Feature Channels: Surgery

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Released: 18-Jan-2011 3:20 PM EST
New Device Allows Neurosurgeons to Treat Complex Brain Aneurysms Without Open Surgery
RUSH

A new device to treat brain aneurysms with stents improves access to the blood vessels allowing endovascular neurosurgeons to offer the minimally invasive technique to patients with complex cases.

Released: 18-Jan-2011 10:00 AM EST
New Treatment Unlocks Curled Fingers
Loyola Medicine

A new, nonsurgical treatment now is available for Dupuytren's contracture, a debilitating condition that curls fingers toward the palm.

13-Jan-2011 9:00 PM EST
Transplant Surgeons Fear Using Organs from ‘High-Risk’ Donors, Despite Safety Record
Johns Hopkins Medicine

As a response to a 2007 episode in which four patients in Chicago were transplanted with organs from a single donor unknowingly infected with HIV — the only such episode in 20 years — one-third of transplant surgeons in the United States “overreacted” and began routinely using fewer organs from high-risk donors, new research from Johns Hopkins finds.

Released: 17-Jan-2011 3:45 PM EST
A Possible Fix for Post-Operative Cognitive Decline
Dalhousie University

Researchers have developed a device to help reduce the occurrence of post-operative cognitive decline, a condition that affects memory and concentration.

Released: 14-Jan-2011 12:25 PM EST
Mountaineer Reaches Peak with Aid of Surgeon
UC San Diego Health

Surgeons at UC San Diego Health System reconstruct Ben Horne's elbow after biking accident crushes it into five pieces.

Released: 14-Jan-2011 10:30 AM EST
Medicine Presents Update on Aortic Stenosis
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Prompt diagnosis and surgery can be lifesaving for older adults with aortic stenosis, according to an article in a recent issue of Medicine®. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health, a leading provider of information and business intelligence for students, professionals, and institutions in medicine, nursing, allied health, and pharmacy.

Released: 14-Jan-2011 8:00 AM EST
Shipping Kidneys for Transplants Is Safe
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Kidney transplants using organs from live donors work just as well if the kidneys are shipped — be it across town or across the country — as when the donors and recipients are operated on at the same hospital, new Johns Hopkins research suggests.

10-Jan-2011 2:30 PM EST
When A Kidney Transplant Fails, Home-Based Dialysis is an Option
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

Patients returning to dialysis after kidney transplant failure present unique challenges compared with other dialysis patients: they have been exposed to very powerful immunosuppressive medications and have been on dialysis for a longer period of time than other dialysis patients. This puts them at particularly high risk for various complications and death. According to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN), despite complications, these patients can choose to undergo dialysis in the comfort of their own homes.

Released: 13-Jan-2011 9:00 AM EST
UNC Surgeons Pioneer New Approach to Aneurysms: Go Through the Nose
University of North Carolina Health Care System

Dr. Anand V. Germanwala and Dr. Adam M. Zanation, have published a paper describing a surgery they performed that is believed to be the first reported clipping of a ruptured brain aneurysm through a patient's nose.

6-Jan-2011 12:10 PM EST
Behavioral Therapies Ease Incontinence for Men After Prostate Cancer Surgery
University of Alabama at Birmingham

Behavioral therapies such as pelvic-floor-muscle training and bladder-control strategies can reduce incontinence episodes by more than 50 percent in men following prostate-cancer surgery, according to new research from UAB Center. The findings, published in JAMA on Jan. 12, 2011, indicate that these therapies can improve bladder control and enhance quality of life.

Released: 10-Jan-2011 5:35 PM EST
Training Accreditation a Milestone for RPCI Robotic-Surgery Program
Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI) in Buffalo, NY has become the first institution to be accredited as a Training Institute in Robot-Assisted Surgery by the Société Internationale d’Urologie (SIU), and will host three-month Robot-Assisted Mini-Fellowships to promising physicians early in their careers.

Released: 7-Jan-2011 8:00 AM EST
Radiosurgery Can Help Patients with Severe Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

For patients with extremely severe obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), a procedure called radiosurgery may bring improvement when other treatments have failed, according to a study in the January issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.

Released: 5-Jan-2011 9:00 AM EST
On-Scene IV Fluids for Trauma Patients: Lifesaver Or Time-Waster?
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Severely injured patients who are routinely given IV fluids by paramedics before transport to the nearest trauma center are significantly more likely to die than similarly injured patients who don’t get the time-consuming IV treatment before hospitalization, new Johns Hopkins-led research suggests.

