33 results on '"McIsaac D"'
Search Results
2. Incidence of persistent postoperative opioid use in patients undergoing ambulatory surgery: a retrospective cohort study.
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Hamilton, G. M., Ladha, K., Wheeler, K., Nguyen, F., McCartney, C. J. L., and McIsaac, D. I.
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AMBULATORY surgery ,OPIOIDS ,OPIOID epidemic ,COHORT analysis - Abstract
Summary: The opioid crisis remains a major public health concern. In ambulatory surgery, persistent postoperative opioid use is poorly described and temporal trends are unknown. A population‐based retrospective cohort study was undertaken in Ontario, Canada using routinely collected administrative data for adults undergoing ambulatory surgery between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2017. The primary outcome was persistent postoperative opioid use, defined using best‐practice methods. Multivariable generalised linear models were used to estimate the association of persistent postoperative opioid use with prognostic factors. Temporal trends in opioid use were examined using monthly time series, adjusting for patient‐, surgical‐ and hospital‐level variables. Of 340,013 patients, 44,224 (13.0%, 95%CI 12.9–13.1%) developed persistent postoperative opioid use after surgery. Following multivariable adjustment, the strongest predictors of persistent postoperative opioid use were pre‐operative: utilisation of opioids (OR 9.51, 95%CI 8.69–10.39); opioid tolerance (OR 88.22, 95%CI 77.21–100.79); and utilisation of benzodiazepines (OR 13.75, 95%CI 12.89–14.86). The time series model demonstrated a small but significant trend towards decreasing persistent postoperative opioid use over time (adjusted percentage change per year −0.51%, 95%CI −0.83 to −0.19%, p = 0.003). More than 10% of patients who underwent ambulatory surgery experienced persistent postoperative opioid use; however, there was a temporal trend towards a reduction in persistent opioid use after surgery. Future studies are needed that focus on interventions which reduce persistent postoperative opioid use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Frailty and emergency surgery: identification and evidence‐based care for vulnerable older adults.
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Gottesman, D. and McIsaac, D. I.
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Summary: Frailty is a multidimensional state related to accumulation of age‐ and disease‐related deficits across multiple domains. Older people represent the fastest growing segment of the peri‐operative population, and 25–50% of older surgical patients live with frailty. When frailty is present before surgery, adjusted rates of morbidity and mortality increase at least two‐fold; the odds of delirium and loss of independence are increased more than four‐ and five‐fold, respectively. Care of the older person with frailty presenting for emergency surgery requires individualised and evidence‐based care given the high‐risk and complex nature of their presentations. Before surgery, frailty should be assessed using a multidimensional frailty instrument (most likely the Clinical Frailty Scale), and all members of the peri‐operative team should be aware of each patient's frailty status. When frailty is present, pre‐operative care should focus on documenting and communicating individualised risk, considering advanced care directives and engaging shared decision‐making when feasible. Shared multidisciplinary care should be initiated. Peri‐operatively, analgesia that avoids polypharmacy should be provided, along with delirium prevention strategies and consideration of postoperative care in a monitored environment. After the acute surgical episode, transition out of hospital requires that adequate support be in place, along with clear discharge instructions, and review of new and existing prescription medications. Advanced care directives should be reviewed or initiated in case of readmission. Overall, substantial knowledge gaps about the optimal peri‐operative care of older people with frailty must be addressed through robust, patient‐oriented research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. SIOG2023-5-P-381 - Experiences of older adults and their caregivers with recovery after major elective surgery.
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Puts, M., Toledano, N., Low, C., Breunis, H., Haase, K., Wijeysundera, D., Mcisaac, D., Chesney, T., Crampton, N., Davis, M., Del Giudice, L., Gregory, A., Jacobsohn, E., Jerath, A., Kuluski, K., Ladha, K., Lorello, G., Macdonald, D., Macdonell, S.Y., and Mazer, D.
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- 2023
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5. Current practices in perioperative blood management for patients undergoing liver resection: a survey of surgeons and anesthesiologists
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Bennett, S., Ayoub, A., Tran, A., Gostimir, M., English, S., Tinmouth, A., McIsaac, D., Fergusson, D., and Martel, G.
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- 2017
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6. Impact of including regional anaesthesia in enhanced recovery protocols: a scoping review.
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McIsaac, D. I., Cole, E. T., and McCartney, C. J. L.
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ANESTHESIA , *MEDICAL protocols , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *MEDICAL care , *PROCTOLOGY , *CONDUCTION anesthesia , *CONVALESCENCE , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *OPERATIVE surgery , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Regional anaesthesia (RA) is often included in enhanced recovery protocols (ERPs) as an important component of a bundle of interventions to improve outcomes after surgery. We sought to delineate whether the literature supports the use of RA in this setting with regard to commonly measured outcomes. We further sought to assess whether such improvements would translate into positive impacts on healthcare value as defined by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement Triple Aim. We conducted a scoping review to address our objectives. Studies of ERPs that included RA and reported at least one outcome of interest in comparison to a control group were included. MEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL, CDSR, PROSPERO, and the NHS Economic Evaluation Database were searched up to May 2015. Two reviewers assessed studies and extracted data. Of 695 identified citations, 58 studies were included for analysis. The majority (53%) were in colorectal surgery. Positive impacts of RA on all outcomes were identified; however, value-based outcomes were rarely reported. Where value-based outcomes were reported, RA appears to have a positive impact on global measures of health and function and on economic outcomes. Existing literature supports a positive impact of RA on ERP outcomes, which may be reflected in improved healthcare value. In order to justify the value of RA in ERPs, a future focus on appropriate measures is needed to align research with widely accepted frameworks, such as the Triple Aim. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Report of seed and meal analysis committee May, 1946
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Haire, Russell R., Hoffpauir, C. L., McIsaac, D. P., Pope, R. C., Wilkins, O. C., Rettger, T. L., Ainslie, E. C., Cox, C. H., Freyer, E. B., Hayward, J. W., Law, T. C., Mehlenbacher, V. C., McKinney, R. S., Milner, R. T., Potts, T. C., Sorensen, S. O., and Hopper, T. H.
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- 1946
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8. Higher sex-diversity of or teams is associated with better post-operative outcomes for HPB surgery.
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Acher, A., Lorello, G., Sutradhar, R., Coburn, N., Chan, W.C., Carrier, F.M., McIsaac, D., Flexman, A., Turgeon, A., McCartney, C., Eskander, A., Jerath, A., Perez d'Empaire, P., and Hallet, J.
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- 2024
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9. Higher sex-diversity of operative teams is associated with better post-operative patient outcomes for hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery: a population-based analysis.
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Acher, A., Lorello, G., Sutradhar, R., Coburn, N., Chan, W., Carrier, F.M., McIsaac, D., Flexman, A., Turgeon, A., McCartney, C., Eskander, A., Jerath, A., Perez d'Empaire, P., and Hallet, J.
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- 2024
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10. An audit and evaluation of appropriateness of perioperative allogenic red blood cell transfusion in liver surgery.
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Baker, L., Lenet, T., Vered, M., Workneh, A., Zahrai, A., Abou-Khalil, J., Balaa, F., Bertens, K., McIsaac, D., Tinmouth, A., Fergusson, D., and Martel, G.
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LIVER surgery , *RED blood cell transfusion , *LIVER cells - Abstract
B Presenter: b Laura Baker MD | University of Ottawa B Background: b Red blood cell (RBC) transfusion in liver surgery is common and associated with post-operative morbidity. B Results: b A cohort of 489 patients underwent liver resection during the study period, of which 19% (n=91) received a total of 241 RBC transfusions in the perioperative period. B Conclusion: b Despite trends towards reductions in perioperative transfusions in patients undergoing hepatectomy, this work highlights that a significant proportion of patients are being exposed to unnecessary transfusion. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2020
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11. Dietary exposure of stormwater contaminants in biofilm to two freshwater macroinvertebrates.
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Izma G, Ijzerman MM, McIsaac D, Raby M, Prosser RS, and Rooney RC
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Aquatic habitats in urban environments are exposed to complex contaminant mixtures that may harm aquatic biota. The impact of contaminant transfer from contaminated biofilm through aquatic food webs is still understudied, as is the current state of knowledge on dietary exposure of urban contaminants to biota residing in stormwater ponds. Our overall objective was to characterize urban pesticide accumulation in a common aquatic food source (biofilm) in stormwater ponds and to investigate the potential toxicity of that food source by testing the responses of two freshwater macroinvertebrates to experimental exposure. We conducted two dietary bioassays using biofilm collected from 15 stormwater ponds in Brampton, Ontario: an acute exposure with the mayfly Neocloeon triangulifer, and a chronic exposure with the freshwater snail Planorbella pilsbryi. We screened for 542 current-use and legacy pesticides to measure pesticide burden (the number of pesticides detected) and the concentration of pesticides in the biofilm. We also quantified chlorophyll-a, pheophytin, and ash-free dry weight content which we used as indicators of biofilm quality. We found no correlations between pesticide burden and chlorophyll-a, pheophytin, or ash-free dry weight of the biofilm diets. Compared to control diets, biofilms collected from stormwater ponds caused a reduction in survival and growth endpoints for both test species, indicating that biofilm-consuming invertebrates living in stormwater ponds may be experiencing risks previously unaccounted for by traditional ecological risk assessments. Pesticide occurrences in biofilm diets did not relate to mayfly survival, growth, or biomass production. Nor were they related to snail growth. This suggests that other contaminants in stormwater-cultivated biofilm are contributing to the observed effects. Snail survival and biomass production were negatively related to pesticide burden in the diets. This implies that duration of exposure may influence the degree and manifestation of pesticide toxicity via dietary exposure., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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12. Development of a survey to support assessment of safety learning systems.
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Mahmoud HA, Mulpuru S, Thavorn K, McIsaac D, and Forster AJ
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- Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Safety Management methods, Safety Management standards, Reproducibility of Results, Patient Safety standards, Patient Safety statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Patient safety learning systems play a critical role in supporting safety culture in healthcare organisations. A lack of explicit standards leads to inconsistent implementation across organisations, causing uncertainty about their roles and impact. Organisations can address inconsistent implementation by using a self-assessment tool based on agreed-on best practices. Therefore, we aimed to create a survey instrument to assess an organisation's approach to learning from safety events., Methods: The foundation for this work was a recent systematic review that defined features associated with the performance of a safety learning system. We organised features into themes and rephrased them into questions (items). Face validity was checked, which included independent pre-testing to ensure comprehensibility and parsimony. It also included clinical sensibility testing in which a representative sample of leaders in quality at a large teaching hospital (The Ottawa Hospital) answered two questions to judge each item for clarity and necessity. If more than 20% of respondents judged a question unclear or unnecessary, we modified or removed that question accordingly. Finally, we checked the internal consistency of the questionnaire using Cronbach's alpha., Results: We initially developed a 47-item questionnaire based on a prior systematic review. Pre-testing resulted in the modification of 15 of the questions, 2 were removed and 2 questions were added to ensure comprehensiveness and relevance. Face validity was assessed through yes/no responses, with over 80% of respondents confirming the clarity and 85% the necessity of each question, leading to the retention of all 47 questions. Data collected from the five-point responses (strongly disagree to strongly agree) for each question were used to assess the questionnaire's internal consistency. The Cronbach's alpha was 0.94, indicating a high internal consistency., Conclusion: This self-assessment questionnaire is evidence-based and on preliminary testing is deemed valid, comprehensible and reliable. Future work should assess the range of survey responses in a large sample of respondents from different hospitals., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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13. 2023 Canadian Surgery Forum: Sept. 20-23, 2023.
