold entered a structured multidisciplinary team (MDT) neuroprognostication pathway. Outcomes included survival to hospital discharge, Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) at discharge, neuroprognostication investigation use, and timing of WLST. Results: Of 406 patients admitted following OHCA, 310 were admitted to ICU and included in the analysis. The cohort was predominantly male (82.3%), with a mean age of 63.8 years; 82.9% had ventricular fibrillation as the initial rhythm. Overall, 182 patients (58.7%) survived to hospital discharge, of whom 160 (87.9%) had a favourable neurological outcome (CPC 1–2). A total of 119 patients entered the neuroprognostication pathway. Of these, 72 underwent WLST after completed MDT review, 10 died before MDT decision-making, and 37 survived to hospital discharge. Among patients undergoing WLST, investigation use was high: CT brain 100%, NSE 91.7%, EEG 90.3%, SSEP 88.9%, and MRI brain 27.8%. Median time to WLST was 5.5 days. Conclusions: In this selected tertiary CAC cohort, enriched for shockable rhythms through BCIS pathway-based conveyance, survival to hospital discharge was high and neurological outcomes among survivors were predominantly favourable. Within this setting, delayed, multimodal neuroprognostication and WLST decision-making were operationalised through a structured MDT pathway aligned with contemporary guideline recommendations. These findings provide contemporary real-world benchmark data on pathway implementation for comparable centres seeking to evaluate or develop structured neuroprognostication services. Full article
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20 pages, 1689 KB  
Systematic Review
Protective and Healing Effects of Zinc L-Carnosine on the Oral Mucosa: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
by Pierpaolo De Francesco, Paolo Vescovi, Giuseppe Pedrazzi and Ilaria Giovannacci
Dent. J. 2026, 14(7), 408; https://doi.org/10.3390/dj14070408 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Oral mucosal injury is a frequent complication in oncologic and surgical settings, significantly affecting patient quality of life. Zinc L-carnosine (ZnC) is a cytoprotective compound with anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and epithelial reparative properties. This systematic review evaluated its protective and healing effects [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Oral mucosal injury is a frequent complication in oncologic and surgical settings, significantly affecting patient quality of life. Zinc L-carnosine (ZnC) is a cytoprotective compound with anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and epithelial reparative properties. This systematic review evaluated its protective and healing effects on oral mucosa. Methods: A systematic search followed PRISMA guidelines was conducted across PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library (2015–2026). Randomized and non-randomized controlled studies assessing ZnC in patients with or at risk of oral mucosal injury were included. Risk of bias was evaluated using RoB 2 and ROBINS-I tools. Meta-analyses were conducted under both common- and random-effects models. The certainty of evidence was evaluated according to the GRADE guidelines. Results: Eight studies (n = 544) were included. Six non-randomized studies showed moderate or serious risk of bias, while randomized trials presented some concerns. ZnC was administered in different formulations, including mouthwashes, lozenges, and mucoadhesive suspensions based on sodium alginate, polyacrylic acid, and carboxyvinyl polymer, and across different clinical settings. Meta-analysis showed a reduced incidence of severe oral mucositis (grade ≥3) under the Common Effect model (OR 0.48; 95% CI 0.32–0.72), although statistical significance was not maintained under random-effects models (OR 0.44; 95% CI 0.18–1.06). Similar results were observed for grade ≥2 mucositis. According to the GRADE assessment, the certainty of evidence was low for oral mucositis outcomes and very low for oral mucosal healing. Only one study suggested improved surgical wound healing. No serious adverse events were reported. Conclusions: ZnC may support oral mucosal protection and healing, particularly in preventing oral mucositis. However, substantial heterogeneity and limited high-quality randomized evidence restrict the strength of conclusions. Further well-designed randomized trials are needed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Review Papers in Dentistry: 2nd Edition)
24 pages, 3040 KB  
Review
Practical Management in Coronary In-Stent Restenosis: A Narrative Review
by Handi Y. Salim, Awais Tahir, Wen Hui Teh, Mala Jheinga, Sherab Thaye and Lampson Fan
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 5250; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15135250 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
Coronary in-stent restenosis (ISR) remains a major contributor to repeat revascularisation despite advances in drug-eluting stent (DES) technology. Its persistence reflects a complex and heterogeneous interplay among mechanical, biological, and procedural factors, and understanding the dominant mechanism in each case is fundamental to [...] Read more.
Coronary in-stent restenosis (ISR) remains a major contributor to repeat revascularisation despite advances in drug-eluting stent (DES) technology. Its persistence reflects a complex and heterogeneous interplay among mechanical, biological, and procedural factors, and understanding the dominant mechanism in each case is fundamental to effective treatment selection. This narrative review provides a contemporary, mechanism-guided approach to the practical management of coronary ISR. We summarise the definition, incidence, and classification of ISR—including the Mehran, Waksman, and SCAI 2023 time-based frameworks—and outline patient-related, procedural, anatomical, and stent-related risk factors. The pathophysiology of neointimal hyperplasia and neoatherosclerosis is discussed with reference to its clinical implications. Intracoronary imaging with intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) or optical coherence tomography (OCT) is central to ISR characterisation and treatment planning. Current international guidelines support imaging use in ISR management, though it is important to recognise that this recommendation is based largely on observational and surrogate-endpoint data rather than ISR-specific randomised trials demonstrating reductions in hard clinical outcomes, and practical barriers including cost, availability, and operator expertise must be acknowledged. Evidence-based treatment strategies—including drug-coated balloons (DCB), repeat DES implantation, lesion-modifying therapies, vascular brachytherapy, and coronary artery bypass grafting—are reviewed critically with reference to contemporary trial data and their specific clinical applicability. The choice between DCB and repeat DES is addressed with greater nuance, accounting for ISR type (BMS-ISR versus DES-ISR), lesion pattern, stent layering, and bleeding risk. Management considerations in complex subsets—chronic total occlusion ISR, left main ISR, saphenous vein graft ISR, and recurrent ISR—are also addressed. We propose a practical, substrate-driven management framework aligned with the 2024 ESC, 2021 ACC/AHA/SCAI, and 2018 JCS/JSCVS guidelines. Future research priorities include ISR-specific randomised trials with hard clinical endpoints, prospective validation of imaging-guided treatment algorithms, head-to-head comparisons of DCB platforms, and investigation of pharmacological strategies targeting neoatherosclerosis progression. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Interventional Cardiology: From Access to Outcomes)
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15 pages, 890 KB  
Review
Laboratory Automation and Robotics in Indonesia: Challenges, Workforce Transformation, and a Roadmap for Equitable Implementation
by Allan Johannes Andaria, Atna Permana, Steldy Runtuwene Lantaka, Hizkia Svenly Isworo and Julystia Pratiwi Egidia Mole
Laboratories 2026, 3(3), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/laboratories3030010 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
The rapid advancement of laboratory automation, robotics, and digital technologies has significantly transformed laboratory medicine worldwide, improving efficiency, diagnostic accuracy, and quality management. However, the adoption of these technologies in developing countries such as Indonesia remains uneven and is influenced by infrastructural, financial, [...] Read more.
