Annals of surgery
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The aims of this study were 3-fold: first, establish the level of radiation exposure experienced by the pediatric trauma patients; second, model the level of risk of developing fatal carcinogenesis; and third, test whether pattern of injury was predictive of the level of exposure. ⋯ A proportion of younger polytrauma patients were exposed to high levels of radiation that in turn mean an increased risk of carcinogenesis. However, the ISS, age, injury pattern, and length of hospital stay are predictive of both risks, enabling monitoring and patient advisement of the risks.
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To describe the quality of operative performance feedback using evaluation tools commonly used by general surgery residency training programs. ⋯ Evaluators give significantly higher quality operative performance feedback when using workplace-based assessment tools rather than EOR evaluations.
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Comparative Study
Precision medicine: clinical tolerance to hyperfibrinolysis differs by shock and injury severity.
The definition of hyperfibrinolysis based on thrombelastogram LY30 measurements should vary with trauma patient characteristics, i.e., as anatomic injury or shock severity increase, the ability to tolerate even mild degrees of fibrinolysis is markedly reduced. This trend is independent of institutional practice patterns. The management of hyperfibrinolysis, particularly with anti-fibrinolytics administration, should be interpreted in the context of injury severity/shock and managed on an individual patient basis.
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Evaluation of International Contemporary Operative Outcomes and Management Trends Associated With Esophagectomy: A 4-Year Study of >6000 Patients Using ECCG Definitions and the Online Esodata Database.
This study aims to verify the utility of international online datasets to benchmark and monitor treatment and outcomes in major oncologic procedures. ⋯ The Esodata database provides a valuable resource for assessing contemporary international outcomes. This study highlights an increased application of minimally invasive approaches, a high percentage of complications, improvements in pneumonia and key quality metrics, but with anastomotic leak rates still >10%.
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To investigate the incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of colon involvement in patients with necrotizing pancreatitis. ⋯ Colon involvement in necrotizing pancreatitis is common; clinical deterioration should prompt its evaluation. Risk factors include tobacco use, coronary artery disease, and respiratory failure. Colon involvement in necrotizing pancreatitis is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality.