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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2018

Surgery

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Implantable Biomaterials To Provide Local Immunotherapy Following Surgical Resection., Michael J Gough, Jason R Baird, R Bryan Bell Dec 2018

Implantable Biomaterials To Provide Local Immunotherapy Following Surgical Resection., Michael J Gough, Jason R Baird, R Bryan Bell

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

No abstract provided.


Implementing A Surgical Infection Prevention Practice In An Integrated Healthcare System, Tammy Peacock Dec 2018

Implementing A Surgical Infection Prevention Practice In An Integrated Healthcare System, Tammy Peacock

Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Projects

Problem: One of the most preventable health care associated infections (HAI) is surgical site infection (SSI). Approximately sixty percent of SSI’s could be prevented. The devastation of an SSI to the patient can be catastrophic. The cost to the health care system for treating SSI’s can be substantial (Ban et al., 2017).

Context: The rate of surgical site infections has been on the increase over the past three years. The concern for the amount of harm affecting our patients was worrisome. The cost of reputation and the bottom line to the organization was recognized by senior leadership. The support from …


Early Oral Feeding After Bowel Resection, Jennifer Strang Dec 2018

Early Oral Feeding After Bowel Resection, Jennifer Strang

Theses & Dissertations

Research Focus: The primary purpose of this project was to determine if there was an association of factors with time to first solid meal in gastrointestinal (GI) surgery patients and the impact solid diet has on length of stay (LOS) in the hospital, GI symptoms, and incidence of post-operative ileus (POI). A secondary purpose was to observe and describe when an oral diet was started and the progression of diet after GI surgery.

Research Methods: This study was a cross-sectional, retrospective chart review of a convenience sample in a multi-centered hospital system conducted in 84 GI resection patients …


Opioid-Prescribing Practices For Post-Operative Patients In Otolaryngology: A Multiphasic Quality Improvement Project In A Single Large Institution, Zachary Gandee, Sophia Dang, Alexander N. Duffy, Jonathan C. Li, Tanvi Rana, Brittany Gunville, Tingting Zhan, Elizabeth Cottrill, Md, David Cognetti, Md Dec 2018

Opioid-Prescribing Practices For Post-Operative Patients In Otolaryngology: A Multiphasic Quality Improvement Project In A Single Large Institution, Zachary Gandee, Sophia Dang, Alexander N. Duffy, Jonathan C. Li, Tanvi Rana, Brittany Gunville, Tingting Zhan, Elizabeth Cottrill, Md, David Cognetti, Md

Phase 1

Objectives:

In otolaryngology, postoperative pain management lacks evidence-based guidelines. We investigated opioid prescription and consumption for common procedures to develop prescribing guidelines at our institution.

Study Design:

Prospective, survey study.

Methods:

Patients who underwent surgery between July and September were given surveys upon discharge and at first follow-up visit. We assessed opioid usage and pain using the visual analog scale and opioid consumption throughout the postoperative period. Opioid prescriptions were converted to a standardized unit of 5 mg Oxycodone pills for reporting. Four procedures (transoral robotic surgery resection [TORS], sialendoscopy, parathyroidectomy/thyroidectomy, and parotidectomy) were selected for isolated analysis.

Results: …


Patient Perceptions And Expectations About Postoperative Analgesia, Carrie Mok, Nirmal Shah, Do, Stephen F. Goldberg, Md, Amir C. Dayan, Md, Marc Torjman, Phd, Jaime L. Baratta, Md Dec 2018

Patient Perceptions And Expectations About Postoperative Analgesia, Carrie Mok, Nirmal Shah, Do, Stephen F. Goldberg, Md, Amir C. Dayan, Md, Marc Torjman, Phd, Jaime L. Baratta, Md

Phase 1

Introduction

Opioid overdose deaths have nearly quadrupled since 1999. Nearly 2 out of 3 persons being prescribed medications are prescribed an opioid. Physicians may be prescribing opioids for more than what is required for postoperative pain control, leading to increased risk for opioid abuse and addiction. Patient perceptions of perioperative pain medications are poorly understood.

Objective

This survey aims to understand patient expectations of perioperative analgesics.

Methods

Following IRB approval, patients 18 years of age or older, were given a 13-question survey prior to their surgery at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, to evaluate the perception of pain medications, medication efficacy, …


The Impact Of Obesity Surgery On Psychosocial Health, Sibel Taze, Oya Gumuskaya, Mustafa Taşkın Dec 2018

The Impact Of Obesity Surgery On Psychosocial Health, Sibel Taze, Oya Gumuskaya, Mustafa Taşkın

Journal of Perioperative Nursing

Background: As obesity affects different dimensions of health, psychosocial wellbeing of patients can be predicted to significantly improve after bariatric surgery.

Method: This qualitative study focused on determining the experience of patients who underwent bariatric surgery and the psychosocial impact of it on their daily lives and provides nurses with detailed information regarding patients’ experience. While some of these outcomes were in line with the literature, they have also revealed new aspects and provided deeper understanding regarding individuals’ experiences.

Results: Five themes were identified: limitations in physical activity, social isolation due to negative body image, increased self-esteem, change in romantic …


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


Functional Radical Cervical Dissection For Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: The Experience Of A Single Center, Tulin Adrian, Lucian Alecu, Catalina Poiana, Luminita Tomescu, Iulian Slavu, Raluca Tulin, Silviu Pituru, Cristina Orlov, Radu Jecan, Balalau Cristian, Anca Pantea Stoian, Razvan Hainarosie, Cornelia Nitipir Oct 2018

Functional Radical Cervical Dissection For Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: The Experience Of A Single Center, Tulin Adrian, Lucian Alecu, Catalina Poiana, Luminita Tomescu, Iulian Slavu, Raluca Tulin, Silviu Pituru, Cristina Orlov, Radu Jecan, Balalau Cristian, Anca Pantea Stoian, Razvan Hainarosie, Cornelia Nitipir

Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences

There is ongoing debate regarding the role of neck dissection in differentiated thyroid cancer, about its usefulness in elective settings, and the increased costs regarding morbidity and operative time. This retrospective study aimed to determine the rate of metastases in cervical lymph nodes, to examine the morbidity of this surgery, and to assess whether a pattern of distribution of tumor cells concerning neck lymphatic compartments exists. The most frequent type of cancer to metastasize was papillary cancer, the majority of patients were young with a median of 30 years, predominantly females. Differentiated thyroid cancer frequently metastasizes to the central and …


Long-Term Antibiotic Therapy Is Just As Effective As Amputation For Foot Osteomyelitis In Diabetics Without Peripheral Arterial Disease, Christopher Hopper Sep 2018

Long-Term Antibiotic Therapy Is Just As Effective As Amputation For Foot Osteomyelitis In Diabetics Without Peripheral Arterial Disease, Christopher Hopper

Clinical Research in Practice: The Journal of Team Hippocrates

A critical appraisal and clinical application of Lázaro-Martínez JL, Aragón-Sánchez J, García-Morales E. Antibiotics versus conservative surgery for treating diabetic foot osteomyelitis: a randomized comparative trial. Diabetes Care. 2014;37(3):789-95. doi: 10.2337/dc13-1526.


The Association Of Prescription Opioid Exposure And Patient Factors With Prolonged Postoperative Opioid Use In Opioid Naive Patients, Jennifer Lanzillotta Aug 2018

The Association Of Prescription Opioid Exposure And Patient Factors With Prolonged Postoperative Opioid Use In Opioid Naive Patients, Jennifer Lanzillotta

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Background

Research suggests prolonged postoperative opioid use occurs in 4-13% of opioid naïve patients and is related to factors other than surgical pain. However, it is unclear which patient factors and prescribing practices are associated with prolonged use after surgery among opioid naïve patients.

Objectives

To identify factors associated with prolonged postoperative opioid use (refills 90-180 days after surgery) in opioid naïve patients in two domains: specific patient characteristics (demographics, smoking status, comorbidities, etc.) and exposure through postoperative opioid prescriptions (in oral morphine milligram equivalents [OME]).

