4 results on '"Jenkins, Nathaniel W."'
Search Results
2. YouTube as an Information Source for Lumbar Disc Herniations: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Mohile, Neil V., Jenkins, Nathaniel W., Markowitz, Moses I., Lee, Danny, and Donnally III, Chester J.
- Subjects
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HERNIA , *INFORMATION resources , *INTRACLASS correlation , *EDUCATIONAL films - Abstract
The Internet is a source of health information for patients. Quality of information available to patients is varied and uncontrolled. Physicians should be familiar with the overall quality of the information. This review provides an evaluation of YouTube's current patient accessible health information on the topic of lumbar disc herniation (LDH). YouTube was queried using 3 different search strings: (1) "disc herniation", (2) "lumbar disc herniation", or (3) "lower back disc herniation". Video duplicates, non-English, or those that contained no audio or were not relevant to LDH were excluded. The first 50 videos per search string were evaluated. Two reviewers independently assessed videos. Parameters included duration, upload date, number of views, number of likes, views per day, and likes per day. A scoring system was used to grade the videos for their performance on diagnosis and treatment of LDH. The first 50 videos produced a total number of hits of 50,500, 29,100, and 22,100, respectively. Strong agreement, assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), was demonstrated between readers for both diagnostic scores (ICC 0.921, 95% CI 0.866–0.953) and treatment scores (ICC 0.916, 95% CI 0.855–0.951). Educational Physician videos had significantly greater diagnostic and treatment scores compared to non-physician videos (9.54 vs. 7.05, P = 0.048, and 6.53 vs. 5.3, P = 0.004). YouTube videos pertaining to LDH were found to have low overall quality. Physicians should be cognizant about information sources readily available to patients as they may influence patient expectations and preconceptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Multimodal Analgesic Management for Lumbar Decompression Surgery in the Ambulatory Setting: Clinical Case Series and Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Nolte, Michael T., Parrish, James M., Jenkins, Nathaniel W., Cha, Elliot D.K., Lynch, Conor P., Jacob, Kevin C., Patel, Madhav R., Jadczak, Caroline N., Geoghegan, Cara E., Mohan, Shruthi, Podnar, Jeffrey, Buvanendran, Asokumar, and Singh, Kern
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SURGICAL clinics , *SURGICAL decompression , *PAIN management , *LITERATURE reviews , *VISUAL analog scale , *OPERATIVE surgery - Abstract
Effective pain control is vital for successful surgery in the ambulatory setting. Our study aims to characterize a case series of patients who underwent lumbar decompression (LD) in the ambulatory surgical center (ASC) with the use of a multimodal analgesic (MMA) protocol. A prospective surgical registry was retrospectively assessed for patients who underwent single or multilevel LD in an ASC using MMA from 2013 to 2019. Observation in excess of 23 hours was not permitted at the ASC, and patients were required to be discharged the same day. Length of stay, patient-reported visual analog scale pain scores before discharge, and the quantity of narcotic medications administered to patients before discharge were recorded. Quantity of narcotic medications were converted into units of oral morphine equivalents and summed across all types of narcotic medications prescribed. A total of 499 patients were included. In total, 86.0% (429) of the patients underwent a single-level decompression procedure, 13.8% (69) of patients underwent a 2-level, and 0.2% (1) of the patients underwent a 3-level procedure; 83.6% (417) of the patients in this study underwent a primary LD, and 14.0% (70) underwent a revision decompression. This is the largest clinical case series focused on LD procedures within an ASC requiring no planned 23-hour observation. This study demonstrates the feasibility of performing LD surgery in an ASC with proper patient selection, surgical technique, and MMA protocol. All patients were discharged from the surgical center on the same day of surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Validation of VR-12 Physical Function in Minimally Invasive Lumbar Discectomy.
- Author
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Lynch, Conor P., Cha, Elliot D.K., Jacob, Kevin C., Patel, Madhav R., Jenkins, Nathaniel W., Parrish, James M., Mohan, Shruthi, Jadczak, Caroline N., Geoghegan, Cara E., and Singh, Kern
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PHYSICAL mobility , *DISCECTOMY , *PATIENT reported outcome measures , *SPINAL surgery , *MINIMALLY invasive procedures - Abstract
Although the Veterans RAND 12-item Physical Component Survey (VR-12 PCS) has been broadly used to evaluate patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in spine surgery, its feasibility for use in patients undergoing minimally invasive lumbar discectomy (MIS LD) has not been well studied. This study aimed to assess the feasibility of VR-12 PCS for use up to 2 years postoperatively for MIS LD by correlation with PROMs for physical function. Patients undergoing primary single-level MIS LD procedures were reviewed retrospectively. Results on the VR-12 PCS, 12-Item Short Form (SF-12) PCS, and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS PF) were recorded preoperatively and up to 2 years postoperatively. Improvements in postoperative PROMs were calculated and assessed for significant differences from baseline values. Correlation significance and strength were evaluated between VR-12 PCS and SF-12 PCS or PROMIS PF. Scatterplots were constructed to demonstrate relationships of VR-12 PCS with SF-12 PCS and PROMIS PF at each time point. Our cohort comprised 402 patients. Patients improved significantly from preoperative baseline for all 3 PROMs at all postoperative time points. Both Pearson's correlation and time-independent partial correlation revealed statistically significant strong correlations of VR-12 PCS with SF-12 PCS and PROMIS PF through 2-years. Physical function scores for VR-12, SF-12, and PROMIS PF all demonstrated significant improvements following MIS LD. Strongly statistically significant correlations of VR-12 PCS with SF-12 PCS and PROMIS PF from preoperative measures through 2 years demonstrate the feasibility of VR-12 for assessing patient-reported physical function in MIS LD patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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