3 research outputs found
Intraoperative ketorolac in high-risk breast cancer patients : A prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial
Funding: This work is financed by grants received by PF, in the name of his institution: the Anticancer Fund (no grant number) (www.anticancerfund.org); the Belgian Society of Anaesthesia and Resuscitation (no grant number) (www.sarb.be); the Fondation Saint-Luc (no grant number) (www.uclouvain.be); the Commission du Patrimoine of the Université catholique de Louvain, St-Luc Hospital (exceptional grant, no number) (www.uclouvain.be). None of the funders had any role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript except the scientific advise of GB, scientific director of the Anticancer Fund.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
ProgrÚs récents en médecine périopératoire : nouveaux usages des marqueurs inflammatoires
La prise en compte de lâinflammation pĂ©riopĂ©ratoire, nous amĂšne Ă considĂ©rer de nouvelles stratĂ©gies de dĂ©pistage, de stratification des patients, dâoptimisation prĂ©opĂ©ratoire, surtout en cas de cancer mais aussi chez le patient fragile. Le mĂ©decin gĂ©nĂ©raliste peut aujourdâhui travailler avec les mĂ©decins hospitaliers, dans le cadre dâune chaine de soins, pour mieux documenter, comprendre et adapter les stratĂ©gies de prise en charge pĂ©riopĂ©ratoire, dans lâespoir de faciliter la rĂ©solution de la phase postopĂ©ratoire.[Recent advances in peri-operative medicine: promising new use of inflammatory markers] The concept of peri-operative inflammation leads us to consider new patient screening, patient stratification, and preoperative optimization strategies, particularly in frail elderly cancer patients. General practitioners are now invited to work in close collaboration with hospital physicians, being part of a unique chain of care, in order to better document, understand, and adapt strategies to the peri-operative care setting, thereby facilitating resolution of issues relating to the postoperative phase