The rapid advancement of laboratory automation, robotics, and digital technologies has significantly transformed laboratory medicine worldwide, improving efficiency, diagnostic accuracy, and quality management. However, the adoption of these technologies in developing countries such as Indonesia remains uneven and is influenced by infrastructural, financial, regulatory, and workforce-related challenges. This structured narrative review aimed to critically examine the current landscape of laboratory automation and robotics in Indonesia, with particular emphasis on implementation challenges, workforce transformation among medical laboratory scientists (Ahli Teknologi Laboratorium Medik, ATLM), and pathways toward equitable integration. Studies published between 2015 and 2025 were identified through PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar, complemented by Indonesian regulatory documents, professional guidelines, and relevant grey literature. The review was informed by PRISMA principles and synthesized narratively to explore technological developments, operational impacts, policy contexts, and implementation barriers relevant to Indonesian laboratory systems. The findings indicate that automation and robotics offer substantial benefits, including improved turnaround time, enhanced quality assurance, reduced laboratory errors, and greater operational efficiency. Nevertheless, significant barriers persist, particularly disparities in digital infrastructure, financial constraints, limited workforce readiness, and the absence of comprehensive implementation frameworks. The review further highlights that automation is reshaping rather than replacing the role of ATLM, shifting professional responsibilities toward digital competency, automation oversight, data interpretation, and quality management. Achieving sustainable laboratory automation in Indonesia therefore requires an equity-centered and systems-oriented approach involving regulatory strengthening, workforce development, infrastructure investment, and multi-stakeholder collaboration. With strategic planning and policy alignment, laboratory automation and robotics hold considerable potential to modernize laboratory services and support Indonesia’s broader healthcare transformation agenda. Full article
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26 pages, 1059 KB  
Systematic Review
Non-Invasive Assessment of Hypertonic Muscle Properties After Botulinum Toxin Neuromodulation in Post-Stroke Patients: A Systematic Literature Review of Recent Evidence (2023–2025) on Mobility and Balance
by Sebastian Giuvara, Gelu Onose, Constantin Munteanu, Cristina Popescu, Aura Spinu, Andrada Mirea and Aurelian Anghelescu
Life 2026, 16(7), 1120; https://doi.org/10.3390/life16071120 (registering DOI) - 5 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background: Post-stroke spasticity is a frequent and disabling consequence of stroke, including when affecting the lower limbs, where it may impair stance, gait, balance, postural control, functional independence and quality of life. Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) is widely used as a focal [...] Read more.
Background: Post-stroke spasticity is a frequent and disabling consequence of stroke, including when affecting the lower limbs, where it may impair stance, gait, balance, postural control, functional independence and quality of life. Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) is widely used as a focal neuromodulatory treatment for post-stroke spasticity. However, the relationship between BoNT-A-induced reduction in muscle hypertonia, objective changes in spastic muscle’s biomechanical properties, and functional outcomes such as mobility and balance remains insufficiently clarified. This systematic review aimed to synthesize recent evidence regarding the non-invasive assessment of spastic muscle properties following BoNT-A administration in post-stroke patients, with emphasis on mobility and balance outcomes. Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. The search was performed in international electronic databases and included studies published between 1 January 2023 and 31 December 2025. The search strategy used specific keywords and keyword combinations/syntaxes, contextually, related to the topic of interest. Results: A total of 32 studies met the eligibility criteria and were included in the final data analysis and synthesis, comprising 13 primary clinical studies—6 randomized or controlled interventional studies and 7 observational studies—together with 12 reviews or evidence syntheses, 3 technical or clinical framework papers, and 4 survey, epidemiological, health-services or health-economic studies. Overall, the included articles addressed BoNT-A treatment in post-stroke spasticity, with partial focus on muscle properties, gait, mobility, and functional outcomes. However, only a limited number of studies investigated objective non-invasive assessment methods, and few directly related muscle-property changes in balance and mobility outcomes. Formal risk-of-bias assessment and quantitative synthesis were not performed because of the substantial heterogeneity of the included evidence, with only two studies being potentially suitable for pooling and these addressing different muscle groups, interventions, and outcome domains. Discussion and Conclusions: The reviewed literature confirms the clinical relevance of BoNT-A in the management of post-stroke spasticity. However, most studies assess treatment effects mainly through clinical scales, while objective evaluation of muscle stiffness, elasticity, viscoelastic properties, and their relationship with mobility and balance remains limited. Although some studies address gait, functional recovery, or muscle-related changes, the combined use of BoNT-A treatment, myotonometric assessment, and proprioceptive–stabilometric evaluation is largely absent. Therefore, current evidence highlights an important research gap and supports the need for future longitudinal studies integrating non-invasive biomechanical and balance assessment tools to better monitor treatment response and guide individualized neurorehabilitation in post-stroke patients. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Medical Research)
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18 pages, 7230 KB  
Review
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation/Replacement (TAVI/TAVR): How It Started, How It’s Going, and Where It’s Going
by Alok Shah, Amr Gamal, Hesham Abdelaziz, Matthew Luckie, Andrew Wiper, Ranjit More and Tawfiq Choudhury
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 5242; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15135242 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation/Replacement (TAVI/TAVR) has come a long way since the first-in-human implant by Prof Cribier & colleagues in 2002. Initially a consideration for inoperable/high-surgical-risk patients, TAVI is now indicated in patients with severe tricuspid aortic stenosis and suitable anatomy aged 70 [...] Read more.
