1.Fast-track surgery deserves more attention.
Hong-chi JIANG ; Bei SUN ; Gang WANG
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2007;45(9):577-579
2.The popularization and application of cold storage red blood cells or whole blood at -80 degrees C of the Rh (D) negative patients in surgical operation.
Zhongqing YU ; Lihua, HU ; Min, HAN ; Shenzong, RAO ; Chengwei, LUO
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2002;22(2):155-7
The efficiency of cold storage red blood cells (CSRBC) or whole blood at -80 degrees C used in 27 Rh (D) negative patients during surgical operation was reported. The Rh (D) negative patients received the transfusion of CSRBC or whole blood stored at -80 degrees C for 180 to 360 days. The changes in the indexes, such as blood TB, DB, K+, Na+, BUN, Cr, urine protein (URPO), UOB, Hb, HCT, serum total protein, relative to hemolytic reaction and blood volume before and after transfusion were observed. The results showed that after transfusion of CSRBC or whole blood 27 cases were negative for urine protein and UOB, and the levels of BUN and Cr were normal (P > 0.05). Blood TB, DB, Hb, and HCT were increased, while pH, blood K+ and blood Na+ was normal with the difference being not significant before and after operation (P > 0.05). Plasma protein was decreased, but there was no significant difference before and after operation (P > 0.05). It was suggested that CSRBC or whole blood at -80 degrees C could be safely infused to the Rh(D) negative patients without side effects during the surgical operation.
Blood Preservation/*methods
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Blood Transfusion/*methods
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*Cryopreservation
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Erythrocytes
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Intraoperative Care
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*Rh-Hr Blood-Group System
3.Development of the portable automatic pneumatic tourniquet.
Zhen-ling KOU ; Bo ZHAO ; Jian-xin WANG ; Ai-xia ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2005;29(1):60-61
This article introduces the basic structure, features and the priciples of a portable automatic pneumatic tourniquet and its prospects of applications.
Anastomosis, Surgical
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methods
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Automation
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Bandages
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Extremities
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surgery
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Hemostasis, Surgical
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instrumentation
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Humans
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Intraoperative Care
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Tourniquets
6.Right sided double inferior vena cava with obstructed retrocaval ureter: Managed with single incision multiple port laparoscopic technique using "Santosh Postgraduate Institute tacking ureteric fixation technique".
Santosh KUMAR ; Shivanshu SINGH ; Nitin GARG
Korean Journal of Urology 2015;56(4):330-333
Right double inferior vena cava with obstructed retrocaval ureter is an extremely rare anomaly with only a few reported cases in the literature. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report describing ureteric repair by use of a single-incision laparoscopic technique. In addition, this report addresses the underlying surgical challenges of this repair and provides a brief review of the embryology of this anomaly. The "Santosh Postgraduate Institute ureteric tacking fixation technique" provides ease of end-to-end uretero-ureteric anastomosis in a single-incision laparoscopic surgery.
Humans
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Intraoperative Care/methods
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Intraoperative Complications/*prevention & control
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Laparoscopy/methods
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
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*Retrocaval Ureter/diagnosis/physiopathology/surgery
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Treatment Outcome
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Urography/methods
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Urologic Surgical Procedures/*methods
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*Vena Cava, Inferior/abnormalities/surgery
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Young Adult
7.Anesthesia and Sedation.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2007;50(12):1065-1071
Anesthetic care is usually provided for patients undergoing surgical procedures to make them unconscious and painless during surgery. Nowadays there are increasing therapeutic or diagnostic procedures performed outside operating room. Sedation is more frequently provided as healthcare during procedures for patient's comfort and safety by non-anesthesiologist or anesthesiologist. Early in 1999, ASA (the American Society of Anesthesiologists defined sedation and analgesia and established 4 states: minimal sedation, moderate sedation, deep sedation, and general anesthesia. Monitored anesthetic care implies the potential for a deep sedation and is always administered by an anesthesiologist. It is not always possible to predict how an individual patient will respond by nature of being a continuum of sedation. Hence, practitioners intending to induce a given level of sedation should be able to rescue patients whose level of sedation becomes deeper than initially intended. The standards for preoperative evaluation, intraoperative monitoring, anesthetic care, etc. are not different from those for general anesthesia.