Released: 4-Jan-2011 8:00 AM EST
Study Finds Residents at High Risk of Burnout Early in Career
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

The January issue of the journal Anesthesiology examines the issue of burnout among anesthesiologists. Two studies provide significant burnout statistics among these highly trained medical specialists...

Released: 3-Jan-2011 3:15 PM EST
Personality Factors Affect Quality of Life after Breast Reconstruction
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Certain personality traits are linked to higher quality-of-life scores in breast cancer patients who undergo breast reconstruction after mastectomy, reports a study in the January issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).

Released: 3-Jan-2011 3:00 PM EST
Facial Bones Show Signs of Aging Too
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

What makes us look older? Wrinkles and sagging result not just from changes in the skin, but also from aging-related changes in the underlying facial bones, according to a report in the January issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery®, the official medical journal of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS).

Released: 30-Dec-2010 8:00 AM EST
New Test Announced for Major Killer of Lung Transplant Patients
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A lung transplant can mean a new chance at life. But many who receive one develop a debilitating, fatal condition that causes scar tissue to build up in the lungs and chokes off the ability to breathe. University of Michigan researchers hope a new diagnostic tool they developed to predict bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) will allow doctors to intervene earlier and, ultimately, to provide life-saving treatments.

23-Dec-2010 4:00 PM EST
Doctors Should Be Required To Disclose Sleep Deprived Status To Patients Before Elective Surgeries
Hospital for Special Surgery

An editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine argues that sleep-deprived physicians should not be permitted to proceed with an elective surgery without a patient’s informed, written consent.

29-Dec-2010 2:45 PM EST
Coma and General Anesthesia Demonstrate Important Similarities
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center/Weill Cornell Medical College

The brain under general anesthesia isn't "asleep" as surgery patients are often told -- it is placed into a state that is a reversible coma, according to three neuroscientists who have published an extensive review of general anesthesia, sleep and coma, in the Dec. 30 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. This insight and others reported in their review article could eventually lead to new approaches to general anesthesia and improved diagnosis and treatment for sleep abnormalities and emergence from coma.

Released: 29-Dec-2010 1:20 PM EST
Children in Areas with Few Pediatricians at Higher Risk for Serious Appendix Ruptures
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Children who live in areas with fewer pediatricians are more likely to suffer life-threatening ruptures of the appendix than those in areas with more pediatricians, even when accounting for other factors such as the number of hospitals, imaging technology, insurance coverage and the number of surgeons in an area, according to a study from the Johns Hopkins Children's Center.

Released: 29-Dec-2010 12:00 PM EST
Survival Negatively Impacted by Readmission / Reintervention Following Surgery
Society for Vascular Surgery

Both open and endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair results studied.

Released: 29-Dec-2010 12:00 PM EST
Hospital Rankings Can Be Affected by Adjustments in Statistical Reliability
Society for Vascular Surgery

Mortality variations due to statistical noise, patient factors and quality differences reviewed.

Released: 22-Dec-2010 8:00 AM EST
Preoperative Cerebral Oxygen Saturation Could Offer a Simple, Noninvasive Way to Predict Health Risks in Surgical Patients
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

A study published in the January 2011 issue of Anesthesiology is one of the first to show that low preoperative cerebral oxygen saturation (ScO2) could be an important physiological risk marker for adverse outcome in cardiac surgery patients.

Released: 22-Dec-2010 8:00 AM EST
Chronic Statin Therapy Associated With Reduced Postoperative Mortality
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

A new study from France, published in the January 2011 issue of Anesthesiology, is the first to analyze the impact of preoperative chronic statin therapy on postoperative adverse events in surgical patients. Findings from the study suggest that statin therapy is associated with reduced postoperative mortality.

Released: 21-Dec-2010 3:00 PM EST
Mount Sinai Performs First U.S. Implantation of Aortic Valve Prosthesis to Treat Severe Aortic Stenosis
Mount Sinai Health System

David H. Adams, MD, Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis Professor and Chairman of the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Samin K. Sharma, MD, the Zena and Michael A. Weiner Professor and Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory, and Annapoorna S. Kini, MD, Associate Professor and Associate Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at The Mount Sinai Medical Center, have performed the first implantation of the Medtronic CoreValve® Transcatheter Aortic Valve Prosthesis in the United States.