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation/Replacement (TAVI/TAVR) has come a long way since the first-in-human implant by Prof Cribier & colleagues in 2002. Initially a consideration for inoperable/high-surgical-risk patients, TAVI is now indicated in patients with severe tricuspid aortic stenosis and suitable anatomy aged 70 or higher. This has been made possible due to improvements in preprocedural planning, performance upgrades to and evolution of transcatheter heart valve (THV) systems and increasing operator experience. Younger age at index implantation, complexities of redo TAVI planning and methods to improve THV durability are the next frontiers. This review summarizes these advancements while emphasizing preprocedural planning, current guidelines, and individualized device selection, with a brief note on polymeric heart valves—developed to overcome the disadvantageous bioprosthetic dysfunction seen with current THVs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Clinical Insights and Advances in Structural Heart Disease)
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21 pages, 1642 KB  
Review
Biologically Informed Radiotherapy in Glioblastoma: A Structured Framework for Imaging-Guided Clinical Decision-Making
by Flavio Donnini, Giovanni Rubino, Giuseppe Battaglia, Pierpaolo Pastina, Tommaso Carfagno, Marta Vannini, Alfonso Cerase, Giulio Bagnacci, Armando Perrella, Salvatore Chibbaro, Maria Antonietta Mazzei and Paolo Tini
Radiation 2026, 6(3), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/radiation6030025 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Radiotherapy for glioblastoma remains anchored to postoperative structural MRI and anatomy-based target definitions, despite marked spatial heterogeneity and dynamic biological change during chemoradiotherapy. Advanced MRI, amino-acid PET, radiomics, and habitat imaging can characterize tumor biology beyond conventional anatomy, yet their relevance to radiotherapy [...] Read more.
Radiotherapy for glioblastoma remains anchored to postoperative structural MRI and anatomy-based target definitions, despite marked spatial heterogeneity and dynamic biological change during chemoradiotherapy. Advanced MRI, amino-acid PET, radiomics, and habitat imaging can characterize tumor biology beyond conventional anatomy, yet their relevance to radiotherapy planning and their evidentiary maturity differ substantially. This narrative review examines the current evidence for biologically informed radiotherapy in glioblastoma and proposes an imaging-based actionability framework that organizes imaging-derived findings into five levels of evidentiary maturity, from descriptive or associative signals to intervention-ready biomarkers, to guide literature interpretation, multidisciplinary discussion, and prospective protocol design. Standard MRI-based planning remains the clinical backbone, supported by contemporary guidelines and the absence of randomized evidence demonstrating benefit from routine biologically guided target modification. Advanced MRI is discussed as the most practical serial platform for treatment-course reassessment, amino-acid PET as a selective complementary tool for metabolic clarification and recurrence assessment, and radiomics and habitat imaging as promising but not yet intervention-ready research layers. Across modalities, prospective evidence supports feasibility more consistently than clinical benefit. The proposed framework is intended to separate biologically informative findings from those sufficiently validated to justify a defined radiotherapy consequence, and to structure the translational path toward intervention-grade evidence in glioblastoma radiotherapy. Full article
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37 pages, 1290 KB  
Review
Nonlinear Measures Applied to Spontaneous Infant Movement Analysis: A Scoping Review
by Joana Ferreira, Marta Freitas, Sofia Gaspar, Francisco Pinho, Hélder Fonseca and Cláudia Silva
Sensors 2026, 26(13), 4267; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26134267 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Spontaneous movement analysis provides valuable information about the maturation of the central nervous system and the emergence of motor control strategies in very young babies. Nonlinear measures capture dynamic aspects of movement that cannot be represented by linear methods. However, their implementation in [...] Read more.
Spontaneous movement analysis provides valuable information about the maturation of the central nervous system and the emergence of motor control strategies in very young babies. Nonlinear measures capture dynamic aspects of movement that cannot be represented by linear methods. However, their implementation in clinical practice faces challenges, including the lack of standardized protocols and accessible tools for routine use. This scoping review aimed to map and characterize the nonlinear measures used to analyze spontaneous infant movement, including assessment context, instruments, data collection protocols, and main variables. The review followed JBI methodology and PRISMA-ScR guidelines. Searches were conducted in PubMed®, Web of Science™, IEEE Xplore®, ScienceDirect®, and Google Scholar for studies published from 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2025. Of 1166 records identified, 18 met the inclusion criteria. The nonlinear measures were grouped into five main methodological families: entropy-based measures (n = 10), state-space and dynamical systems measures (n = 4), recurrence-based analysis (n = 3), symbolic and discrete-state approaches (n = 3), and variance and frequency-based nonlinear descriptors (n = 1). Studies were conducted in laboratory settings (n = 6) and in hospital and/or home environments (n = 10). Two studies did not clearly specify the assessment context. Kinematic assessment was mainly performed using video-based systems (n = 7), accelerometers (n = 4), and wearable sensors (n = 2), with most studies focusing on the upper and lower limbs. Several investigations extended beyond single-joint analyses to examine inter-limb relationships and whole-body configurations, capturing spatial coordination patterns across multiple body segments. Kinetic assessment was conducted using pressure mats (n = 4) and force platforms (n = 1), with the center of pressure displacement as the primary outcome. Future research should prioritise methodological harmonisation and theoretical clarity. Consensus is needed regarding minimal data requirements, parameter selection, and reporting standards for commonly used nonlinear measures. Studies should also move beyond single-metric approaches and adopt multivariate frameworks that integrate complementary nonlinear metrics. The absence of standardised acquisition and analytical protocols currently limits cross-study comparability and hinders the clinical translation of nonlinear movement metrics as objective tools for early neurodevelopmental assessment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sensors in Biomechanics, Neurophysiology and Neurorehabilitation)
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30 pages, 827 KB  
Systematic Review
“I Was Embarrassed to Go and See a Counsellor”: Stigma Experienced by Individuals Diagnosed with Mental Illness (A Systematic Review and Meta-Synthesis)
by Oladapo Akinlotan, Dinithi Vidanage and Allen O’connor
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(7), 873; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23070873 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background: Stigma is a persistent barrier to psychosocial wellbeing and recovery of individuals with mental illnesses. Aim: This study aims to examine stigma experienced by individuals diagnosed with mental illnesses. Method: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of peer-reviewed qualitative primary [...] Read more.
Background: Stigma is a persistent barrier to psychosocial wellbeing and recovery of individuals with mental illnesses. Aim: This study aims to examine stigma experienced by individuals diagnosed with mental illnesses. Method: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of peer-reviewed qualitative primary studies followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines. Five databases: CINAHL Ultimate, APA PsycArticles, APA PsycINFO, MEDLINE Ultimate, and Embase were searched for studies published between 2021 and 2025. A total of 17 studies were included after rigorous screening. Results: Thematic analysis identified three major themes and fifteen sub-themes. These are manifestations of stigma (prevalence of stigma, operation of stigma, stigma related to mental health diagnosis, stigma related to motherhood and impacts of stigma), multiple factors shaping stigma (ignorance and misunderstanding, spiritual and religious beliefs, family and friends, cultural beliefs) and management of stigma (management strategies, internalising stigma, isolation due to stigma, disclosure of mental illness, non-disclosure of mental illness and help-seeking for mental illness). Conclusions: Stigma related to mental illness remains widespread and continues to influence individuals’ experiences, relationships, and help-seeking behaviours. Addressing stigma through improved mental health awareness and supportive environments is essential to promote recovery and wellbeing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Reducing Stigma and Discrimination in Global Mental Health)
30 pages, 4659 KB  
Article
Epidemiological and Evolutionary Dynamics of Dengue Virus in Saudi Arabia: Insights from Three Decades of Molecular and Serological Surveillance
by Mohamed A. Farrag, Reem M. Aljowaie, Ibrahim M. Aziz, Rawan M. Alshalan, Abdulaziz Abdullah Almosa, Basel Mohammed Alnafjan and Najat A. Y. Marraiki
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(13), 6014; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27136014 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
B Dengue fever represents a significant public health challenge in Saudi Arabia, yet comprehensive molecular characterization of circulating serotypes remains limited. This study combines epidemiological and phylogenetic analyses to understand dengue virus (DENV) dynamics in the Kingdom. A systematic review and meta-analysis of [...] Read more.