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Brière R, Émond M, Benhamed A, Blanchard PG, Drolet S, Habashi R, Golbon B, Shellenberger J, Pasternak J, Merchant S, Shellenberger J, La J, Sawhney M, Brogly S, Cadili L, Horkoff M, Ainslie S, Demetrick J, Chai B, Wiseman K, Hwang H, Alhumoud Z, Salem A, Lau R, Aw K, Nessim C, Gawad N, Alibhai K, Towaij C, Doan D, Raîche I, Valji R, Turner S, Balmes PN, Hwang H, Hameed SM, Tan JGK, Wijesuriya R, Tan JGK, Hew NLC, Wijesuriya R, Lund M, Hawel J, Gregor J, Leslie K, Lenet T, McIsaac D, Hallet J, Jerath A, Lalu M, Nicholls S, Presseau J, Tinmouth A, Verret M, Wherrett C, Fergusson D, Martel G, Sharma S, McKechnie T, Talwar G, Patel J, Heimann L, Doumouras A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Wang C, Guo M, Huang L, Sun S, Davis N, Wang J, Skulsky S, Sikora L, Raîche I, Son HJ, Gee D, Gomez D, Jung J, Selvam R, Seguin N, Zhang L, Lacaille-Ranger A, Sikora L, McIsaac D, Moloo H, Follett A, Holly, Organ M, Pace D, Balvardi S, Kaneva P, Semsar-Kazerooni K, Mueller C, Vassiliou M, Al Mahroos M, Fiore JF Jr, Schwartzman K, Feldman L, Guo M, Karimuddin A, Liu GP, Crump T, Sutherland J, Hickey K, Bonisteel EM, Umali J, Dogar I, Warden G, Boone D, Mathieson A, Hogan M, Pace D, Seguin N, Moloo H, Li Y, Best G, Leong R, Wiseman S, Alaoui AA, Hajjar R, Wassef E, Metellus DS, Dagbert F, Loungnarath R, Ratelle R, Schwenter F, Debroux É, Wassef R, Gagnon-Konamna M, Pomp A, Richard CS, Sebajang H, Alaoui AA, Hajjar R, Dagbert F, Loungnarath R, Sebajang H, Ratelle R, Schwenter F, Debroux É, Wassef R, Gagnon-Konamna M, Pomp A, Santos MM, Richard CS, Shi G, Leung R, Lim C, Knowles S, Parmar S, Wang C, Debru E, Mohamed F, Anakin M, Lee Y, Samarasinghe Y, Khamar J, Petrisor B, McKechnie T, Eskicioglu C, Yang I, Mughal HN, Bhugio M, Gok MA, Khan UA, Fernandes AR, Spence R, Porter G, Hoogerboord CM, Neumann K, Pillar M, Guo M, Manhas N, Melck A, Kazi T, McKechnie T, Jessani G, Heimann L, Lee Y, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Tessier L, Archer V, Park L, Cohen D, Parpia S, Bhandari M, Dionne J, Eskicioglu C, Bolin S, Afford R, Armstrong M, Karimuddin A, Leung R, Shi G, Lim C, Grant A, Van Koughnett JA, Knowles S, Clement E, Lange C, Roshan A, Karimuddin A, Scott T, Nadeau K, Macmillan J, Wilson J, Deschenes M, Nurullah A, Cahill C, Chen VH, Patterson KM, Wiseman SM, Wen B, Bhudial J, Barton A, Lie J, Park CM, Yang L, Gouskova N, Kim DH, Afford R, Bolin S, Morris-Janzen D, McLellan A, Karimuddin A, Archer V, Cloutier Z, Berg A, McKechnie T, Wiercioch W, Eskicioglu C, Labonté J, Bisson P, Bégin A, Cheng-Oviedo SG, Collin Y, Fernandes AR, Hossain I, Ellsmere J, El-Kefraoui C, Do U, Miller A, Kouyoumdjian A, Cui D, Khorasani E, Landry T, Amar-Zifkin A, Lee L, Feldman L, Fiore J, Au TM, Oppenheimer M, Logsetty S, AlShammari R, AlAbri M, Karimuddin A, Brown C, Raval MJ, Phang PT, Bird S, Baig Z, Abu-Omar N, Gill D, Suresh S, Ginther N, Karpinski M, Ghuman A, Malik PRA, Alibhai K, Zabolotniuk T, Raîche I, Gawad N, Mashal S, Boulanger N, Watt L, Razek T, Fata P, Grushka J, Wong EG, Hossain I, Landry M, Mackey S, Fairbridge N, Greene A, Borgoankar M, Kim C, DeCarvalho D, Pace D, Wigen R, Walser E, Davidson J, Dorward M, Muszynski L, Dann C, Seemann N, Lam J, Harding K, Lowik AJ, Guinard C, Wiseman S, Ma O, Mocanu V, Lin A, Karmali S, Bigam D, Harding K, Greaves G, Parker B, Nguyen V, Ahmed A, Yee B, Perren J, Norman M, Grey M, Perini R, Jowhari F, Bak A, Drung J, Allen L, Wiseman D, Moffat B, Lee JKH, McGuire C, Raîche I, Tudorache M, Gawad N, Park LJ, Borges FK, Nenshi R, Jacka M, Heels-Ansdell D, Simunovic M, Bogach J, Serrano PE, Thabane L, Devereaux PJ, Farooq S, Lester E, Kung J, Bradley N, Best G, Ahn S, Zhang L, Prince N, Cheng-Boivin O, Seguin N, Wang H, Quartermain L, Tan S, Shamess J, Simard M, Vigil H, Raîche I, Hanna M, Moloo H, Azam R, Ko G, Zhu M, Raveendran Y, Lam C, Tang J, Bajwa A, Englesakis M, Reel E, Cleland J, Snell L, Lorello G, Cil T, Ahn HS, Dube C, McIsaac D, Smith D, Leclerc A, Shamess J, Rostom A, Calo N, Thavorn K, Moloo H, Laplante S, Liu L, Khan N, Okrainec A, Ma O, Lin A, Mocanu V, Karmali S, Bigam D, Bruyninx G, Georgescu I, Khokhotva V, Talwar G, Sharma S, McKechnie T, Yang S, Khamar