The Journal of surgical research
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Accurate evaluation of muscle strength and function is difficult. Commonly known as sarcopenia, skeletal muscle loss is closely correlated with the prognosis of patients diagnosed with gastric cancer (GC). We wondered the correlation between skeletal muscle measures combined with computed tomography and grip strength (GS) and short-term outcomes after radical gastrectomy (RG) in patients with GC. ⋯ Skeletal muscle measures using computed tomography and GS are closely correlated with short-term outcomes of patients diagnosed with GC after RG. The model contained SMG plus GS could effectively predict for patients with GC after RG at high risk of short-term outcomes. SMG plus GS has the highest accuracy for the several evaluation methods of sarcopenia.
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Comparative Study
Prehospital Versus Trauma Center Glasgow Coma Scale in Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Patients.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major source of morbidity and mortality in children. The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) can be challenging to calculate in pediatric patients. Our objective was to determine its reproducibility between prehospital providers and pediatric trauma hospital personnel. ⋯ Prehospital and trauma center GCS scores frequently disagree in children, particularly in TBI patients aged <3 y and those with moderate TBI. Centers should consider the inconsistency of the pediatric GCS when triaging TBI patients.
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Variability in computed tomography (CT) use during pediatric emergency department (ED) visits has been reported. Our objective was to identify patient and hospital characteristics associated with CT use during pediatric ED visits. ⋯ Several patient-level and ED-level characteristics, including annual pediatric volume, are associated with the probability of a child having a CT scan during an ED visit. Future work should focus on determining drivers behind these associations to develop intervention strategies to decrease pediatric CT use.
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Nonmedical opioid use is a major public health problem. There is little standardization in opioid-prescribing practices for pediatric ambulatory surgery, which can result in patients being prescribed large quantities of opioids. We have evaluated the variability in postoperative pain medication given to pediatric patients following routine ambulatory pediatric surgical procedures. ⋯ There is significant variation in opioid-prescribing practices after pediatric surgical procedures; increased awareness may help minimize this variability and reduce overprescribing. Training level has an impact on the frequency and quantity of opioids prescribed.