Methods

An electronic medical record dataset analysis of inpatient and outpatient opioid naïve adult …


Health Information Technology And Language Barriers In Pre-Admission Clinics, Sandra M. Coffey Jul 2018

Health Information Technology And Language Barriers In Pre-Admission Clinics, Sandra M. Coffey

Applied Research Projects

LEP or Limited English Proficiency patients across the United States are at higher risk for decreased quality of care because of their inability to communicate effectively with healthcare providers. Interpreters are not offered in a consistent manner due to many variables such as cost, availability of qualified interpreters, the time spent with patients due to an increased work-overload and clinician lack of knowledge into technologies available to use. Healthcare information technology such as video and telephone interpretation can bridge the gap between patients and medical personnel when a language barrier is present. At the pre-admission clinic, the Nursing personnel interviews …


Wait Time Reality Check: The Convergence Of Process, Perception, And Expectation, Marian Hill, Lorianne Classen, Andrea Romay, Erika Diaz Jul 2018

Wait Time Reality Check: The Convergence Of Process, Perception, And Expectation, Marian Hill, Lorianne Classen, Andrea Romay, Erika Diaz

Patient Experience Journal

There are few experiences as ubiquitous to patients as the experience of waiting. It is an occurrence that transcends diagnosis, is common to all demographics, and is shared across the continuum of care. The experience can be frustrating and full of ambiguity for patients and their families. Wait time and delays can lead to patients sensing a loss of control and magnify the feelings of anxiety they may already be suffering. In an effort to improve patient experience, a framework was developed to examine patient satisfaction as a function of expectations, perceptions, and reality. The process domain focused on the …


Can Novel Technologies Improve Breast Conserving Surgery?, Brian W. Pogue Jul 2018

Can Novel Technologies Improve Breast Conserving Surgery?, Brian W. Pogue

Dartmouth Scholarship

The practice of breast conserving surgery has been transformative for management of women’s breast cancer, and yet the current practice remains in a situation where approximately one-third of all patients have incomplete surgical resection. This is measured by the finding of clear margins on the surgical specimen, as measured by pathology sampling. This is a very active area of professional debate and research study, and the solutions are not as obvious as one might guess. Still, reviews of the status of the field suggest that technical solutions should be available to help mitigate this issue, and the tools for molecular …


Jefferson Digital Commons Quarterly Report: April-June 2018, Kelsey Duinkerken, Msi, James Copeland, Libt Jul 2018

Jefferson Digital Commons Quarterly Report: April-June 2018, Kelsey Duinkerken, Msi, James Copeland, Libt

Jefferson Digital Commons Reports

This quarterly report includes:

  • New Feature: PlumX Metrics
  • New Feature: CrossRef DOIs
  • College Restructuring
  • Articles
  • CREATE Day Presentations
  • Department of Surgery Resident Research Day
  • Dissertations
  • From the Archives
  • Grand Rounds and Lectures
  • Master of Public Health Capstones
  • Newsletters
  • Pathology Honors Program Student Research Symposium
  • Posters
  • What People are Saying About the JDC


Quality Of Life After Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery In Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis, Sadaf Qadeer, Shabbir Akhtar, Montasir Junaid, Muhammad Sohail Halim Jul 2018

Quality Of Life After Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery In Patients With Chronic Rhinosinusitis, Sadaf Qadeer, Shabbir Akhtar, Montasir Junaid, Muhammad Sohail Halim

Section of Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery

Chronic Rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a group of disorders characterized by the inflammation of mucosa of the nasal passages and paranasal sinuses. It includes chronic rhinosinusitis with polyps, CRS without polyps and Allergic Fungal Sinusitis (AFS). This debilitating disease causes negative impact on quality of life (QOL) of patients. Functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) is the mainstay of surgical treatment for patients and improves QOL of patients. This subjective assessment of QOL can be measured by disease specific questionnaires. SNOT-22 questionnaire is widely used and validated questionnaire for this purpose. Prospective study was done on 54 patients. Data were collected using …


A Variant Of The Sciatic Nerve And Its Clinical Implications., Graham Dupont, Florence Unno, Joe Iwanaga, Rod J Oskouian, R Shane Tubbs Jun 2018

