Barnes-Jewish Hospital | Washington University Physicians
OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP APNEA: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

OBSTRUCTIVE SLEEP APNEA: DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT

BY PAM MCGRATH

People diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea, or OSA, experience frequent disruptions of breathing while asleep. Those disruptions can range in frequency from five times in an hour for mild sleep apnea to 30 times or more for severe sleep apnea. In other words, a person with severe OSA stops and starts breathing at least every two minutes within an hour.

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LEARNING TO SEE INSIDE THE BODY

LEARNING TO SEE INSIDE THE BODY

BY Connie Mitchell

The very first X-ray image is a blurry, ghostlike view of a woman’s left hand, two sizable wedding rings visible on her third finger. Using his wife as his test subject, German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen used the power of the X-ray to gaze at bones beneath his wife’s skin, something he couldn’t have done before without an incision. Six years later, Röntgen won the 1901 Nobel Prize in Physics. The practice of medicine had changed forever.

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PARTIAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY: IMPROVING OUTCOMES WITH ROBOTICS

PARTIAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY: IMPROVING OUTCOMES WITH ROBOTICS

BY Stephanie Stemmler

All that holds true for the use of robotics in partial knee replacement surgery, also called unicompartmental knee arthroplasty or UKA. In fact, a team of Washington University orthopedic researchers found that using robotics during UKA yielded results that were up to 10 times more accurate than doing the procedure without robotic assistance. The study was published in The Bone & Joint Journal, March 2021.

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ONCOLOGY UPDATE: USING LIQUID BIOPSY TO ASSESS CANCER CARE

ONCOLOGY UPDATE: USING LIQUID BIOPSY TO ASSESS CANCER CARE

BY Julia Evangelou Strait

Cancer is most often detected using traditional tissue biopsy: the removal of tissue by needle, endoscope or open surgery. The tissue sample is then examined for the presence of cancer cells. Though the standard of care, this kind of biopsy comes with some limitations. Because the procedure is invasive, it can be risky, and recovery can be uncomfortable. Additionally, such a procedure may not be safe for some people and may not be practical for those needing a series of biopsies to monitor the progress of cancer treatment.

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FUNCTIONAL NEUROSURGERY TREATS BRAIN DISORDERS

FUNCTIONAL NEUROSURGERY TREATS BRAIN DISORDERS

BY Ilima Loomis

Functional neurosurgery—surgical interaction with the brain to improve function—was pioneered to treat people in need of pain relief, often those suffering with terminal cancer. Simple early procedures included surgically creating tiny lesions, also called ablations, in specific areas of the nervous system linked to pain.

The field has come a long way since those early days, says Jon Willie, MD, PhD, Washington University neurosurgeon at Barnes-Jewish Hospital.

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