Analgesia
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Anesthesia*
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Anesthesia, General
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Conscious Sedation
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Deep Sedation
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Delivery of Health Care
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Humans
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Methods
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Monitoring, Intraoperative
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Operating Rooms
9.Forced-air warming and fluid warming minimize core hypothermia during abdominal surgery.
Jing ZHAO ; Ai-lun LUO ; Li XU ; Yu-guang HUANG
Chinese Medical Sciences Journal 2005;20(4):261-264
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the effect of intraoperative combined forced-air warming and fluid warming system on patient's core temperature, blood loss, transfusion demand, extubation time, and incidence of postoperative shivering.
METHODSForty patients with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status I and II, aged 18-70 years, scheduled for elective abdominal surgery were randomly assigned to receive intraoperative warming from a forced-air blanket and fluid warming system or conventional cotton blanket, 20 in each group. The core temperature was recorded every 20 minutes during the operation, as well as the blood loss, blood transfusion, extubation time, and incidence of postoperative shivering.
RESULTSThe core temperature at the end of the surgery in the warming group was significantly different from that in the control group (36.4 +/- 0.4 degrees C vs. 35.3 +/- 0.5 degrees C, P < 0.001). Application of intraoperative warming significantly shortened the time between the end of the surgery and extubation (P < 0.01). Postoperative shivering occurred in 30% of the patients in the control group compared to no patient in the warming group (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONActive warming with air-forced blanket and fluid warming system provides sufficient heat to prevent hypothermia during abdominal surgery.
Abdomen ; surgery ; Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Anesthesia, General ; Body Temperature Regulation ; Female ; Humans ; Intraoperative Care ; methods ; Intraoperative Complications ; prevention & control ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Postoperative Complications ; prevention & control ; Rewarming ; methods ; Shivering ; physiology
10.The Analysis of Risk Factors in No Thumb Test in Total Knee Arthroplasty.
Jee Hyoung KIM ; Song LEE ; Dong Oh KO ; Chang Wook YOO ; Tae Hwan CHUN ; Jung Soo LEE
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2011;3(4):274-278
BACKGROUND: We would like to analyze the risk factors of no thumb test among knee alignment tests during total knee arthroplasty surgery. METHODS: The 156 cases of total knee arthroplasty by an operator from October 2009 to April 2010 were analyzed according to preoperative indicators including body weight, height, degree of varus deformity, and patella subluxation and surgical indicators such as pre-osteotomy patella thickness, degree of patella degeneration, no thumb test which was evaluated after medial prepatella incision and before bone resection (1st test), no thumb test which was evaluated with corrective valgus stress (2nd test, J test), and the kind of prosthesis. We comparatively analyzed indicators affecting no thumb test (3rd test). RESULTS: There was no relation between age, sex, and body weight and no thumb test (3rd test). Patellar sulcus angle (p = 0.795), patellar congruence angle (p = 0.276) and preoperative mechanical axis showed no relationship. The 1st no thumb test (p = 0.007) and 2nd test (p = 0.002) showed significant relation with the 3rd no thumb test. Among surgical indicators, pre-osteotomy patella thickness (p = 0.275) and degeneration of patella (p = 0.320) were not relevant but post-osteotomy patellar thickness (p = 0.002) was relevant to no thumb test (3rd test). According to prosthesis, there was no significance with Nexgen (p = 0.575). However, there was significant correlation between Scorpio (p = 0.011), Vanguard (p = 0.049) and no thumb test (3rd test). Especially, Scorpio had a tendency to dislocate the patella, but Vanguard to stabilize the patella. CONCLUSIONS: No thumb test (3rd test) is correlated positively with 1st test, 2nd test, and post-osteotomy patella thickness. Therefore, the more patella osteotomy and the prosthesis with high affinity to patellofemoral alignment would be required for correct patella alignment.
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee/*methods
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Female
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Humans
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Intraoperative Care/*methods
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Osteotomy
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Patella/*anatomy & histology/surgery
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Physical Examination
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Risk Factors