J, Hong D, Doumouras A, Eskicioglu C, Spoyalo K, Rebello TA, Chhipi-Shrestha G, Mayson K, Sadiq R, Hewage K, MacNeill A, Muncner S, Li MY, Mihajlovic I, Dykstra M, Snelgrove R, Wang H, Schweitzer C, Wiseman SM, Garcha I, Jogiat U, Baracos V, Turner SR, Eurich D, Filafilo H, Rouhi A, Bédard A, Bédard ELR, Patel YS, Alaichi JA, Agzarian J, Hanna WC, Patel YS, Alaichi JA, Provost E, Shayegan B, Adili A, Hanna WC, Mistry N, Gatti AA, Patel YS, Farrokhyar F, Xie F, Hanna WC, Sullivan KA, Farrokhyar F, Patel YS, Liberman M, Turner SR, Gonzalez AV, Nayak R, Yasufuku K, Hanna WC, Mistry N, Gatti AA, Patel YS, Cross S, Farrokhyar F, Xie F, Hanna WC, Haché PL, Galvaing G, Simard S, Grégoire J, Bussières J, Lacasse Y, Sassi S, Champagne C, Laliberté AS, Jeong JY, Jogiat U, Wilson H, Bédard A, Blakely P, Dang J, Sun W, Karmali S, Bédard ELR, Wong C, Hakim SY, Azizi S, El-Menyar A, Rizoli S, Al-Thani H, Fernandes AR, French D, Li C, Ellsmere J, Gossen S, French D, Bailey J, Tibbo P, Crocker C, Bondzi-Simpson A, Ribeiro T, Kidane B, Ko M, Coburn N, Kulkarni G, Hallet J, Ramzee AF, Afifi I, Alani M, El-Menyar A, Rizoli S, Al-Thani H, Chughtai T, Huo B, Manos D, Xu Z, Kontouli KM, Chun S, Fris J, Wallace AMR, French DG, Giffin C, Liberman M, Dayan G, Laliberté AS, Yasufuku K, Farivar A, Kidane B, Weessies C, Robinson M, Bednarek L, Buduhan G, Liu R, Tan L, Srinathan SK, Kidane B, Nasralla A, Safieddine N, Gazala S, Simone C, Ahmadi N, Hilzenrat R, Blitz M, Deen S, Humer M, Jugnauth A, Buduhan G, Kerr L, Sun S, Browne I, Patel Y, Hanna W, Loshusan B, Shamsil A, Naish MD, Qiabi M, Nayak R, Patel R, Malthaner R, Pooja P, Roberto R, Greg H, Daniel F, Huynh C, Sharma S, Vieira A, Jain F, Lee Y, Mousa-Doust D, Costa J, Mezei M, Chapman K, Briemberg H, Jack K, Grant K, Choi J, Yee J, McGuire AL, Abdul SA, Khazoom F, Aw K, Lau R, Gilbert S, Sundaresan S, Jones D, Seely AJE, Villeneuve PJ, Maziak DE, Pigeon CA, Frigault J, Drolet S, Roy ÈM, Bujold-Pitre K, Courval V, Tessier L, McKechnie T, Lee Y, Park L, Gangam N, Eskicioglu C, Cloutier Z, McKechnie T (McMaster University), Archer V, Park L, Lee J, Patel A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Ichhpuniani S, McKechnie T, Elder G, Chen A, Logie K, Doumouras A, Hong D, Benko R, Eskicioglu C, Castelo M, Paszat L, Hansen B, Scheer A, Faught N, Nguyen L, Baxter N, Sharma S, McKechnie T, Khamar J, Wu K, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Khamar J, Lee Y, Tessier L, Passos E, Doumouras A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Khamar J, Sachdeva A, Lee Y, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Fei LYN, Caycedo A, Patel S, Popa T, Boudreau L, Grin A, Wang T, Lie J, Karimuddin A, Brown C, Phang T, Raval M, Ghuman A, Candy S, Nanda K, Li C, Snelgrove R, Dykstra M, Kroeker K, Wang H, Roy H, Helewa RM, Johnson G, Singh H, Hyun E, Moffatt D, Vergis A, Balmes P, Phang T, Guo M, Liu J, Roy H, Webber S, Shariff F, Helewa RM, Hochman D, Park J, Johnson G, Hyun E, Robitaille S, Wang A, Maalouf M, Alali N, Elhaj H, Liberman S, Charlebois P, Stein B, Feldman L, Fiore JF Jr, Lee L, Hu R, Lacaille-Ranger A, Ahn S, Tudorache M, Moloo H, Williams L, Raîche I, Musselman R, Lemke M, Allen L, Samarasinghe N, Vogt K, Brackstone M, Zwiep T, Clement E, Lange C, Alam A, Ghuman A, Karimuddin A, Phang T, Raval M, Brown C, Clement E, Liu J, Ghuman A, Karimuddin A, Phang T, Raval M, Brown C, Mughal HN, Gok MA, Khan UA, Mughal HN, Gok MA, Khan UA, Mughal HN, Gok MA, Khan UA, Mughal HN, Gok MA, Khan UA, James N, Zwiep T, Van Koughnett JA, Laczko D, McKechnie T, Yang S, Wu K, Sharma S, Lee Y, Park L, Doumouras A, Hong D, Parpia S, Bhandari M, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Tessier L, Lee S, Kazi T, Sritharan P, Lee Y, Doumouras A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Lee Y, Hong D, Dionne J, Doumouras A, Parpia S, Bhandari M, Eskicioglu C, Hershorn O, Ghuman A, Karimuddin A, Brown C, Raval M, Phang PT, Chen A, Boutros M, Caminsky N, Dumitra T, Faris-Sabboobeh S, Demian M, Rigas G, Monton O, Smith A, Moon J, Demian M, Garfinkle R, Vasilevsky CA, Rajabiyazdi F, Boutros M, Courage E, LeBlanc D, Benesch M, Hickey K, Hartwig K, Armstrong C, Engelbrecht R, Fagan M, Borgaonkar M, Pace D, Shanahan