B Dengue fever represents a significant public health challenge in Saudi Arabia, yet comprehensive molecular characterization of circulating serotypes remains limited. This study combines epidemiological and phylogenetic analyses to understand dengue virus (DENV) dynamics in the Kingdom. A systematic review and meta-analysis of dengue epidemiological data from Saudi Arabia (1992–2026) was the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. All available DENV envelope (E) gene sequences from Saudi human cases (1992–2023) were retrieved from GenBank and Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data (GISAID). Phylogenetic trees were constructed using maximum likelihood with 1000 bootstrap replicates and best-fit models. Selection pressure was analyzed using SLAC, FEL, FUBAR, and MEME methods, while glycosylation sites were predicted with NetNGlyc and NetOGlyc. The pooled seroprevalence from 25 studies (n = 32,393) was 40.71% (95% CI: 26.96–56.10%). DENV-2 predominated (80.25%), followed by DENV-1 and DENV-3, with DENV-4 remaining rare (0.42%). Males (67–78%) and adults aged 25–44 years were most affected. Phylogenetic analysis of 50 Saudi isolates showed DENV-1 strains clustered within American–African (1994) and Asian (2004–2011) genotypes, all DENV-2 within the Cosmopolitan genotype, and all DENV-3 within Genotype III (bootstrap support 99–100%). Selection pressure analysis indicated pervasive positive selection in DENV-2, episodic selection across serotypes, and strong purifying selection in the E gene. Several amino acid substitutions with potential functional importance were identified. No DENV-4 E gene sequences from Saudi Arabia are publicly available. Dengue in western Saudi Arabia is characterized by DENV-2 predominance, co-circulation of three serotypes, and multiple introductions. The absence of DENV-4 sequences highlights critical surveillance gaps. Sustained molecular surveillance, expanded genomic sequencing, and data sharing are essential for effective prevention and vaccine preparedness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Microbiology)
11 pages, 223 KB  
Review
Medical and Surgical Management of Hidradenitis Suppurativa
by John W. Frew and Falk G. Bechara
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(13), 5238; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15135238 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background: HS is a chronic inflammatory skin disease in which inflammatory nodules and abscesses coexist with tunnels, fibrosis, and scarring. This dual biology explains why medical therapy often improves inflammatory dissease activity without fully addressing fixed tissue damage, whereas surgery can achieve durable [...] Read more.
