The American surgeon
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A retrospective review of 222 consecutive patients with duodenal injuries admitted to an urban Level 1 Trauma Center who subsequently underwent laparotomy during the period July 1980 to April 2002 was performed in an effort to elucidate factors associated with mortality, infectious morbidity, and length of stay in these patients. Predictably, the patients were predominantly male (92.7%) and young (mean age, 31.6 years). The overall mortality rate was 22.5 per cent, with a mortality rate of 18 per cent seen in the first 48 hours. ⋯ Splenic injury was the associated injury found on multivariate analysis to be most closely associated with increased mortality. Early control of bleeding and the prevention of infection provide the most significant opportunity for decreasing length of stay. Infections are common with duodenal injuries, and aggressive surveillance should especially be performed in those patients with an abdominal arterial injury, an ISS >25, pancreatic injury, or lowest OR core body temperature <35 degrees C.
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The American surgeon · Mar 2004
Comparative StudyManagement of unsuspected gallbladder carcinoma discovered during or following laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) is widely used in the treatment of symptomatic cholelithiasis. Gallbladder carcinoma (GBC) discovered during or after LC presents a management problem because of the difficulty of intraoperative staging. We conducted a retrospective, 8-year review of 10 patients with GBC discovered during or after LC. ⋯ The remaining nine patients did not have any recurrence during the follow-up period. No patient had a port site recurrence of GBC. Based on our limited experience, early GBC (T1a or T1s) can successfully be managed by simple cholecystectomy, either by LC or the open method.
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The American surgeon · Mar 2004
Comparative StudyCharacterization of the human diaphragm muscle with respect to the phrenic nerve motor points for diaphragmatic pacing.
Diaphragm pacing from laparoscopically placed electrodes is an alternative to conventional phrenic pacers that use electrodes placed in direct contact with the nerve in the neck or chest. The challenge with the laparoscopic approach is determining where to implant the electrodes, as the phrenic nerves are not visible from the abdomen. The objective of this study was to locate the phrenic nerve "motor points" in the human diaphragm muscle from an abdominal perspective. ⋯ Thus, although the nerves branch prior to entry into the muscle on the right side, several well-placed electrodes could still activate the entire nerve. In this study, we have characterized the human diaphragm muscle in the motor point region and found that it is feasible to place laparoscopically intramuscular electrodes in the motor point region. This is the foundation for the laparoscopically placed diaphragm pacing device that has been utilized in a small series of patients.
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The American surgeon · Mar 2004
Comparative StudyComparative review of use of physician assistants in a level I trauma center.
In view of the new residency guidelines, which restrict resident work hours, the use of physician assistants (PAs) for patient care continuity during off-hours of residents may become a common practice. The purpose of this study was to assess the quality of patient care during transition from resident- to PA-assisted trauma program (without residents) and comparative simultaneous support. A retrospective analysis of patient care during two 6-month segments was carried out: during resident-assisted program at a level II trauma center in 1998 and a PA-dedicated trauma program in 1999. ⋯ Focused analysis in 2002 showed 100 per cent participation of PAs during the trauma alert compared to 51 per cent by residents. Substitution of residents with PAs had no impact on patient mortality; however, LOS (from EC to floor), was statistically reduced by 1 day. Trauma programs can benefit with collaboration of residents and PAs in patient care.