J, Moon J, Salama E, Wang A, Arsenault M, Leon N, Loiselle C, Rajabiyazdi F, Boutros M, Brennan K, Rai M, Farooq A, McClintock C, Kong W, Patel S, Boukhili N, Caminsky N, Faris-Sabboobeh S, Demian M, Boutros M, Paradis T, Robitaille S, Dumitra T, Liberman AS, Charlebois P, Stein B, Fiore JF Jr, Feldman LS, Lee L, Zwiep T, Abner D, Alam T, Beyer E, Evans M, Hill M, Johnston D, Lohnes K, Menard S, Pitcher N, Sair K, Smith B, Yarjau B, LeBlanc K, Samarasinghe N, Karimuddin AA, Brown CJ, Phang PT, Raval MJ, MacDonell K, Ghuman A, Harvey A, Phang PT, Karimuddin A, Brown CJ, Raval MJ, Ghuman A, Hershorn O, Ghuman A, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang PT, Brown C, Logie K, Mckechnie T, Lee Y, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Matta M, Baker L, Hopkins J, Rochon R, Buie D, MacLean A, Ghuman A, Park J, Karimuddin AA, Phang PT, Raval MJ, Brown CJ, Farooq A, Ghuman A, Patel S, Macdonald H, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang PT, Brown C, Wiseman V, Brennan K, Patel S, Farooq A, Merchant S, Kong W, McClintock C, Booth C, Hann T, Ricci A, Patel S, Brennan K, Wiseman V, McClintock C, Kong W, Farooq A, Kakkar R, Hershorn O, Raval M, Phang PT, Karimuddin A, Ghuman A, Brown C, Wiseman V, Farooq A, Patel S, Hajjar R, Gonzalez E, Fragoso G, Oliero M, Alaoui AA, Rendos HV, Djediai S, Cuisiniere T, Laplante P, Gerkins C, Ajayi AS, Diop K, Taleb N, Thérien S, Schampaert F, Alratrout H, Dagbert F, Loungnarath R, Sebajang H, Schwenter F, Wassef R, Ratelle R, Debroux É, Cailhier JF, Routy B, Annabi B, Brereton NJB, Richard C, Santos MM, Gimon T, MacRae H, de Buck van Overstraeten A, Brar M, Chadi S, Kennedy E, Baker L, Hopkins J, Rochon R, Buie D, MacLean A, Park LJ, Archer V, McKechnie T, Lee Y, McIsaac D, Rashanov P, Eskicioglu C, Moloo H, Devereaux PJ, Alsayari R, McKechnie T, Ichhpuniani S, Lee Y, Eskicioglu C, Hajjar R, Oliero M, Fragoso G, Ajayi AS, Alaoui AA, Rendos HV, Calvé A, Cuisinière T, Gerkins C, Thérien S, Taleb N, Dagbert F, Sebajang H, Loungnarath R, Schwenter F, Ratelle R, Wassef R, Debroux E, Richard C, Santos MM, Kennedy E, Simunovic M, Schmocker S, Brown C, MacLean A, Liberman S, Drolet S, Neumann K, Stotland P, Jhaveri K, Kirsch R, Alnajem H, Alibrahim H, Giundi C, Chen A, Rigas G, Munir H, Safar A, Sabboobeh S, Holland J, Boutros M, Kennedy E, Richard C, Simunovic M, Schmocker S, Brown C, MacLean A, Liberman S, Drolet S, Neumann K, Stotland P, Jhaveri K, Kirsch R, Bruyninx G, Gill D, Alsayari R, McKechnie T, Lee Y, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Zhang L, Abtahi S, Chhor A, Best G, Raîche I, Musselman R, Williams L, Moloo H, Caminsky NG, Moon JJ, Marinescu D, Pang A, Vasilevsky CA, Boutros M, Al-Abri M, Gee E, Karimuddin A, Phang PT, Brown C, Raval M, Ghuman A, Morena N, Ben-Zvi L, Hayman V, Hou M (University of Calgary), Nguyen D, Rentschler CA, Meguerditchian AN, Mir Z, Fei L, McKeown S, Dinchong R, Cofie N, Dalgarno N, Cheifetz R, Merchant S, Jaffer A, Cullinane C, Feeney G, Jalali A, Merrigan A, Baban C, Buckley J, Tormey S, Benesch M, Wu R, Takabe K, Benesch M, O'Brien S, Kazazian K, Abdalaty AH, Brezden C, Burkes R, Chen E, Govindarajan A, Jang R, Kennedy E, Lukovic J, Mesci A, Quereshy F, Swallow C, Chadi S, Habashi R, Pasternak J, Marini W, Zheng W, Murakami K, Ohashi P, Reedijk M, Hu R, Ivankovic V, Han L, Gresham L, Mallick R, Auer R, Ribeiro T, Bondzi-Simpson A, Coburn N, Hallet J, Cil T, Fontebasso A, Lee A, Bernard-Bedard E, Wong B, Li H, Grose E, Brandts-Longtin O, Aw K, Lau R, Abed A, Stevenson J, Sheikh R, Chen R, Johnson-Obaseki S, Nessim C, Hennessey RL, Meneghetti AT, Bildersheim M, Bouchard-Fortier A, Nelson G, Mack L, Ghasemi F, Naeini MM, Parsyan A, Kaur Y, Covelli A, Quereshy F, Elimova E, Panov E, Lukovic J, Brierley J, Burnett B, Swallow C, Eom A, Kirkwood D, Hodgson N, Doumouras A, Bogach J, Whelan T, Levine M, Parvez E, Ng D, Kazazian K, Lee K, Lu YQ, Kim DK, Magalhaes M, Grigor E, Arnaout A, Zhang J, Yee EK, Hallet J, Look Hong NJ, Nguyen L, Coburn N, Wright FC, Gandhi S, Jerzak KJ, Eisen A, Roberts A, Ben Lustig D, Quan ML, Phan T, Bouchard-Fortier A, Cao J, Bayley C, Watanabe A, Yao S, Prisman E, Groot G, Mitmaker E, Walker R, Wu J, Pasternak J, Lai CK, Eskander