34 research outputs found

    Squamosal Craniosynostosis

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    Microaggressions and Implicit Bias in Hand Surgery

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    Implicit bias and microaggressions are well-known phenomenon and have recently been acknowledged as contributing to health care disparities. Within Hand Surgery, implicit bias and microaggressions occur in patient-surgeon, surgeon-peer, surgeon-staff, and training environment interactions. Although racial and gender biases are well studied, biases can also be based on age, sexual orientation, socioeconomic background, and/or hierarchal rank. Academia has well-documented evidence of implicit bias and microaggressions, contributing to current disparate demographics of trainees, physicians, and leaders within Hand Surgery. Awareness is fundamental to combating bias and microaggressions; however, actions must be taken to minimize negative effects and change culture

    The "weekend effect" in plastic surgery: analyzing weekday versus weekend admissions in body contouring procedures from 2000 to 2010

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    Body contouring operations are a quickly becoming the most commonly performed operations by American plastic surgeons, mirroring the increase in bariatric surgery in the US over the last decade. Despite previous studies showing worse patient outcomes on weekend admissions for non-emergent cases (spine, breast, and hernia), there is no comparative data reported regarding body contouring procedures. The authors aimed to determine whether body contouring surgery results in worse outcomes when performed on weekends versus weekdays. A serial cross-sectional study of body contouring patients was performed using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample database from 2000 to 2010. Data were gathered using international classification of diseases, ninth revision codes for liposuction and reduction of adipose tissue (86.83) for weekday and weekend admissions, including demographics, hospital charges, and patient outcomes. A total of 50,346 hospital admission cases of inpatient body contouring were examined over the 11-year period, 98% of which were on a weekday. When compared to weekday admissions, weekend admissions were associated with a statistically significant increase in hospitalization costs ($35,481, p < 0.000) and in hospital length of stay (5.68 days, p < 0.000). Mortality rates were found to be higher on weekend admissions (3.7%) versus weekdays (0.5%) as well. Although outcomes are multifactorial, in body contouring patients, weekday admission is associated with favorable outcomes in terms of length of stay and hospital charges. 4 Risk

    Common Hand Conditions

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    Efficacy of Microsurgical Treatment of Primary Lymphedema

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    Treatment of lymphedema remains a challenging clinical problem. Lymphatic surgery has recently gained momentum as an effective method to treat both early- and late-stage disease. In particular, "physiologic" microsurgical techniques including vascularized lymph node transplant and lymphovenous bypass/anastomosis have been shown to be effective in treating even advanced lymphedema. Most published reports describe techniques and success in secondary lymphedema. Traditionally, physiologic surgery was not believed to be useful in the treatment of primary lymphedema where baseline lymphatic function is abnormal. However, recent studies have shown a benefit in these cases. The objective of this study is to evaluate outcomes and complications of physiologic microsurgical treatment for primary lymphedema. The electronic databases of PubMed, Scopus, and MEDLINE were searched using key words "primary lymphedema" and "surgery" (also vascularized lymph node transplant, lymphovenous bypass, microsurgery). Only human studies published between 2000 and 2021 were included. Studies that only included ablative or resection surgeries were excluded. A total of 10 studies comprising 254 patients with primary lymphedema who underwent 357 physiologic microsurgical operations were included. Lymphovenous bypass comprised 88% of cases, and in the patients who underwent vascularized lymph node transplant, all but 1 flap survived. Regardless of type of operative intervention, all studies showed a statistically significant improvement in lymphedema, through either reduction in limb circumference or edema volume or improvement in quality of life. Physiologic lymphatic surgery has shown success and improvement for patients with primary lymphedema. Based on current literature, physiologic surgical treatment of primary lymphedema should be considered when treating this patient population
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