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Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 7, Issue 1, 2024 Apr 2024

Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 7, Issue 1, 2024

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

6 - Socially Responsible Surgery: Better Practices for Better Outcomes

8 - Interview with Dr. Talar Tatarian - Assistant Professor

10 - Global Surgery : Current State and Involvement as a Trainee

12 - Interview with Dr. Ibnouf Sulieman - Transplant Surgery Fellow

14 - Resident Spotlight - Dr. Sam Nasser - PGY3

16 - A Review of the FIRST and SECOND Trials

18 - Residency Signaling in General Surgery

20 - Navigating Competency: Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs)

22 - The Effect of Language Barriers on Surgical Outcomes

24 - Research Spotlight: The First Complete Human Eye …


Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 6, Issue 1, 2023 Mar 2023

Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 6, Issue 1, 2023

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

6 - Dr. Thomas Mütter’s Legacy: The Mütter Museum

8 - The History and Progression of Laparoscopic Surgery

10 - An Interview with Dr. Andrew Morgan

12 - A Surgical Perspective of the Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Healthcare

14 - An Interview with Dr. Deviney Rattigan

16 - The Importance of Mentorship in Improving the Outlook and Perception of General Surgery Among Medical Students

18 - Surgical Fellow Spotlight: An Interview with Dr. Steve Gurien

20 - Point of Care Ultrasound in General Surgery Training

22 - Surgical Resident Spotlight: An Interview with Hamza Rshaidat …


Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 5, Issue 1, 2022 Jun 2022

Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 5, Issue 1, 2022

Gibbon Surgical Review

In this Issue:

6 - A History of ECMO and its Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic

8 - The First Pig-to-Human Heart Xenotransplantation

9 - Residency Interviewing in the Zoom Era

10 - An Interview with Dr. Andrew Newman

12 - Lung Transplantation for Patients with Severe COVID-19 Pulmonary Disease

14 - Risk Factors for Five-year Mortality after Carotid Endarterectomy

18 - An Interview with Dr. Scott Cowan

18 - General Surgery 101: The J-Pouch

20 - The Business of Surgery: Recognizing Barriers to Gender Equity


Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 4, Issue 1, 2021 Jun 2022

Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 4, Issue 1, 2021

Gibbon Surgical Review

Contents:

The Evolution of Surgical Practice During the Ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic, 4

Socially responsible surgical care: a movement committed to surgical equity, 6

The MS4 Perspective on the Path to Surgery, 8

The Role of Empathy in Surgery: A Commentary and Conversation with Dr. Harish Lavu, 10

Interview with Dr. Olugbenga Okusanya, 12

The Ultimate Test in Medicine: Adapting Patient Care, Procedures, and Training During a Pandemic, 14

Robotic Surgery: Development, Applications, and Future Directions,16

Editorial Board and Reviewers, 19

Gibbon Surgical Society, 20

John H. Gibbon Jr., MD, 21

Also in this Issue:

The Jefferson Legacy: Where are they …


Surgery Myths And Facts, Heli Patel Feb 2020

Surgery Myths And Facts, Heli Patel

Gibbon Surgical Review

Throughout social media, television shows, movies, and “public perception”, surgical residents and attendings are often stereotyped into a personality that is most often incorrect. Unless you are a surgeon, it is often hard to understand what exactly the life entails. Add in some Hollywood drama and social media, and what you get is a wildly disproportionate picture of what surgeons’ personalities are like. As a medical student, it is often difficult to separate fact from fiction, so here are some of the most common myths debunked.


John H. Gibbon, Jr., Md Feb 2020

John H. Gibbon, Jr., Md

Gibbon Surgical Review

Dr. John Heysham Gibbon, Jr. graduated from Jefferson Medical College in 1927, and in a brief series of events, he was named Fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital. In 1930, he found himself assisting Dr. Edward Churchill in an emergency pulmonary embolectomy. At that time the procedure was one of desperation, as no patient in the U.S. had survived the removal of blood clots in open-heart surgery. As Dr. Gibbon recorded the patient’s waning vital signs prior to the procedure he thought, “If only we could remove the blood from her body by bypassing her lungs, and oxygenate it, then return …


Gibbon Surgical Society Feb 2020

Gibbon Surgical Society

Gibbon Surgical Review

The John H. Gibbon, Jr. Surgical Society (GSS) at Sidney Kimmel Medical College (SKMC) at Thomas Jefferson University is a unique student interest group that has been working hard to increase interest in the field of surgery among medical students for the last 37 years. The society has over 400 total active members on a year to year basis, spread across the four-year curriculum. The GSS increases exposure and interest to the surgical field through a unique blend of episodic and longitudinal programming that helps bring together students, residents, and faculty in an educational setting.


