2,476 research outputs found
Development of a multidisciplinary quality improvement bundle to improve perioperative care in the management of neck of femur fractures at a district general hospital
LB O-014. Increasing trans-hepatic caval pressure gradient is associated with acute kidney injury after liver transplantation, irrespective of surgical technique
Mechanisms underlying between-hospital variation in mortality after emergency laparotomies in England and Wales: A structure – process analysis
No abstrac
Paternal anxiety and satisfaction in elective caesarean section
Whilst the overwhelming weight of data on caesarean section (CS) concerns maternal experiences,
expectant fathers have historically been underrepresented. A literature search revealed only two
relevant studies conducted in the past two decades; Chan demonstrated greater paternal anxiety at
CS than normal vaginal delivery [1] and Capogna showed that epidural analgesia for the partner
reduces paternal stress and enhances involvement in the experience of childbirth [2]. We
undertook a survey of the partners of women undergoing CS under spinal anaesthesia to assess
paternal preparedness and satisfaction with the proces
Appearance and management of COVID-19 laryngo-tracheitis: two case reports.
We present two cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related laryngotracheitis in good-prognosis, ventilated patients who had failed extubation. As the pandemic continues to unfold across the globe and better management of those with respiratory failure develops, this may be an increasingly common scenario. Close ENT-intensivist liaison, meticulous team preparation, early consideration of rigid endoscopy and prospective data collection and case sharing are recommended
Does the PI3K pathway promote or antagonize regulatory T cell development and function?
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) prevent autoimmunity and inflammation by suppressing the activation of other T cells and antigen presenting cells. The role of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling in Treg is controversial. Some studies suggest that inhibition of the PI3K pathway is essential for the development of Tregs whereas other studies have shown reduced Treg numbers and function when PI3K activity is suppressed. Here we attempt to reconcile the different studies that have explored PI3K and the downstream effectors Akt, Foxo, and mTOR in regulatory T cell development and function and discuss the implications for health and therapeutic intervention
Not All Piggybacks Are Equal: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis of Variation in Anhepatic Transcaval Pressure Gradient and Acute Kidney Injury During Liver Transplant
Objectives: Complete inferior vena cava clamping in caval replacement during liver transplant is associated with substantial physiological derangement and postoperative morbidity. Partial clamping in the piggyback technique may be relatively protective, but evidence is lacking. Having observed substantial variation in transhepatic inferior vena cava pressure gradient with piggyback, we hypothesized that the causative mechanism is the extent of caval clamping rather than the surgical approach.
Materials and Methods: We used internal jugular and femoral catheters to estimate suprahepatic and infrahepatic inferior vena cava pressures during clamping. Pressure gradients were calculated, and distributions were compared by surgical technique. We estimated adjusted odds ratios for pressure gradient on acute kidney injury at 72 hours.
Results: In 115 case records, we observed substantial variation in maximum pressure gradient; median values were 18.0 mm Hg (interquartile range, 8.0-25.0 mm Hg) with the piggyback technique and 24.0 mm Hg (interquartile range, 19.5-27.0 mm Hg) with caval replacement. Incidence of acute kidney injury was 25% (29 patients). Pressure gradient was linearly associated with probability of acute kidney injury (odds ratio, 1.06; 95% CI, 1.01-1.13).
Conclusions: We report 2 novel findings. (1) Anhepatic inferior vena cava pressure gradient varied substantially in individuals undergoing piggyback, and (2) gradient was positively associated with early acute kidney injury. We hypothesize that this (unmeasured) variation explains the conflicting findings of previous studies that compared surgical techniques. Also, we propose that caval pressure gradient could be routinely assessed to optimize real-time piggyback clamp position during liver transplant surgery
Predicting Postoperative Morbidity in Adult Elective Surgical Patients using the Surgical Outcome Risk Tool (SORT)
Background: The Surgical Outcome Risk Tool (SORT) is a risk stratification tool that predicts perioperative mortality. We construct a new recalibrated model based on SORT to predict the risk of developing postoperative morbidity. Methods: We analysed prospectively collected data from a single-centre cohort of adult patients undergoing major elective surgery. The data set was split randomly into derivation and validation samples. We used logistic regression to construct a model in the derivation sample to predict postoperative morbidity as defined using the validated Postoperative Morbidity Survey (POMS) assessed at one week after surgery. Performance of this "SORT-morbidity" model was then tested in the validation sample, and compared against the Physiological and Operative Severity Score for the enUmeration of Mortality and morbidity (POSSUM). Results: The SORT-morbidity model was constructed using a derivation sample of 1056 patients, and validated in 527 patients. SORT-morbidity was well-calibrated in the validation sample, as assessed using calibration plots and the Hosmer-Lemeshow Test (χ² = 4.87, p = 0.77). It showed acceptable discrimination by Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) curve analysis (Area Under the ROC curve, AUROC = 0.72, 95% CI 0.67–0.77). This compared favourably with POSSUM (AUROC = 0.66, 95% CI 0.60–0.71), while remaining simpler to use. Linear shrinkage factors were estimated, which allow the SORT-morbidity model to predict a range of alternative morbidity outcomes with greater accuracy, including low- and high-grade morbidity, and POMS at later time-points. Conclusions: SORT-morbidity can be used preoperatively, with clinical judgement, to predict postoperative morbidity risk in major elective surgery
Anaesthetic Management of a Patient With Critical Respiratory Compromise Resulting From Procedure-induced Broncho-oesophageal Fistulation (BOF)
Craniofacial morphology does not support a pre-contact Carib “invasion” of the northern Caribbean
- …