1.Risk factors of incision infection and spinal canal hematoma after lumbar posterior surgery
Jiaming LIU ; Huilin DENG ; Yang ZHOU ; Xuanyin CHEN ; Wenzhao CHEN ; Shanhu HUANG ; Min DAI ; Zhili LIU
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2017;37(9):547-552
Objective To analyze the risk factors of incision infection and spinal canal hematoma after lumbar spinal posterior surgery.Methods Data of 33 patients with incision infection and 25 patients with spinal canal hematoma after posterior surgery for lumbar spinal disease from January 2010 to December 2014 were retrospectively analyzed.For the patients with incision infection,20 of them were males and 13 were females,with an average age of 58.85±8.76 years (range 38-79 years).Of these patients,5 were diagnosed with lumbar disc herniation,9 with lumbar spondylolisthesis,15 with lumbar spinal stenosis and 4 with lumbar vertebral fracture.For patients with spinal canal hematoma,17 of them were males and 8 were females,with a mean age of 60.96±11.37 (range,38-77).The diagnoses of them were lumbar disc herniation in 18 patients,spondylolisthesis in 3 patients and spinal stenosis in 4 patients.From the same period database,patients who underwent lumbar posterior lumbar surgery with no postoperative complications were selected by 3:1 ratio as the control group according to age,gender and diagnosis.Results For patients with incision infection,it was found that diabetes mellitus,preoperative RBC,hemoglobin,total protein,albumin,serum calcium,operation time,number of segment fusion,intraoperative blood loss,postoperative WBC,RBC,hemoglobin and platelet were significantly different from those with non-infection group.Moreover,multivariate logistic analysis showed that diabetes mellitus (OR=3.716,P=0.032),preoperative serum calcium (OR< 0.001,P=0.001),intraoperative blood loss (OR=1.002,P=0.014),postoperative hemoglobin (OR=0.923,P=0.018) and postoperative platelet (OR=1.007,P=0.017) were independent risk factors for postoperative incision infection.For patients with spinal canal hematoma,it was found that patients' preoperative total protein,albumin,serum calcium,platelet,operation time,intraoperative blood loss and postoperative total protein were significantly different from non-hematoma group.Multivariate logistic analysis showed that preoperative serum calcium (OR< 0.001,P=0.001),preoperative total protein (OR=1.298,P=0.043),intraoperative blood loss (OR=1.003,P=0.021) and postoperative total protein (OR=1.080,P=0.028) were independent risk factors for postoperative spinal canal hematoma.Conclusion The preoperative diabetes mellitus,serum calcium,intraoperative blood loss,postoperative hemoglobin and platelet were important risk factors for lumbar incision infection.And preoperative serum calcium,total protein,intraoperative blood loss and postoperative total protein were the risk factors for spinal canal hematoma.
2.Training effect and influencing factors of transfer training for psychiatrists in Sichuan province
Dan WANG ; Xuanyin HUANG ; Rong PENG ; Fuqiong YAO ; Wei WANG ; Hong WEN
Sichuan Mental Health 2021;34(4):368-371
ObjectiveTo investigate the effect and influencing factors of transfer training for psychiatrists in Sichuan province, and to provide references for development of psychiatric personnel training program. MethodsThe qualified trainees who completed the phase I-IV transfer trainings at six regional mental health centers of Sichuan province from January 2015 to December 2018 were enrolled. All the selected trainees underwent three stages of systematic training: theoretical study, clinical practice and community practice. Moreover, trainees were given a closed-book examination at the end of the first stage of theoretical training and the third stage of community practice, and the examination results were used as indicators to assess the effectiveness of the training. ResultsThe trainees of different educational background, age, hospital type, hospital level and clinical practice bases had statistically different examination results (P<0.05 or 0.01). The results of both examinations of the trainees in transfer training were all better than those of the residents in standardized training [(77.00±8.55) vs. (70.90±6.81), (77.24±8.80) vs. (69.00±7.66), P<0.05]. ConclusionEducational requirements (bachelor's degree and above) and reasonable allocation of clinical practice bases may be the important measures to enhance the effect of transfer training for psychiatrists.