A, Wasserman J, Mercier F, Roth K, Gill S, Villamil C, Goldstein D, Munro V, Pathak A (University of Manitoba), Lee D, Nguyen A, Wiseman S, Rajendran L, Claasen M, Ivanics T, Selzner N, McGilvray I, Cattral M, Ghanekar A, Moulton CA, Reichman T, Shwaartz C, Metser U, Burkes R, Winter E, Gallinger S, Sapisochin G, Glinka J, Waugh E, Leslie K, Skaro A, Tang E, Glinka J, Charbonneau J, Brind'Amour A, Turgeon AF, O'Connor S, Couture T, Wang Y, Yoshino O, Driedger M, Beckman M, Vrochides D, Martinie J, Alabduljabbar A, Aali M, Lightfoot C, Gala-Lopez B, Labelle M, D'Aragon F, Collin Y, Hirpara D, Irish J, Rashid M, Martin T, Zhu A, McKnight L, Hunter A, Jayaraman S, Wei A, Coburn N, Wright F, Mallette K, Elnahas A, Alkhamesi N, Schlachta C, Hawel J, Tang E, Punnen S, Zhong J, Yang Y, Streith L, Yu J, Chung S, Kim P, Chartier-Plante S, Segedi M, Bleszynski M, White M, Tsang ME, Jayaraman S, Lam-Tin-Cheung K, Jayaraman S, Tsang M, Greene B, Pouramin P, Allen S, Evan Nelson D, Walsh M, Côté J, Rebolledo R, Borie M, Menaouar A, Landry C, Plasse M, Létourneau R, Dagenais M, Rong Z, Roy A, Beaudry-Simoneau E, Vandenbroucke-Menu F, Lapointe R, Ferraro P, Sarkissian S, Noiseux N, Turcotte S, Haddad Y, Bernard A, Lafortune C, Brassard N, Roy A, Perreault C, Mayer G, Marcinkiewicz M, Mbikay M, Chrétien M, Turcotte S, Waugh E, Sinclair L, Glinka J, Shin E, Engelage C, Tang E, Skaro A, Muaddi H, Flemming J, Hansen B, Dawson L, O'Kane G, Feld J, Sapisochin G, Zhu A, Jayaraman S, Cleary S, Hamel A, Pigeon CA, Marcoux C, Ngo TP, Deshaies I, Mansouri S, Amhis N, Léveillé M, Lawson C, Achard C, Ilkow C, Collin Y, Tai LH, Park L, Griffiths C, D'Souza D, Rodriguez F, McKechnie T, Serrano PE, Hennessey RL, Yang Y, Meneghetti AT, Panton ONM, Chiu CJ, Henao O, Netto FS, Mainprize M, Hennessey RL, Chiu CJ, Hennessey RL, Chiu CJ, Jatana S, Verhoeff K, Mocanu V, Jogiat U, Birch D, Karmali S, Switzer N, Hetherington A, Verhoeff K, Mocanu V, Birch D, Karmali S, Switzer N, Safar A, Al-Ghaithi N, Vourtzoumis P, Demyttenaere S, Court O, Andalib A, Wilson H, Verhoeff K, Dang J, Kung J, Switzer N, Birch D, Madsen K, Karmali S, Mocanu V, Wu T, He W, Vergis A, Hardy K, Zmudzinski M, Daenick F, Linton J, Zmudzinski M, Fowler-Woods M, He W, Fowler-Woods A, Shingoose G, Vergis A, Hardy K, Lee Y, Doumouras A, Molnar A, Nguyen F, Hong D, Schneider R, Fecso AB, Sharma P, Maeda A, Jackson T, Okrainec A, McLean C, Mocanu V, Birch D, Karmali S, Switzer N, MacVicar S, Dang J, Mocanu V, Verhoeff K, Jogiat U, Karmali S, Birch D, Switzer N, McLennan S, Verhoeff K, Purich K, Dang J, Kung J, Mocanu V, McLennan S, Verhoeff K, Mocanu V, Jogiat U, Birch DW, Karmali S, Switzer NJ, Jeffery L, Hwang H, Ryley A, Schellenberg M, Owattanapanich N, Emigh B, Nichols C, Dilday J, Ugarte C, Onogawa A, Matsushima K, Martin MJ, Inaba K, Schellenberg M, Emigh B, Nichols C, Dilday J, Ugarte C, Onogawa A, Shapiro D, Im D, Inaba K, Schellenberg M, Owattanapanich N, Ugarte C, Lam L, Martin MJ, Inaba K, Rezende-Neto J, Patel S, Zhang L, Mir Z, Lemke M, Leeper W, Allen L, Walser E, Vogt K, Ribeiro T, Bateni S, Bondzi-Simpson A, Coburn N, Hallet J, Barabash V, Barr A, Chan W, Hakim SY, El-Menyar A, Rizoli S, Al-Thani H, Mughal HN, Bhugio M, Gok MA, Khan UA, Warraich A, Gillman L, Ziesmann M, Momic J, Yassin N, Kim M, Makish A, Walser E, Smith S, Ball I, Moffat B, Parry N, Vogt K, Lee A, Kroeker J, Evans D, Fansia N, Notik C, Wong EG, Coyle G, Seben D, Smith J, Tanenbaum B, Freedman C, Nathens A, Fowler R, Patel P, Elrick T, Ewing M, Di Marco S, Razek T, Grushka J, Wong EG, Park LJ, Borges FK, Nenshi R, Serrano PE, Engels P, Vogt K, Di Sante E, Vincent J, Tsiplova K, Devereaux PJ, Talwar G, Dionne J, McKechnie T, Lee Y, Kazi T, El-Sayes A, Bogach J, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Connell M, Klooster A, Beck J, Verhoeff K, Strickland M, Anantha R, Groszman L, Caminsky NG, Watt L, Boulanger N, Razek T, Grushka J, Di Marco S, Wong EG, Livergant R, McDonald B, Binda C, Luthra S, Ebert N, Falk R, and Joos E
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- 2023
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14. Variation in Anesthesiology Provider-Volume for Complex Gastrointestinal Cancer Surgery: A Population-Based Study.