Released: 21-Dec-2010 11:00 AM EST
Hand Contamination from Anesthesiologists Linked to Bacterial Transmission During Surgery
International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS)

Contaminating bacteria are very commonly found on the hands of anesthesia providers, with high rates of transmission to the surgical field during operations, reports a study in the January issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, official journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS).

Released: 21-Dec-2010 11:00 AM EST
Spinal 'Botox' Injection May Have Useful Pain-Reducing Effect
International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS)

Botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNT/A)—better known as Botox—reduces responses to an inflammation-related pain stimulus when injected into the spinal canal in mice, reports a study in the January issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, official journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS).

17-Dec-2010 11:50 AM EST
Study Questions Two-Hour Trauma Transport Law in Illinois
Loyola Medicine

Eighty percent of trauma transfers exceed two-hour limit; but seriously injured are moved faster.

20-Dec-2010 11:45 AM EST
Blacks with Liver Cancer More Likely to Die
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Black people with early stage liver cancer were more likely than white patients to die from their disease, according to a new study from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Released: 16-Dec-2010 12:00 PM EST
UIC Surgeons Offer Obese Kidney Patients New Hope with Robotic Transplantation
University of Illinois Chicago

Surgeons at the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago are the first to offer robotic kidney transplantation to morbidly obese patients and report fewer complications among this high risk population.

Released: 14-Dec-2010 8:00 AM EST
Penn Medicine Establishes Hand Transplant Program
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

The Penn Transplant Institute, the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and the Division of Plastic Surgery at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (HUP) have collaborated to form the Penn Hand Transplant Program.

Released: 13-Dec-2010 12:30 PM EST
Stenting Shows Higher Risk of Stroke, Death vs. Cartoid Endarterectomy
Society for Vascular Surgery

Research results published in the December 2010 issue of the Journal of Vascular Surgery from Marc. L. Schemerhorn, MD reveals that stenting shows a higher risk of stroke and death vs. cartoid endarterectomy.

Released: 10-Dec-2010 12:40 PM EST
Researchers Establish New Rule to Predict Risk of Stroke, Death from Surgery That Prevents It
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers have now developed a clinical risk prediction rule using factors such as sex, race and health history to assess the danger the surgery poses, while a modified version will help patients make a more fully informed choice about whether to have the procedure.

Released: 8-Dec-2010 10:00 PM EST
Young Mother with Rare, Deadly Bone Disease Can Now Cuddle Her Baby Again After “Last Resort” Spinal Fusion Surgery at Cedars-Sinai
Cedars-Sinai

Laurie Harms, Los Angeles, feared she’d never hold her infant daughter, Sky, again. A devastating and extremely rare bone-eroding disease – Gorham-Stout syndrome – had left the 31-year-old crumpled in a hospital bed – her neck broken, arms limp and useless, and voice muted by tubes. Thanks to a young neurosurgeon who performed a "last resort" spinal fusion surgery at Cedars-Sinai she will be able to cuddle Baby Sky this holiday season.

Released: 8-Dec-2010 11:45 AM EST
Geisinger Medical Center One of Few Nationwide to Employ Use of Transcervical Thymectomy
Geisinger Health System

The Department of Thoracic Surgery at Geisinger Medical Center (GMC) recently performed its first transcervical thymectomy, joining other major academic medical centers nationwide that perform the minimally invasive surgical procedure.

Released: 7-Dec-2010 2:00 PM EST
"Vast Majority" of Acoustic Tumor Patients Benefit from Surgery
Loyola Medicine

Surgery to remove tumors under the brain known as acoustic neuromas produces favorable outcomes in the "vast majority" of patients, according to one of the largest studies of its kind.

Released: 6-Dec-2010 8:00 AM EST
Studies Lend New Insights into Biology of Wound Pain and Healing
International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS)

Anesthesiologists are playing a leading role in research into the molecular factors affecting inflammation, pain, and healing of surgical incisions, as illustrated by papers published in the December issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, official journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS).

Released: 3-Dec-2010 1:55 PM EST
Risk of Recreational Shoulder Injuries Common around the Holidays
Hospital for Special Surgery

Around the holidays, even the friendliest game of flag football can lead to injury. According to sports medicine doctors at Hospital for Special Surgery, older and newly active recreational athletes are particularly at risk for shoulder injuries.

