1.Preliminary Outcomes of Endoscopic Spine Surgery Adoption at a Singapore Tertiary Hospital: A Multisurgeon Experience
John Wen Cong THNG ; Nicholas WONG ; Kai Lin LEE ; Wu Jie TOH ; Haobin CHEN ; Ghim Hoe NEO ; Yilun HUANG
Journal of Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery and Technique 2026;11(1):95-104
Objective:
This study characterizes the demographic and clinical profiles of patients undergoing unilateral biportal endoscopic spine surgery (UBE ESS) for lumbar decompression/discectomy at a tertiary hospital in Singapore. It examines service implementation across multiple senior surgeons, evaluates preliminary clinical outcomes, and describes the learning curve observed during early adoption among surgeons already experienced in minimally invasive spine surgery, benchmarked against international standards. In the context of increasing global uptake of endoscopic techniques, this work provides evidence to inform institutional adoption and surgeon training. This analysis forms part of a multi-paper series comparing surgeon experience and patient outcomes between conventional minimally invasive approaches and UBE ESS for lumbar decompression/discectomy.
Methods:
We conducted a retrospective review of 111 patients who underwent UBE lumbar decompression/discectomy at a public tertiary hospital between October 2022 and April 2024. Data on patient demographics, comorbidities, presenting symptoms, operative details, and clinical outcomes, including visual analogue scale (VAS) scores and 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) health domains, were analyzed using appropriate statistical methods.
Results:
The mean patient age was 56.8 years, with a slight female predominance (54.1%). Statistically significant improvements were observed in VAS scores for both back and leg pain (p<0.05), alongside significant gains in SF-36 domains including physical functioning, bodily pain, vitality, and social functioning. Operative times decreased progressively with increasing case volume, consistent with the presence of a procedural learning curve.
Conclusion
UBE ESS for lumbar decompression/discectomy is a safe and efficacious technique that can be successfully adopted by spinal surgeons with prior minimally invasive surgical experience. Operative time demonstrates a meaningful reduction once the initial learning curve has been overcome. ESS provides a reproducible option for the treatment of degenerative lumbar spine disease in the tertiary hospital setting in Singapore, with outcomes comparable to established international benchmarks. Future work will include long-term follow-up of this patient cohort and direct comparison with conventional minimally invasive techniques in subsequent studies.
2.Natural Language Processing for serious illness communications in palliative surgical oncology.
Louis Choon Kit WONG ; Nicholas Brian SHANNON ; Qingyuan ZHUANG ; Hairil Rizal ABDULLAH ; Wei Jing FONG ; Claramae Shulyn CHIA ; Jolene Si Min WONG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2024;53(11):697-699
3.Association of face mask use with self-reported cardiovascular symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Nicholas Wen SHENG CHEW ; Raymond Ching CHIEW WONG ; Andie Hartanto DJOHAN ; Jinghao Nicholas NGIAM ; Ping CHAI ; Tiong-Cheng YEO ; Huay-Cheem TAN ; Ching-Hui SIA
Singapore medical journal 2023;64(10):609-615
INTRODUCTION:
Countries are mandating the use of face masks to stem the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Face mask use has been associated with discomfort due to its effects on thermoregulation, breathing and oxygenation. We evaluated the prevalence and severity of self-reported cardiovascular symptoms before and during face mask use.
METHODS:
This was a cross-sectional study of 1,001 participants residing in Singapore, who participated in a self-administered questionnaire between 25 April 2020 and 4 May 2020. Symptom severity before and during mask use, and health-seeking behaviour information were collected. The study outcome was self-reported worsening of cardiovascular symptoms and its association with the type of mask worn, duration of mask worn per day, and intensity of physical activities during mask use.
RESULTS:
The most common symptom reported during mask use was dyspnoea. Independent predictors for self-reported cardiovascular symptoms during mask use were moderate-high physical activity during mask use (odds ratio [OR] 1.634, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.176-2.270, P = 0.003), duration of mask use for ≥3 h (OR 1.672, 95% CI 1.189-2.352, P = 0.003) and type of mask used, after adjusting for age, sex, healthcare-based worker status and presence of comorbidities. N95 mask was associated with worse symptoms when compared to surgical mask. Participants with ≥3 worsening symptoms or worsening dyspnoea, palpitations, fatigue and dizziness were more likely to seek medical help.
CONCLUSION
Face mask use has been proven to be an effective way in curbing COVID-19 transmission. However, participants in this study had concerns regarding its use and these concerns should be urgently addressed to enable mask use policies to be enacted.
Humans
;
COVID-19/epidemiology*
;
Pandemics
;
Masks/adverse effects*
;
Self Report
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Dyspnea/etiology*
4.Universal Screening For Gestational Diabetes Mellitus In Antenatal Mothers Improves Antenatal Management And Outcomes – Single Centre Experience
Nicholas Lee Wen Sheng ; Daniel Wong Bang Lung ; Safurah Jaafar ; Sangeetha ; Tiffany Grace Wong ; Salmiah Md Sharif
Malaysian Journal of Public Health Medicine 2021;21(1):230-238
This study examined the impact of universal screening in diagnosing and managing gestational diabetes (GDM) amongst antenatal mother and associated neonatal outcomes. It is a single-centre, retrospective study on routinely collected data of antenatal women in Health Clinic Seremban over one year in 2018. All women diagnosed with GDM, who were not known sufferers of type 1 or type 2 diabetes were included in this study. Participants were stratified according to risk factors for GDM to compare the performance of a selective high-risk screening approach to that of universal screening for detecting GDM. Subjects were categorized as high-risk for GDM based on the guidelines recommended by the Malaysian Clinical Practice guidelines. It was found that through universal screening, 246 antenatal mothers were tested positive for GDM out of the 987 of these mothers without prior diabetes, giving a prevalence of 24.9%. If selective screening using traditional risk factors had been employed, 54 (22%) of the antenatal mothers diagnosed with GDM would have been missed. It was established that risk factors for GDM included advancing age, other ethnicities (patients that are not of Malay, Chinese nor Indian ethnicities), obesity, history of abortion or GDM and family history of diabetes mellitus. Neonatal outcomes of those with GDM as compared to those without were similar. This study highlights that universal screening improved GDM detection rates amongst antenatal mothers. The increased detection helped facilitate an earlier intervention which may have contributed to better antenatal management and outcomes for neonates and their mothers.
5.Low incidence of cardiac complications from COVID-19 and its treatment among hospitalised patients in Singapore.
Tony Yi Wei LI ; Jinghao Nicholas NGIAM ; Nicholas W S CHEW ; Sai Meng THAM ; Zhen Yu LIM ; Shuyun CEN ; Shir Lynn LIM ; Robin CHERIAN ; Raymond C C WONG ; Ping CHAI ; Tiong Cheng YEO ; Paul Anantharajah TAMBYAH ; Amelia SANTOSA ; Gail Brenda CROSS ; Ching Hui SIA
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2021;50(6):490-493
6.Rare
Nicholas W S CHEW ; Raymond C WONG ; William W F KONG ; Adrian LOW ; Huay Cheem TAN
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2021;50(8):655-656


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