Longevity In Surgery: A Conversation With Two Temple Surgeons About How They Continually Find Joy In Their Careers, Kelsey Muir Feb 2020

Longevity In Surgery: A Conversation With Two Temple Surgeons About How They Continually Find Joy In Their Careers, Kelsey Muir

Gibbon Surgical Review

Both Dr. Daly and Dr. Pontari describe the stress and pressure that comes with a long career in patient care, however intertwined with the stress is their overwhelming gratitude and joy for surgery. Maintaining that perspective for medicine and patient care has required two things: community and an outlet. Dr. Daly and Dr. Pontari expressed the need to be able to share their anxieties and struggles with someone to process the stress, the difficulties, and the demands of a surgical career.


Interview With Dr. Dawn Salvatore, Preeyal Patel Feb 2020

Interview With Dr. Dawn Salvatore, Preeyal Patel

Gibbon Surgical Review

A medical student’s path to surgery is notoriously long and arduous. Traditionally, students who are interested in the field begin to prepare their qualifications from day one, especially given the competitive nature of acceptance into surgical programs. For students who develop an interest in surgery during their later years of medical school, it can be a daunting task to pursue a track in which they already feel behind. Often times, these students are discouraged from applying to surgical residencies, worrying that their non-traditional path may hinder their success. However, Dr. Dawn Salvatore can reassure students that a non-traditional path to …


The Utility Of Surgical Simulation In Student Education, Jared Raikin Feb 2020

The Utility Of Surgical Simulation In Student Education, Jared Raikin

Gibbon Surgical Review

The use of simulation in the field of surgery has become a heavily researched topic over the last few decades, but it is by no means a new concept. The first recorded use of surgical simulation dates back 2,500 years with evidence of nasal models for flap reconstruction made of leaf and clay.1 But simulation as we know it today did not take shape until the 1980s with the invention of the Comprehensive Anesthesia Simulation Environment (CASE) mannequins. The use of nonorganic simulation tools revolutionized the field and continues to play a large role in medical education. These modalities have …


Interview With Dr. Geoffrey Krampitz, Colin Yost Feb 2020

Interview With Dr. Geoffrey Krampitz, Colin Yost

Gibbon Surgical Review

Geoffrey Krampitz, MD, PhD is a hepatopancreaticobiliary surgeon with an extensive background in surgical oncology, stem cell science, and cancer immunotherapy research who recently joined the faculty here at Thomas Jefferson University as an Assistant Professor of Surgery. After earning his BSE in biomedical engineering at Johns Hopkins University and before starting medical training, Dr. Krampitz worked in consulting in the San Francisco Bay Area and eventually helped launch two internet startup companies in Silicon Valley. He then went to UC San Francisco for his Master’s degree, where he investigated the role of HIF1-alpha in stem cell differentiation. Dr. Krampitz …


Primum Non Nocere: Surgeons And The Politics Of Firearm Trauma, Kaushal Desai Feb 2020

Primum Non Nocere: Surgeons And The Politics Of Firearm Trauma, Kaushal Desai

Gibbon Surgical Review

The crisis of firearm violence in America continues to worsen and the call to action cannot be ignored. If we are to make a real impact, we must be just as skilled policy makers as proceduralists. We must wield the pen as well as we wield the scalpel. All the clinical knowledge and surgical skills in the world will make no difference if we do not reduce the number of firearm injuries. The skillset we need is policy analysis and lobbying, which can only be developed through political activism and engagement, not more practice questions and Online MedEd.