A Variant Of The Sciatic Nerve And Its Clinical Implications., Graham Dupont, Florence Unno, Joe Iwanaga, Rod J Oskouian, R Shane Tubbs

Articles, Abstracts, and Reports

Variants of gluteal neural anatomy are important to consider, especially during surgical approaches to the hip. During the routine dissection of the gluteal region, a variant of the sciatic nerve was found where the nerve left the pelvis fully split into its tibial and common fibular components. Intrapelvically and extrapelvically, there was no splitting of the two components by the piriformis muscle. Distally, the two parts of the nerve were draped over the medial and lateral edges of the ischial tuberosity. To avoid iatrogenic injury to the sciatic nerve during invasive or surgical approaches to this region, all possible anatomical …


Standardized Discharge Instructions And Their Impact On Post Operative Patient Knowledge, Nikolaus Hjelm, Md, Gregory Epps, Md, Ryan Rimmer, Md, Lauren Bogdan, Md, Erin Reilly, Md Jun 2018

Standardized Discharge Instructions And Their Impact On Post Operative Patient Knowledge, Nikolaus Hjelm, Md, Gregory Epps, Md, Ryan Rimmer, Md, Lauren Bogdan, Md, Erin Reilly, Md

House Staff Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Conference (2016-2019)

After every surgery, surgeons send their patients home with discharge instructions. The information is intended to educate the patients about their postoperative care and how to safely care for themselves upon returning home. Each surgeon reviews and approves the discharge instructions before they are given to their patients. This information is once again reviewed by the patient’s nurse before the patient leaves the hospital.

Within a large hospital, there are often several surgeons within each specialty that perform the same surgeries. The department of Otolaryngology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital is no exception. Within otolaryngology there are several subspecialties. At …


Volume Vii (2018), Unm Department Of Orthopaedic Surgery Jun 2018

Volume Vii (2018), Unm Department Of Orthopaedic Surgery

UNM Orthopaedic Research Journal

No abstract provided.


The Impact Of Rural-Urban Residency On Colorectal Cancer Screening, Stage At Diagnosis And Treatment In The Privately Insured Population, Mesnad Alyabsi May 2018

The Impact Of Rural-Urban Residency On Colorectal Cancer Screening, Stage At Diagnosis And Treatment In The Privately Insured Population, Mesnad Alyabsi

Theses & Dissertations

Colorectal Cancer (CRC) is the third most common and leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Although CRC screening can prevent and detect CRC at an early stage, about 35% of Americans are not screened. Despite the recent increase in screening, people with lower SES and those who live in rural areas have lowest screening. In rural areas, a common obstacle for screening is the long trips for health services which is associated with advanced CRC.

Moreover, surgery is a substantial part of CRC treatment since stages I-III and some metastatic CRC (mCRC) patients are treated with surgery. …


Postoperative Delirium Education, Aaron Wede May 2018

Postoperative Delirium Education, Aaron Wede

Doctor of Nursing Practice Projects

Surgical patients, aged 65 and older, comprise the largest surgical population. Increased age correlates with an increased incidence of postoperative delirium. Postoperative delirium (POD) can drastically increase healthcare costs, length of hospital stay, and overall morbidity and mortality. A clinical reference tool was created to have available for perioperative staff members at a 200-bed community hospital in the Midwest. The tool describes risk factors, prevention methods, and treatment options for POD. The initial implementation of the project was achieved with a PowerPoint presentation which was created to summarize the information found in the literature review and to instruct perioperative staff …


Benchmarking Rectal Cancer Care: Institutional Compliance With A Longitudinal Checklist., William C. Chapman, Pamela Choi, Alexander T. Hawkins, Steven R. Hunt, Matthew L. Silviera, Paul E. Wise, Matthew G. Mutch, Sean C. Glasgow May 2018

Benchmarking Rectal Cancer Care: Institutional Compliance With A Longitudinal Checklist., William C. Chapman, Pamela Choi, Alexander T. Hawkins, Steven R. Hunt, Matthew L. Silviera, Paul E. Wise, Matthew G. Mutch, Sean C. Glasgow

Manuscripts, Articles, Book Chapters and Other Papers

BACKGROUND: In 2012, the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons published the Rectal Cancer Surgery Checklist, a consensus document listing 25 essential elements of care for all patients undergoing radical surgery for rectal cancer. The authors herein examine checklist adherence in a mature, multisurgeon specialty academic practice.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective medical record review of patients undergoing elective radical resection for rectal adenocarcinoma over a 23-mo period was conducted. Checklists were completed post hoc for each patient, and these results were tabulated to determine levels of compliance. Subgroup analyses by compliance and experience levels of the treating surgeon …


Identifying What Matters To Hysterectomy Patients: Postsurgery Perceptions, Beliefs, And Experiences, Andrew S. Bossick, Roopina Sangha, Heather Olden, Gwen L. Alexander, Ganesa Wegienka Apr 2018

Identifying What Matters To Hysterectomy Patients: Postsurgery Perceptions, Beliefs, And Experiences, Andrew S. Bossick, Roopina Sangha, Heather Olden, Gwen L. Alexander, Ganesa Wegienka

Journal of Patient-Centered Research and Reviews

Purpose: Hysterectomy is the most common nonobstetrical surgery for women in the United States. Few investigations comparing hysterectomy surgical approaches include patient-centered outcomes.

Methods: The study was performed at Henry Ford Health System (Detroit, MI) between February 2015 and May 2015. A total of 1,038 eligible women — those 18 to 65 years of age and who had an electronic medical record-documented Current Procedural Terminology (CPT®) code or an International Statistical Classification of Diseases, Ninth Edition (ICD-9) code of hysterectomy between December 2012 and December 2014 — were selected and recruited. A question guide was developed to investigate …


Management Of Deep Space Infections Of The Neck, Emil Mărginean, Sargarovschi Egor, Ciprian Venter, Alina Pantiș, Oana Vălenaș, Ildiko Sorban, Maria Domuța, Cristian Bălălău, Razvan V. Scaunasu Md, Bogdan Popescu Mar 2018

Management Of Deep Space Infections Of The Neck, Emil Mărginean, Sargarovschi Egor, Ciprian Venter, Alina Pantiș, Oana Vălenaș, Ildiko Sorban, Maria Domuța, Cristian Bălălău, Razvan V. Scaunasu Md, Bogdan Popescu

Journal of Mind and Medical Sciences

Infections of the deep neck spaces often present a clinical challenge for the ENT surgeon. Management of these complex suppurations of the neck requires in fact a multidisciplinary approach due to possible complications like mediastinitis, septic shock and MSOF, life threatening bleeding and ICU management. The spread of infection from the primary site to other regions is possible through the lymphatic, arterial and venous vessels, or directly along the fasciae. There are several classifications for the etiology, pathogenic mechanism and site of evolution, the most frequently encountered clinical forms being peritonsillar abscess, retropharyngeal abscess, lateropharyngeal abscess, and the deep cervical …


An Essential Perspective Of Surgery: A Family Nurse Practitioner Clinical Care Model, Michelle D. Johnson Mar 2018

An Essential Perspective Of Surgery: A Family Nurse Practitioner Clinical Care Model, Michelle D. Johnson

Theses and Graduate Projects

Family Nurse Practitioners provide efficient, cost effective and safe care to patients in a variety of healthcare settings. Through the implementation of a clinical care practice model, the role of the Family Nurse Practitioner is a part of the multidisciplinary team caring for the outpatient surgical population. Patient satisfaction, system and patient benefits, including potential for increased revenue and effects on continuity of care across the spectrum of the surgical journey will be evaluated. This scholarly project examines the evidence in the form of literature review, conceptual and theoretical frameworks to evaluate the 1:1 clinical care model utilizing a Family …


Compassion In Medicine, Lawrence M. Wyner M.D. Mar 2018

Compassion In Medicine, Lawrence M. Wyner M.D.