Background: HS is a chronic inflammatory skin disease in which inflammatory nodules and abscesses coexist with tunnels, fibrosis, and scarring. This dual biology explains why medical therapy often improves inflammatory dissease activity without fully addressing fixed tissue damage, whereas surgery can achieve durable local control but does not treat diffuse inflammatory burden. Contemporary international guidelines increasingly endorse multimodal and medicosurgical care. Objective: To critically compare the evidence supporting medical and surgical management of HS, with emphasis on outcomes, indications, limitations, and clinical decision-making relevant to contemporary practice. Methods: A structured review was undertaken using PubMed/MEDLINE, the Cochrane Library, and major dermatology guideline sources, with searches updated to 7 May 2026. Priority was given to clinical guidelines, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, and higher-quality observational studies. Evidence was synthesized narratively because endpoints, populations, and follow-up intervals differed markedly across medical and surgical studies. Results: Medical evidence is strongest for biologic therapy in moderate-to-severe inflammatory HS. Weekly adalimumab improved week-12 HiSCR in the phase 3 PIONEER trials; secukinumab improved week-16 and week-52 outcomes in SUNSHINE/SUNRISE; and bimekizumab improved week-16 HiSCR50 in BE HEARD I/II. Surgical evidence is strongest for wide excision in structurally advanced disease, particularly when compared with local excision or incision and drainage. Meta-analytic data consistently show lower recurrence after wide excision than after local excision, and lower recurrence after flap or graft reconstruction than after primary closure. Combined therapy is increasingly supported: peri-operative adalimumab improved outcomes in SHARPS, and surgery plus adalimumab outperformed adalimumab alone in a pragmatic 12-month RCT. Conclusions: HS is best managed by matching treatment to disease phenotype. Medical therapy is essential for inflammatory control; surgery is essential for persistent tunnels, fibrosis, and scarred regional disease. The strongest overall clinical position is an integrated, multidisciplinary model in which systemic therapy reduces inflammatory load and surgery definitively treats irreversible tissue damage. Full article
25 pages, 642 KB  
Review
Perioperative Arrhythmias: Pathophysiology, Risk Stratification, Management, and Emerging Technologies—A Narrative Review Toward Personalised Care
by Daniele Salvatore Paternò, Luigi La Via, Marco Lo Presti, Gilberto Duarte-Medrano, Natalia Nuño-Lámbarri, Emilia Concetta Lo Giudice, Giordana Russo, Mattia Pratini, Paolo Tummino, Giuseppe Scibilia, Marco Barbanti and Massimiliano Sorbello
J. Pers. Med. 2026, 16(7), 367; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm16070367 (registering DOI) - 4 Jul 2026
Abstract
Cardiac arrhythmias complicate 20–50% of surgical procedures and contribute substantially to perioperative morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs, with postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) being the most frequent form. Their genesis reflects the convergence of surgical stress, anaesthetic agents, autonomic imbalance, systemic inflammation, and electrolyte [...] Read more.
Cardiac arrhythmias complicate 20–50% of surgical procedures and contribute substantially to perioperative morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs, with postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) being the most frequent form. Their genesis reflects the convergence of surgical stress, anaesthetic agents, autonomic imbalance, systemic inflammation, and electrolyte disturbances, explaining the limited efficacy of single-mechanism interventions. This narrative review synthesises contemporary evidence on pathophysiology, risk stratification, prevention, acute management, and emerging technologies, emphasising individualised, patient-tailored approaches. MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane CENTRAL were searched (January 2010–January 2026), prioritising randomised trials, meta-analyses, and guidelines. Contemporary risk stratification integrates clinical scores, biomarkers, and electrocardiographic parameters; machine-learning models show moderate discrimination (pooled AUC 0.84) and may enable more personalised prediction pending external validation. Evidence-based prophylaxis—beta-blockade, magnesium, selective amiodarone, and emerging anti-inflammatory strategies such as colchicine—reduces POAF in high-risk populations, while acute management is guided by haemodynamic status and individual risk. Anticoagulation follows CHA2DS2-VASc stratification, although optimal timing and duration remain undefined. Wearable monitoring, AI-based detection, and atrial-selective agents show clinical promise. Systematic, personalised integration of risk assessment, prophylaxis, monitoring, and management offers the clearest path to reducing arrhythmia-associated morbidity. Full article
16 pages, 2055 KB  
Case Report
MEIS1::NCOA2 Fusion Sarcoma of the Bartholin Gland: A Case Report and Review of the Literature
by Pauline Dumonceaux, Loréane Sims, Aline Francois, Sabrina Croce, Latifa Fellah, Sophie Cvilic, Charlotte Maillard and Pascale Jadoul
Diagnostics 2026, 16(13), 2098; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16132098 - 3 Jul 2026
Abstract
Background: MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas are a recently described molecular entity arising predominantly in the genitourinary and gynecologic tracts. Their clinical presentation is often misleading, and no standardized treatment guidelines currently exist. Methods: A literature review was conducted using PubMed to identify all reported [...] Read more.
Background: MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas are a recently described molecular entity arising predominantly in the genitourinary and gynecologic tracts. Their clinical presentation is often misleading, and no standardized treatment guidelines currently exist. Methods: A literature review was conducted using PubMed to identify all reported cases of molecularly confirmed MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas. Clinicopathological, molecular, treatment, and outcome data were extracted for comparative analysis. Case: We report the case of a 38-year-old nulliparous woman who presented with a right vulvar induration clinically consistent with a Bartholin gland cyst. Surgical excision revealed a spindle cell mesenchymal tumor harboring a MEIS1::NCOA2 fusion transcript and a CTNNB1 exon 3 mutation, with probable incomplete resection margins. A local recurrence was documented by MRI and PET–CT at eight months. Surgical re-excision revealed diffuse involvement and complete excision was considered uncertain. Adjuvant external beam radiotherapy followed by an MR-Linac boost was administered. Discussion: This case highlights the diagnostic challenge of Bartholin gland masses. We provide a review of the literature on MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas and examine the potential aggressiveness of tumors that additionally harbor a CTNNB1 mutation. Given the nonspecific immunophenotype of this entity, this case underscores the indispensable role of RNA-based molecular sequencing in the diagnosis of low-grade spindle cell tumors when immunohistochemistry proves inconclusive. We further discuss the surgical challenges inherent to this anatomical region and explore intention-to-treat radiotherapy as a potential therapeutic option. Conclusions: We report a rare case of a MEIS1::NCOA2 fusion-positive sarcoma arising in the Bartholin gland region, and, to our knowledge, the first case in which radiotherapy with curative intent has been explored for this entity. This observation expands the limited literature on this emerging clinicopathological entity. Full article
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18 pages, 1537 KB  
Review
Transbronchial Lung Cryobiopsy and Awake Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery in Interstitial Lung Disease: Complementary Roles in a Stepwise Diagnostic Approach
by Umberto Masi, Alessandro Sanduzzi Zamparelli and Stefano Sanduzzi Zamparelli
Diagnostics 2026, 16(13), 2095; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16132095 - 3 Jul 2026
Abstract
The diagnostic evaluation of interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) remains challenging when clinical assessment and imaging findings are inconclusive. Although surgical lung biopsy has traditionally represented the diagnostic gold standard, its invasiveness and perioperative risks limit its applicability, particularly in patients with advanced disease [...] Read more.
The diagnostic evaluation of interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) remains challenging when clinical assessment and imaging findings are inconclusive. Although surgical lung biopsy has traditionally represented the diagnostic gold standard, its invasiveness and perioperative risks limit its applicability, particularly in patients with advanced disease or impaired respiratory reserve. This review aims to examine the evolving roles of transbronchial lung cryobiopsy (TBLC) and awake video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (Awake VATS) within contemporary diagnostic pathways for ILD. A narrative review of the current literature was performed, focusing on studies evaluating the diagnostic performance, safety profiles, clinical indications, and complementary integration of TBLC and Awake VATS in patients with suspected ILD. Evidence from multidisciplinary ILD referral centers and recent guideline recommendations was critically analyzed. TBLC has progressively emerged as an appropriate first-line histological procedure in many ILD centers, providing a pooled diagnostic yield of approximately 80% with an acceptable safety profile. Awake VATS has refined the surgical approach by preserving spontaneous ventilation while maintaining high diagnostic accuracy. Current evidence suggests that these techniques should be considered complementary rather than competitive. A TBLC-first strategy, followed by selective surgical escalation when endoscopic sampling is non-diagnostic or insufficient, appears to achieve diagnostic accuracy comparable to upfront surgical biopsy while reducing complications, length of hospital stay, and overall patient burden. The choice between Awake VATS and conventional surgical biopsy should be individualized according to patient characteristics, institutional expertise, and available resources. TBLC and Awake VATS represent complementary tools within a multidisciplinary, personalized, and risk-adapted diagnostic framework for ILD. Their integrated use enables optimization of diagnostic accuracy while minimizing procedural invasiveness and improving patient safety, supporting a stratified approach to histological assessment in contemporary clinical practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Diagnosis and Prognosis of Pulmonary Diseases)
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