The Journal of surgical research
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Locally advanced esophageal cancer is often treated with neoadjuvant therapy followed by surgery. Many patients present with or experience clinical deconditioning during neoadjuvant therapy. Prehabilitation programs in other areas of surgery have demonstrated improved postoperative outcomes. The aims of this study were to evaluate the feasibility of a pilot prehabilitation program and determine preliminary effects on surgical and cancer-related outcomes. ⋯ The pilot prehabilitation program demonstrated feasibility of implementing a structured program for patients receiving neoadjuvant therapy for esophageal cancer. Although the small population limits evaluation of statistical significance, trends in the data suggest a potential benefit of the prehabilitation program on neoadjuvant hospital admission rates, postsurgical readmission rates, and nutritional status.
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Comparative Study
Opioid Prescribing Habits of General Versus Pediatric Surgeons After Uncomplicated Laparoscopic Appendectomy.
Adolescents who use prescription opioids have an increased risk for future drug abuse and overdose, making them a high-risk population. Appendectomy is one of the most common surgical procedures in this age group, often requires opioid analgesia, and is performed by both pediatric and general surgeons. Prescription patterns comparing these two provider groups have not yet been evaluated; we hypothesize that general surgery providers prescribe more opioids for adolescent and young adult patients than do pediatric surgery providers. ⋯ After an uncomplicated laparoscopic appendectomy, general surgeons prescribe significantly more opioid to adolescent patients than do pediatric surgeons, even when controlling for age and weight. One substantial and modifiable contributor of the opioid epidemic is the amount of opioid prescribed. The variability of prescribing habits to adolescents and young adults demonstrates a clear need for increased education and guidelines on this topic, especially for surgeons who do not frequently treat the younger and more vulnerable population.
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Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols after colorectal surgery use several perioperative, intraoperative and postoperative interventions that decrease morbidity, length of stay, and improve patient satisfaction. ERAS is increasingly being considered standard of care; however, uptake of formalized protocols remains low. The objective is to characterize the provincial rates of ERAS utilization after colorectal surgery and identify barriers and limitations to ERAS implementation. ⋯ Small community hospitals are less likely to use formal ERAS protocols; however, most Ontario surgeons are using ERAS principles after colorectal surgery. Barriers to ERAS implementation are broad and the present study has provided a pragmatic solution to change.
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Cardiovascular complications contribute significantly to the morbidity and resource utilization after pulmonary resections. Maturation of less-invasive technologies, such as video and robot-assisted thoracoscopic surgery, aims at improving postoperative outcomes by reducing the trauma of surgery. The present work aimed to evaluate changes in cardiovascular complications after open and minimally invasive lobectomies in the United States. ⋯ MIS lobectomies increased without a concurrent reduction in perioperative MI, CA, or PE incidence. High hospital lobectomy volume and MIS approach decrease odds of failure to rescue. Improved perioperative management of cardiovascular risk is warranted to reduce the morbidity, mortality, and resource utilization associated with these complications.
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Comparative Study
Outcomes After Massive Transfusion in Trauma Patients: Variability Among Trauma Centers.
Exsanguinating trauma patients often require massive blood transfusion (defined as transfusion of 10 or more pRBC units within first 24 h). The aim of our study is to assess the outcomes of trauma patients receiving massive transfusion at different levels of trauma centers. ⋯ Hemorrhage continues to remain one of the most common cause of death after trauma. Almost half of the patients who received massive transfusion died. Patients who receive massive blood transfusion in a level I trauma centers have improved survival compared with level II trauma centers.