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1.
J Surg Res ; 288: 87-98, 2023 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36963298

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Pancreatic surgery tends to have a high rate of postoperative complications due to its complex nature, significantly increasing hospital costs. Our aim was to describe the true association between complications and hospital costs in a national cohort of US patients. METHODS: The National Inpatient Sample was used to conduct a retrospective analysis of elective pancreatic resections performed between 2004 and 2017, categorizing them based on whether patients experienced major complications (MaC), minor complications (MiC), or no complications (NC). Multivariable quantile regression was used to analyze how costs varied at different percentiles of the cost curve. RESULTS: Of 37,893 patients, 45.3%, 28.6%, and 26.1% experienced NC, MiC, and MaC, respectively. Factors associated with MaC were a Charlson Comorbidity Index of ≥4, prolonged length of stay, proximal pancreatectomy, older age, male sex, and surgery performed at hospitals with a small number of beds or at urban nonteaching hospitals (all P < 0.01). Multivariable quantile regression revealed significant variation in MiC and MaC across the cost curve. At the 50th percentile, MiC increased the cost by $3352 compared to NC while MaC almost doubled the cost of the surgery, increasing it by $20,215 (both P < 0.01). The association between complications and cost was even greater at the 95th percentile, increasing the cost by $10,162 and $108,793 for MiC and MaC, respectively (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: MiC and MaC were significantly associated with increased hospital costs. Furthermore, the relationship between MaC and costs was especially apparent at higher percentiles of the cost curve.


Asunto(s)
Procedimientos Quirúrgicos del Sistema Digestivo , Humanos , Masculino , Tiempo de Internación , Estudios Retrospectivos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos del Sistema Digestivo/efectos adversos , Hospitales , Costos de Hospital , Complicaciones Posoperatorias/epidemiología , Complicaciones Posoperatorias/etiología
2.
Surg Endosc ; 36(10): 7279-7287, 2022 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35194662

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The annual number of robotic surgical procedures is on the rise. Robotic surgery requires unique skills compared to other surgical approaches. Simulation allows basic robot skill acquisition and enhances patient safety. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility, effectiveness, and transferability of a mastery-based curriculum using a new virtual reality (VR) robotic simulator for surgery resident training. METHODS: Nineteen PGY2s and 22 PGY4s were enrolled. Residents completed a pretest and posttest consisting of five VR and three previously validated inanimate tasks. Training included practicing 33 VR tasks until a total score ≥ 90% ("mastery") was achieved using automated metrics (time, economy of motion). Inanimate performance was evaluated by two trained, blinded raters using video review metrics (time, errors, and modified OSATS). Outcomes were defined as: curriculum feasibility (completion rate, training time, repetitions), training effectiveness (pre/post training skill improvement), and skill transferability (skill transfer to validated inanimate drills). Wilcoxon signed-rank and Mann-Whitney U tests were used; median (IQR) reported. RESULTS: Thirty-four of 41 residents (83%) achieved mastery on all 33 VR tasks; median training time was 7 h (IQR: 5'26″-8'52″). Pretest vs. post-test performance improved (all p < 0.001) according to all VR and Inanimate metrics for both PGY2 and PGY4 residents. Significant pretest performance differences were observed between PGY2 and PGY4 residents for VR but not inanimate tasks; no PGY2 vs. PGY4 posttest performance differences were observed for both VR and inanimate tasks. CONCLUSION: This mastery-based VR curriculum was associated with a high completion rate and excellent feasibility. Significant performance improvements were noted for both the VR and inanimate tasks, supporting training effectiveness and skill transferability. Additional studies examining validity evidence may help further refine this curriculum.


Asunto(s)
Cirugía General , Internado y Residencia , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Robotizados , Robótica , Entrenamiento Simulado , Realidad Virtual , Competencia Clínica , Simulación por Computador , Curriculum , Estudios de Factibilidad , Cirugía General/educación , Humanos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Robotizados/educación , Robótica/educación , Entrenamiento Simulado/métodos
3.
J Mol Cell Cardiol ; 105: 12-23, 2017 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28223221

RESUMEN

Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) constitute a promising alternative in cardiovascular regenerative medicine due to their assigned role in angiogenesis and vascular repair. In response to injury, EPCs promote vascular remodeling by replacement of damaged endothelial cells and/or by secreting angiogenic factors over the damaged tissue. Nevertheless, such mechanisms need to be further characterized. In the current approach we have evaluated the initial response of early EPCs (eEPCs) from healthy individuals after direct contact with the factors released by carotid arteries complicated with atherosclerotic plaques (AP), in order to understand the mechanisms underlying the neovascularization and remodeling properties assigned to these cells. Herein, we found that the AP secretome stimulated eEPCs proliferation and mobilization ex vivo, and such increase was accompanied by augmented permeability, cell contraction and also an increase of cell-cell adhesion in association with raised vinculin levels. Furthermore, a comparative mass spectrometry analysis of control versus stimulated eEPCs revealed a differential expression of proteins in the AP treated cells, mostly involved in cell migration, proliferation and vascular remodeling. Some of these protein changes were also detected in the eEPCs isolated from atherosclerotic patients compared to eEPCs from healthy donors. We have shown, for the first time, that the AP released factors activate eEPCs ex vivo by inducing their mobilization together with the expression of vasculogenic related markers. The present approach could be taken as a ex vivo model to study the initial activation of vascular cells in atherosclerosis and also to evaluate strategies looking to potentiate the mobilization of EPCs prior to clinical applications.