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Hallet J, Sutradhar R, Eskander A, Carrier FM, McIsaac D, Turgeon AF, d'Empaire PP, Idestrup C, Flexman A, Lorello G, Darling G, Kidane B, Chan WC, Kaliwal Y, Barabash V, Coburn N, and Jerath A
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- Humans, Anesthesiologists, Delivery of Health Care, Anesthesiology, Digestive System Surgical Procedures, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Examine between-hospital and between-anesthesiologist variation in anesthesiology provider-volume (PV) and delivery of high-volume anesthesiology care., Background: Better outcomes for anesthesiologists with higher PV of complex gastrointestinal cancer surgery have been reported. The factors linking anesthesiology practice and organization to volume are unknown., Methods: We identified patients undergoing elective esophagectomy, hepatectomy, and pancreatectomy using linked administrative health data sets (2007-2018). Anesthesiology PV was the annual number of procedures done by the primary anesthesiologist in the 2 years before the index surgery. High-volume anesthesiology was PV>6 procedures/year. Funnel plots to described variation in anesthesiology PV and delivery of high-volume care. Hierarchical regression models examined between-anesthesiologist and between-hospital variation in delivery of high-volume care use with variance partition coefficients (VPCs) and median odds ratios (MORs)., Results: Among 7893 patients cared for at 17 hospitals, funnel plots showed variation in anesthesiology PV (median ranging from 1.5, interquartile range: 1-2 to 11.5, interquartile range: 8-16) and delivery of HV care (ranging from 0% to 87%) across hospitals. After adjustment, 32% (VPC 0.32) and 16% (VPC: 0.16) of the variation were attributable to between-anesthesiologist and between-hospital differences, respectively. This translated to an anesthesiologist MOR of 4.81 (95% CI, 3.27-10.3) and hospital MOR of 3.04 (95% CI, 2.14-7.77)., Conclusions: Substantial variation in anesthesiology PV and delivery of high-volume anesthesiology care existed across hospitals. The anesthesiologist and the hospital were key determinants of the variation in high-volume anesthesiology care delivery. This suggests that targeting anesthesiology structures of care could reduce variation and improve delivery of high-volume anesthesiology care., Competing Interests: J.H. has received speaking honoraria from Ipsen Biopharmaceuticals Canada, Advanced Accelerator Applications, Brystol Myers, and Medtronic. F.M.C. is recipient of a Career Award from the Fonds de la Recherche du Québec – Santé (FRQS). A.F.T. is the chairholder of the Canada Research Chair in Critical Care Neurology and Trauma. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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15. Feasibility of a multidisciplinary Transitional Pain Service in spine surgery patients to minimise opioid use and improve perioperative outcomes: a quality improvement study.
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Tierney S, Magnan MC, Zahrai A, McIsaac D, Poulin P, and Stratton A
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- Humans, Feasibility Studies, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy, Pain Management, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
Introduction: Spine surgery patients have high rates of perioperative opioid consumption, with a chronic opioid use prevalence of 20%. A proposed solution is the implementation of a Transitional Pain Service (TPS), which provides patient-tailored multidisciplinary care. Its feasibility has not been demonstrated in spine surgery. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of a TPS programme in patients undergoing spine surgery., Methods: Patients were recruited between July 2020 and November 2021 at a single, tertiary care academic centre. Success of our study was defined as: (1) enrolment: ability to enrol ≥80% of eligible patients, (2) data collection: ability to collect data for ≥80% of participants, including effectiveness measures (oral morphine equivalent (OME) and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)-perceived analgesic management and overall health) and programme resource requirements measures (appointment attendance, 60-day return to emergency and length of stay), and (3) efficacy: estimate potential programme effectiveness defined as ≥80% of patients weaned back to their intake OME requirements at programme discharge., Results: Thirty out of 36 (83.3%) eligible patients were enrolled and 26 completed the TPS programme. The main programme outcomes and resource measures were successfully tracked for >80% of patients. All 26 patients had the same or lower OME at programme discharge than at intake (intake 38.75 mg vs discharge 12.50 mg; p<0.001). At TPS discharge, patients reported similar overall health VAS (pre 60.0 vs post 70.0; p=0.14), improved scores for VAS-perceived analgesic management (pre 47.6 vs post 75.6; p<0.001) and improved Brief Pain Inventory pain intensity (pre 39.1 vs post 25.0; p=0.02)., Conclusion: Our feasibility study successfully met or exceeded our three main objectives. Based on this success and the defined clinical need for a TPS programme, we plan to expand our TPS care model to include other surgical procedures at our centre., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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16. Barriers and facilitators to improving patient safety learning systems: a systematic review of qualitative studies and meta-synthesis.
