The American surgeon
-
Appendectomy for presumed appendicitis is the most common surgical emergency during pregnancy. Delayed diagnosis and treatment of appendicitis carries risk for the fetus and mother. We sought to evaluate the accuracy of MRI in pregnant patients with suspected appendicitis. ⋯ A positive MRI result was very specific with a 100 per cent positive predictive value; however, the sensitivity was as low as 18 per cent (diagnosed only 2 of 11 cases). Although a positive MRI finding was reliable in making a decision to operate, a negative or inconclusive MRI was not. In patients with a high clinical suspicion of appendicitis, surgery should still be considered even without definitive positive MRI findings.
-
The American surgeon · Aug 2018
The Surgical Experience Aboard USNS COMFORT (T-AH-20) during Operation Continuing Promise 2015.
In 2015, the United States Navy hospital ship (USNS) COMFORT, deployed to 11 Caribbean and Latin American countries over a six-month period to provide humanitarian civic assistance. Personnel from the United States Navy and multiple nongovernmental organizations collaborated to offer surgical and medical care. Data from past deployments aid in planning for future missions by prioritizing finite resources and maximizing care. ⋯ The USNS COMFORT platform offers the unique capability to provide humanitarian surgical assistance. Reporting these data demonstrate that there is a need for humanitarian assistance and this can be provided safely through the Continuing Promise mission. Future deployments may target resources toward the surgical services with higher volumes, which were general surgery, ophthalmology, pediatric surgery, and plastic surgery.