Asunto(s)
Células Progenitoras Endoteliales/metabolismo , Placa Aterosclerótica/metabolismo , Proteoma , Movimiento Celular , Proliferación Celular , Supervivencia Celular , Células Cultivadas , Humanos , Permeabilidad , Placa Aterosclerótica/patología , Proteómica/métodos
4.
J Surg Educ ; 81(4): 589-596, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38403503

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Our institution recently implemented a virtual reality (VR) skills curriculum for general surgery residents using the SimNow simulator. Based on a content alignment study, we revised the curriculum to include only 20 of 33 VR tasks and we added 3 previously validated inanimate tasks. The purpose of this study was to establish expert-derived proficiency levels for all tasks and to evaluate the validity of the scoring for the VR tasks. DESIGN: Two expert robotic surgeons performed 5 repetitions of each VR and inanimate task. The trimmed mean (lowest scoring attempt and outliers [>2 standard deviations] were eliminated) was defined as the expert level for each task. For the VR tasks, expert levels were compared to resident performance to evaluate validity. SETTING: This study was conducted at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas, TX), a tertiary care academic teaching hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Two expert robotic surgeons participated in this study. The data from 42 residents (PGY2-4) who completed the original curriculum was used to represent novice performance. RESULTS: Comparison of expert levels and resident performance was statistically significant for 15 VR tasks (supporting validity) and approached significance (p = 0.06, 0.09) for 2 VR tasks; expert levels were designated as proficiency levels for these 17 tasks. Group comparisons were clearly not significant (p = 0.2-0.8) for 3 VR tasks; 2 of these 3 tasks were retained as introductory exercises (with 3 repetitions required) and 1 was excluded. For the 3 inanimate tasks, expert levels minus 2 standard deviations were designated as proficiency levels. CONCLUSIONS: This analysis generated validity evidence for 15 VR tasks and established expert-derived proficiency levels for 17 VR tasks and 3 inanimate tasks. Our proposed curriculum now consists of 19 VR and 3 inanimate tasks using the selected proficiency levels. We anticipate that this design will maximize curriculum efficiency and effectiveness.


Asunto(s)
Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Robotizados , Realidad Virtual , Humanos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Robotizados/educación , Competencia Clínica , Simulación por Computador , Curriculum
5.
iScience ; 26(8): 107429, 2023 Aug 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37575193

RESUMEN

Biological evidence supports plasma methemoglobin as a biomarker for anemia-induced tissue hypoxia. In this translational planned substudy of the multinational randomized controlled transfusion thresholds in cardiac surgery (TRICS-III) trial, which included adults undergoing cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass with a moderate-to-high risk of death, we investigated the relationship between perioperative hemoglobin concentration (Hb) and methemoglobin; and evaluated its association with postoperative outcomes. The primary endpoint was a composite of death, myocardial infarction, stroke, and severe acute kidney injury at 28 days. We observe weak non-linear associations between decreasing Hb and increasing methemoglobin, which were strongest in magnitude at the post-surgical time point. Increased levels of post-surgical methemoglobin were associated with a trend toward an elevated risk for stroke and exploratory neurological outcomes. Our generalizable study demonstrates post-surgical methemoglobin may be a marker of anemia-induced organ injury/dysfunction, and may have utility for guiding personalized approaches to anemia management. Clinicaltrials.gov registration NCT02042898.

9.
An. cir. card. cir. vasc ; 12(5): 248-249, nov.-dic. 2006. ilus
Artículo en Es | IBECS (España) | ID: ibc-052791

RESUMEN

Presentamos el caso de una paciente de 49 años que desarrolló varios episodios de embolismos arteriales recurrentes, mostrándose en el estudio efectuado, la presencia de dos trombos móviles en aorta descendente, relacionados a un trastorno genético de la coagulación. Revisamos las distintas etiologías asociadas a esta entidad, así como su diagnóstico y tratamiento


We present a 49-years-old woman who presesented several embolic arterial recurrent episodes associated to floating thrombus in the descending thoracic aorta, secondary to genetic coagulation disorder. We review the different etiologies, diagnosis and treatment


Asunto(s)
Femenino , Adulto , Humanos , Aneurisma de la Aorta/complicaciones , Aneurisma de la Aorta/diagnóstico , Aneurisma de la Aorta/terapia , Síndromes del Arco Aórtico/complicaciones , Ecocardiografía Transesofágica/métodos , Factores de Riesgo , Embolectomía/métodos , Trombosis/fisiopatología , Acenocumarol/uso terapéutico , Endarterectomía/métodos , Ecocardiografía Transesofágica , Embolia/complicaciones , Aorta/patología , Aorta , Enfermedades de la Aorta/complicaciones , Enfermedades de la Aorta/diagnóstico , Trombosis/complicaciones , Trombosis , Endarterectomía/tendencias , Endarterectomía
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