Released: 3-Dec-2010 10:50 AM EST
Conference Goals Include Better Surgery, and Better Surgeons
University of Chicago Medical Center

A two-day conference at the University of Chicago Medical Center is designed to offer surgeons a peek at the profession's future. It focuses on new molecular and mechanical solutions to three age-old problems: preventing the breakdown of anastomoses, improving tissue healing after surgery and developing new tools to test and sharpen surgical skills.

Released: 2-Dec-2010 12:50 PM EST
Innovations Make Hip Replacement Safe, Less Invasive
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), hip replacements are among the most common surgical procedures in the United States; and with osteoarthritis and obesity on the rise, demand for the procedure is expected to grow.

Released: 2-Dec-2010 12:40 PM EST
New Treatment for Early to Mid-Stage Osteoarthritis May Provide Better Precision During Surgery
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center

A robotic arm device developed to assist orthopedic surgeons with performing partial knee replacement surgery for early to mid-stage osteoarthritis is now available at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center. The technology was approved by the FDA in 2005, and to date nearly 5,000 cases have been performed in the U.S.

Released: 1-Dec-2010 11:40 AM EST
New Results in Carotid Artery Stenosis Versus Endarterectomy
Mayo Clinic

In the December issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, an interdisciplinary team of Mayo Clinic physicians reviewed the most current data available, especially the results of two recent, widely anticipated randomized studies, and provided a new analysis of the two major interventions for carotid occlusive disease.

Released: 30-Nov-2010 5:55 PM EST
Loyola's Heart-Bypass Mortality Rate is 74 percent Lower than Peer Hospitals
Loyola Medicine

Loyola University Hospital's mortality rate from heart-bypass surgery is 74 percent lower than the mortality rate at peer hospitals, according to Thomson Reuters Cardiovascular Benchmarks Report.

17-Nov-2010 2:15 PM EST
Team Uncovers Mechanism Behind Organ Transplant Rejection
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA researchers have pinpointed the culprit behind chronic rejection of heart, lung and kidney transplants. Published in the Nov. 23 edition of Science Signaling, their findings suggest new therapeutic approaches for preventing transplant rejection and sabotaging cancer growth.

Released: 18-Nov-2010 11:00 AM EST
French-Cambodian Surgical Team Perform Humanitarian Work to Repair the Faces and Spirits of Impoverished Cambodian Children Living with Malformation
American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS)

Frontoethmoidal meningoencephalocele is a type of facial malformation that is rarely seen in developed countries, but is quite common in many Southeast Asian countries. A compelling article in the Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics details the experiences of a cross-cultural surgical team who performed humanitarian work from 2004-2009 repairing the faces and spirits of Cambodian children.

16-Nov-2010 5:05 PM EST
Top Hospital Organ Transplant Centers Identified by HealthGrades
HealthGrades

HealthGrades, the nation’s leading independent ratings organization, today made available to organ transplant patients a list of those hospitals with the best track record for survival and chances of receiving a donor organ. HealthGrades annual evaluation of the nation’s top-performing hospitals in organ transplantation includes clinical quality data, based on patient outcomes, for each of the 210 adult acute care hospitals that perform transplants.

Released: 16-Nov-2010 3:10 PM EST
HealthGrades Ranks Franklin Hospital Best on Long Island for Joint Replacement Surgery
North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System (North Shore-LIJ Health System)

Franklin Hospital is ranked the best on Long Island for joint replacement outcomes and also is tops in Nassau County for its overall success in orthopedics and joint replacement, according to the latest national study by HealthGrades.

Released: 16-Nov-2010 1:30 PM EST
Heart Surgeries Trigger Strokes, Seizures
Loyola Medicine

Strokes, seizures and other neurological complications related to heart surgery account for "considerable morbidity and mortality," Loyola University Health System neurologists report.

Released: 15-Nov-2010 9:00 AM EST
Rare, Lifesaving Heart/Liver Transplant Saves Young Man's Life
University of Maryland Medical Center

28-year old traveled to University of Maryland Medical Center from Georgia

Released: 15-Nov-2010 9:00 AM EST
Symptoms of Obese Heart Failure Patients Improved After Bariatric Surgery
Mayo Clinic

A small Mayo Clinic study has found that morbidly obese heart failure patients who undergo bariatric surgery gain long-lasting and meaningful improvements in disease symptoms and quality of life. The results were presented today at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2010 in Chicago.



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