Bedside To Bench: Basic Science Research During General Surgery Residency, Signe Caksa Feb 2020

Bedside To Bench: Basic Science Research During General Surgery Residency, Signe Caksa

Gibbon Surgical Review

Clinical, basic science, and quality improvement research is becoming increasingly integrated into general surgery residency programs, providing aspiring surgeons with an avenue to engage with academia and improve patient care early on in their careers. For example, as an essential part of their training, general surgery residents at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (TJUH) complete one to two years of research, usually between their PGY3 and PGY4 years. The goal of this protected research time is for residents to gain hands-on surgical research skills and work on translational research projects that correlate with clinical cases, while also becoming more competitive for …


General Surgery 101: Nissen Fundoplication, Kelley Yuan, Tyler Bauer Feb 2020

General Surgery 101: Nissen Fundoplication, Kelley Yuan, Tyler Bauer

Gibbon Surgical Review

The first time that medical students enter the OR can be a jarring experience. Successfully maintaining sterility is hard enough, but remembering relevant patient history, answering “pimp” questions, and performing basic suturing skills can make the third year medical student experience difficult. In this article we describe a common surgery performed by both general and thoracic surgeons with a specific focus on “medical student level” understanding. This piece is the product of a collaboration between an MS1 and MS4, both of whom are interested in a career in surgery. We hope you find it helpful!


Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 3, Issue 1, 2020 Feb 2020

Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 3, Issue 1, 2020

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

4 - Interview with Dr. Geoffrey Krampitz

8 - Primum Non Nocere: Surgeons and the Politics of Firearm Trauma

10 - General Surgery 101: Nissen Fundoplication

14 - Interview with Dr. Dawn Salvatore

16 - The Utility of Surgical Simulation in Student Education

18 - Bedside to Bench: Basic Science Research During General Surgery Residency

20 - Longevity in Surgery: A Conversation with Two Temple Surgeons About How They Continually Find Joy in Their Careers

22 - Surgery Myths and Facts

24 - Gibbon Surgical Society

25 - John H. Gibbon Jr., MD

26 - Editorial Board …


Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 2, Issue 1, 2019 Apr 2019

Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 2, Issue 1, 2019

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

4 - The Gibbon Surgical Externship: A Student’s Perspective

6 - Invited Article: The PCOM Wisely Surgical Association and the Philadelphia Surgery Conference

8 - Interview With Thomas Jefferson Cardiothoracic Surgeon, H. Todd Massey, MD

12 - The Life of a Rwandan Surgical Resident

14 - Role Of Technological Advancement In The Context Of Surgical Planning And Execution: Perspective Of Jefferson Surgical Faculty

16 - Interview with William B. Hughes, MD, Director of the Thomas Jefferson University Hospital Burn Center

19 - Women in Surgery: An Interview with Dr. Karen Chojnacki, Vice Chair of Surgical Education at …


Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 1, Issue 2, 2018 Nov 2018

Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 1, Issue 2, 2018

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

  • Forward by Charles J. Yeo, MD, FACS
  • PERSPECTIVE - An Interview with Dr. Theresa Yeo, Co-Director of the Jefferson Pancreas Tumor Registry (JPTR)
  • A PGY-1's Perspective: Conducting Pancreatic Cancer Research as a Medical Student
  • INTERVIEW - Jonathan Brody, PhD - Pancreatic Cancer Specialist
  • RESEARCH SPOTLIGHT - The Journal of Pancreatic Cancer
  • Pancreatic Cancer Research at Jefferson: The Mary Halinski Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund
  • The Gibbon Surgical Society
  • Contributors
  • Samuel D. Gross Professor of Surgery: Charles J. Yeo, MD, FACS


Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 1, Issue 1, 2018 Mar 2018

Download Entire Issue: Gibbon Surgical Review, Volume 1, Issue 1, 2018

Gibbon Surgical Review

Table of Contents

  • A First Year's Perspective on JeffMD, Somnath Das, MS1
  • Spotlight on TJUH's Quality and Safety Group, Samantha L. Savitch, MS1
  • Medical Student Involvement in Quality Improvement Research, Tyler M. Bauer, MS3
  • Global Surgery: A Shift in the Global Health Paradigm, Myles S. Dworkin, MS3
  • Thomas Jefferson University Design Vault, Victor B. Hsue, MS2
  • Physician Spotlight: Ernest (Gary) L. Rosato, MD, FACS, Carrie E. Andrews, MS3
  • The SCALPELS Program, Emily Papai, MS1


Pharmacists On The Front Lines Of Polypharmacy: The Individualized Medication Assessment And Planning (Imap) Project To Improve Medication Use In Senior Adults With Cancer, Ginah Nightingale Pharmd, Bcop, Laura T. Pizzi Pharmd, Mph, Emily Hajjar Pharmd, Bcps, Bcacp, Cgp, Elizabeth Pigott, Margaret Wang, Shannon Doherty, Kristine Swartz Md, Andrew Chapman Do, Facp Nov 2015

Pharmacists On The Front Lines Of Polypharmacy: The Individualized Medication Assessment And Planning (Imap) Project To Improve Medication Use In Senior Adults With Cancer, Ginah Nightingale Pharmd, Bcop, Laura T. Pizzi Pharmd, Mph, Emily Hajjar Pharmd, Bcps, Bcacp, Cgp, Elizabeth Pigott, Margaret Wang, Shannon Doherty, Kristine Swartz Md, Andrew Chapman Do, Facp

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract provided.


Healthcare-Associated Infections-Is Targeting Zero A Global Reality?, Mary Lou Manning Phd, Crnp, Cic, Faan, Denise Murphy Rn, Mph, Cic, Faan Oct 2013

Healthcare-Associated Infections-Is Targeting Zero A Global Reality?, Mary Lou Manning Phd, Crnp, Cic, Faan, Denise Murphy Rn, Mph, Cic, Faan

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract provided.


New Jersey Vaccine Mandates: The Confluence Of Regulations, Rights, And Religion, Drew Harris Dpm, Mph Jun 2013

New Jersey Vaccine Mandates: The Confluence Of Regulations, Rights, And Religion, Drew Harris Dpm, Mph

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract provided.


Histology Slide, John Farber Oct 2012

Histology Slide, John Farber

The Medicine Forum

A 45 year old Black female without significant past medical history was admitted with insidious cough, dyspnea, nausea, vomiting, and progressive weight loss. She suddenly went into respiratory distress and succumbed to death. Autopsy subsequently showed widespread granulomatous disease. This slide of one of the lung lesions shows a noncaseating granulocyte with a fibrotic center surrounded by palisading histiocytes, consistent with a diagnosis of nodular sarcoma.


Cord Compression By Extramedullary Hematopoiesis In Polycythemia Vera, Lisa Reale, Steve Zrada, Jose Martinez Oct 2012

Cord Compression By Extramedullary Hematopoiesis In Polycythemia Vera, Lisa Reale, Steve Zrada, Jose Martinez

The Medicine Forum

A 73-year-old male with polycythemia vera and a history of prostate cancer presents to an outside hospital complaining of back pain of two months duration. He denied fevers, chills, night sweats, weight loss, lower extremity weakness and decreased sensation. Other than chronic constipation and urinary hesitancy, his review of systems was unremarkable. A spinal x-ray revealed a T12 vertebral fracture and the patient was transferred to Thomas Jefferson University Hospital for further management.


Nevirapine Hepatotoxicity: Case Report And Discussion, Matt Baichi Oct 2012

Nevirapine Hepatotoxicity: Case Report And Discussion, Matt Baichi

The Medicine Forum

Nevirapine (viramune) is a nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor commonly used in combination with other antiretroviral medicines in the treatment of HIV/AIDS. The safety profile of nevirapine, as determined by review of prospective clinical trials, reports rash with an incidence of 16% as the most common side effect. Clinical hepatitis is reported to occur with an incidence of 1%. A review of the literature shows many case reports of nevirapine-induced hepatotoxicity in patients receiving both treatment and prophylaxis for HIV. The purpose of this case report is to stress the importance of early recognition and withdrawal of the offending drug.


Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonitis In Hiv-Infected Patients, Bobbak Vahid Oct 2012

Nonspecific Interstitial Pneumonitis In Hiv-Infected Patients, Bobbak Vahid

The Medicine Forum

A 24 year old African-American male with a history of AIDS with a recent CD4 count of 57/uL, is admitted to the hospital with substernal chest pain and shortness of breath for the past two weeks. Dyspnea is mostly on exertion, and the patient denied productive cough or hemoptysis, fevers, chills, or night sweats. Three weeks prior to presentation, the patient underwent esophagogastroduodenoscopy, which revealed an esophageal ulcer. Biopsies did not show any specific pathology and cultures were negative. Outpatient medications include prednisone, rabeprazole, fluconazole, clarithromycin, and ethambutol, bactrim.

Vitals on admission were as follows: temperature 97.2, pulse 80/min, and …