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Mahmoud HA, Thavorn K, Mulpuru S, McIsaac D, Abdelrazek MA, Mahmoud AA, and Forster AJ
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- Humans, Patient Safety, Learning
- Abstract
Background: The implementation and continuous improvement of patient safety learning systems (PSLS) is a principal strategy for mitigating preventable harm to patients. Although substantial efforts have sought to improve these systems, there is a need to more comprehensively understand critical success factors. This study aims to summarise the barriers and facilitators perceived by hospital staff and physicians to influence the reporting, analysis, learning and feedback within PSLS in hospitals., Methods: We performed a systematic review and meta-synthesis by searching MEDLINE (Ovid), EMBASE (Ovid), CINAHL, Scopus and Web of Science. We included English-language manuscripts of qualitative studies evaluating effectiveness of the PSLS and excluded studies evaluating specific individual adverse events, such as systems for tracking only medication side effects, for example. We followed the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for qualitative systematic reviews., Results: We extracted data from 22 studies, after screening 2475 for inclusion/exclusion criteria. The included studies focused on reporting aspects of the PSLS, however, there were important barriers and facilitators across the analysis, learning and feedback phases. We identified the following barriers for effective use of PSLS: inadequate organisational support with shortage of resources, lack of training, weak safety culture, lack of accountability, defective policies, blame and a punitive environment, complex system, lack of experience and lack of feedback. We identified the following enabling factors: continuous training, a balance between accountability and responsibility, leaders as role models, anonymous reporting, user-friendly systems, well-structured analysis teams, tangible improvement., Conclusion: Multiple barriers and facilitators to uptake of PSLS exist. These factors should be considered by decision makers seeking to enhance the impact of PSLS., Ethics and Dissemination: No formal ethical approval or consent were required as no primary data were collected., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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17. Postsurgery paths and outcomes for hip fracture patients (POST-OP HIP PATHS): a population-based retrospective cohort study protocol.
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Backman C, Shah S, Webber C, Turcotte L, McIsaac DI, Papp S, Harley A, Beaulé P, French-Merkley V, Berdusco R, Poitras S, and Tanuseputro P
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Cohort Studies, Patients, Ontario, Hip Fractures surgery, Hip Fractures rehabilitation
- Abstract
Introduction: Hip fracture patients receive varying levels of support posthip fracture surgery and often experience significant disability and increased risk of mortality. Best practice guidelines recommend that all hip fracture patients receive active rehabilitation following their acute care stay, with rehabilitation beginning no later than 6 days following surgery. Nevertheless, patients frequently experience gaps in care including delays and variation in rehabilitation services they receive. We aim to understand the factors that drive these practice variations for older adults following hip fracture surgery, and their impact on patient outcomes., Methods and Analysis: We will conduct a retrospective population-based cohort study using routinely collected health administrative data housed at ICES. The study population will include all individuals with a unilateral hip fracture aged 50 and older who underwent surgical repair in Ontario, Canada between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2018. We will use unadjusted and multilevel, multivariable adjusted regression models to identify predictors of rehabilitation setting, time to rehabilitation and length of rehabilitation, with predictors prespecified including patient sociodemographics, baseline health and characteristics of the acute (surgical) episode. We will examine outcomes after rehabilitation, including place of care/residence at 6 and 12 months postrehabilitation, as well as other short-term and long-term outcomes., Ethics and Dissemination: The use of the data in this project is authorised under section 45 of Ontario's Personal Health Information Protection Act and does not require review by a Research Ethics Board. Results will be disseminated through conference presentations and in peer-reviewed journals., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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18. 2021 Canadian Surgery Forum: Virtual, online Sept. 21-24, 2021.
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Johnson G, Vergis A, Unger B, Park J, Gillman L, Hickey K, Pace D, Azin A, Guidolin K, Lam-Tin-Cheung K, Chadi S, Quereshy F, Guidolin K, Catton J, Rubin B, Bell J, Marangos J, Heesters A, Stuart-McEwan T, Quereshy F, Shariff F, Wright F, Ahmed N, Nadler A, Hallet J, Gentles J, Chen L, Hwang H, Parapini M, Hirpara D, Sidhu R, Scott T, Karimuddin A, Guo R, Nguyen A, Osborn J, Wiseman S, Nabata K, Ertel E, Hwang H, Lenet T, Baker L, Park L, Vered M, Zahrai A, Shorr R, Davis A, McIsaac D, Tinmouth A, Fergusson D, Martel G, Nabata K, Rummel S, Stefic-Cubic M, Karimuddin A, Stewart M, Melck A, McKechnie T, Anpalagan T, Ichhpuniani S, Lee Y, Ramji K, Eskicioglu C, Zhu A, Deng S, Greene B, Tsang M, Palter V, Jayaraman S, McKechnie T, Mann A, Tittley J, Cadeddu M, Nguyen M, Madani A, Pasternak J, McKechnie T, Ramji K, Hong D, Qu L, Istl A, Tang E, Gray D, Zuckerman J, Coburn N, Callum J, McLeod R, Pearsall E, Lin Y, Turgeon A, Martel G, Hallet J, Mahar A, Kammili A, Kriviraltcheva-Kaneva P, Lee L, