Surgery
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Despite recent work hour restrictions, 24-hour calls remain an important part of patient care. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of 24-hour night calls on the psychomotor and cognitive skills of surgeons with a virtual surgery simulator (VSS) and psychometric tests. We hypothesized that sleep loss impairs surgical skills and concentration performance. ⋯ No performance impairment was found for surgeons with a VSS and standardized cognitive tests after a night of relative sleep loss. Although there is no doubt that sleep deprivation ultimately impairs human functioning, typical surgical skills do not necessarily deteriorate with a limited amount of sleep loss under clinical conditions.
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The aim of the "fast-track surgery" program is to decrease the peri-operative stress response to surgical trauma and thus to a decrease in complication rates after elective surgery. Critics of fast-track (FT) rehabilitation may argue that all reports of successful programs came from major specialized hospital units and that implementation in smaller or less specialized units may be difficult if not impossible. ⋯ Based on 6 comparative single-center studies, the FT program was found to reduce length of hospital stay, and was deemed safe for major abdominal surgeries. Present study shows that enhanced recovery or FT program can also be implemented safely in a general surgery unit.
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Groin hernia repair occasionally leads to severe chronic pain associated with entrapped or damaged nerves. Conservative treatment is often unsuccessful. Selective neurectomy may be effective, but long-term results are scarce. The authors assessed the long-term efficacy of surgical neurectomy for chronic, postherniorrhaphy groin neuralgia. ⋯ A selective operative neurectomy for postherniorrhaphy groin neuralgia provides good long-term pain relief in most patients. Hernia surgeons should feel responsible for this iatrogenic complication and should consider incorporating selective neurectomy in their surgical armamentarium.