Lawrence M. Wyner, MD

“Doctor, you know this patient’s HIV-positive.” The scrub nurse’s words hit me like a ton of bricks. I had been called into the operating room to assist one of my colleagues, a good friend and a good surgeon, who had requested my help after he had inadvertently gotten into the bladder during a hernia repair. I scrubbed in and took a look – the bladder neck was almost completely detached from the bladder. A small papillary tumor was visible just lateral to the left ureteral orifice. I snipped off the tumor with the Metzenbaum scissors, fulgurated its base, and proceeded …


A Case Of Congenital Unilateral Absence Of The Vas Deferens, Bi Mo, Vishnu Garla, Lawrence M. Wyner M.D. Mar 2018

A Case Of Congenital Unilateral Absence Of The Vas Deferens, Bi Mo, Vishnu Garla, Lawrence M. Wyner M.D.

Lawrence M. Wyner, MD

Background

Congenital unilateral absence of the vas deferens occurs in 0.5%–1.0% of males. It has been associated with various genitourinary abnormalities, including renal agenesis. We report a case of congenital unilateral absence of the vas deferens found incidentally during vasectomy in a patient with known unilateral renal agenesis.

Case presentation

A 24-year-old male presented to our urology clinic requesting vasectomy. His past history was significant for left renal agenesis. Following successful right vasectomy, several attempts to locate the left vas deferens were unsuccessful. We diagnosed congenital unilateral absence of the vas deferens. Follow-up semen analysis showed azoospermia.

Conclusion

As vasectomies …


14th Annual Parkview Research Symposium, Michael J. Mirro, Neil Sharma, Tammy Toscos, Roy Robertson Md, Micah Smith Md, Jason Voorhies Md Mar 2018

14th Annual Parkview Research Symposium, Michael J. Mirro, Neil Sharma, Tammy Toscos, Roy Robertson Md, Micah Smith Md, Jason Voorhies Md

Presentations and Events

14th Annual Parkview Research Symposium: Innovative Interventions in Healthcare

Objectives

* Discuss latest innovative interventions in informatics, oncology, cardiology, orthopedids and neurosurgery.

* Develop a strategy for efficient diagnosis and treatment planning using the latest innovative techniques and research findings in informatics, oncology, cardiology, orthopedics and neurosurgery.


Rare Case Of Diffuse Spinal Arachnoiditis Following A Complicated Vertebral Artery Dissection, Elias Atallah, Md, Sophia Dang, Sage Rahm, Nohra Chalouhi, Md, Stavropoula Tjoumakaris Md, Robert H. Rosenwasswer Md, Pascal Jabbour Md Mar 2018

Rare Case Of Diffuse Spinal Arachnoiditis Following A Complicated Vertebral Artery Dissection, Elias Atallah, Md, Sophia Dang, Sage Rahm, Nohra Chalouhi, Md, Stavropoula Tjoumakaris Md, Robert H. Rosenwasswer Md, Pascal Jabbour Md

Department of Neurosurgery Posters

Spinal arachnoiditis (SA) is an extremely rare and delayed complication of intracranial subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). SA is an inflammatory process leading to chronic fibrosis of the spinal cord. Possible pathophysiology is a two-staged disease of initial inflammatory reaction secondary to SAH, followed by a “free interval phase” prior to delayed adhesive phase (i.e. SA). The clinical course can be complicated and is the cause of major morbidity.


Effect Of Minor Surgery Under Propofol Anaesthesia On Brain Bdnf And Cognition, Muhammad Rafiq, Zahid Mahmood, Sajed Ali, Laure Pain Mar 2018

Effect Of Minor Surgery Under Propofol Anaesthesia On Brain Bdnf And Cognition, Muhammad Rafiq, Zahid Mahmood, Sajed Ali, Laure Pain

Pakistan Journal of Neurological Sciences (PJNS)

Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) is a brain protein implicated in learning, memory and other cognitive functions. Changes in cellular brain functions as well as cognitive defects have been observed the days following anaesthesia, even for short-duration anaesthesia with/without surgery. Despites the role of neurotrophic factors in cognition, no data are still available on brain effects after anaesthesia. Purpose: To study the effect of minor surgery under short duration anaesthesia on cognition by investigating BDNF levels in plasma, hippocampus and cortex. METHODS: Male rats received an intra-peritoneal injection of either 120 mg/kg of propofol or intralipids solution or minor surgery …


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