Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Closed Incision Negative Pressure Therapy to Reduce Surgical Site Infection in High-Risk Gastrointestinal Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Despite institutional perioperative bundles and national infection prevention guidelines, surgical site infection (SSI) after a major abdominal operation remains a significant source of morbidity. Negative pressure therapy (NPT) has revolutionized care for open wounds but the role of closed incision NPT (ciNPT) remains unclear. ⋯ In this multi-institutional, randomized controlled trial of patients undergoing colorectal or hepatopancreatobiliary surgery, incidence of incisional SSIs between ciNPT and conventional wound therapy was not statistically significant. Future trials should focus on patient populations undergoing specific procedures types that have the highest risk for SSI.
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Sixty percent of patients with esophageal cancer display signs of cachexia at diagnosis. Changes in body composition are common, and muscle mass and quality are measurable through imaging studies. Cachexia leads to functional impairments that complicate treatments, including surgery. We hypothesize that low muscle mass and quality associate with pulmonary function testing parameters, highlighting ventilatory deficits, and postoperative complications in patients receiving esophagectomy. ⋯ Cachexia and low muscle mass are common. Reduced muscle mass and quality independently associate with impaired forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in 1 second, and total lung capacity. We propose that respiratory muscle atrophy occurs with weight loss. Body composition analyses may aid in stratifying patients. Pulmonary function testing may also serve as a functional endpoint for clinical trials. These findings highlight the need to study mechanisms that lead to respiratory muscle pathology and dysfunction in tumor-bearing hosts.
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Burn injury induces multiple signaling pathways leading to a significant inflammatory storm that adversely affects multiple organs, including the heart. Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor 1 (PARP1) inhibition, with specific agents such as N-(5,6-Dihydro-6-oxo-2-phenanthridinyl)-2-acetamide (PJ34), is effective in reducing oxidative stress and cytokine expression in the heart. We hypothesized that PARP1 inhibition would reduce inflammatory signaling and protect against burn injury-induced cardiac dysfunction. ⋯ PARP1 inhibition normalizes multiple inflammatory pathways that are altered after burn injury and improves cardiac dysfunction. PARP1 pathway inhibition may provide a novel methodology to normalize multiple burn injury-induced inflammatory pathways in the heart.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Low vs Standard-Dose Indocyanine Green in the Identification of Biliary Anatomy Using Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial.
Near-infrared fluorescence imaging using intravenous indocyanine green (ICG) facilitates intraoperative identification of biliary anatomy. We hypothesize that a much lower dose of ICG than the standard decreases hepatic and background fluorescence and improves bile duct visualization. ⋯ Low-dose ICG leads to quantitative improvement of biliary visualization using near-infrared fluorescence imaging by minimizing liver fluorescence; this further facilitates routine use during hepatobiliary operations.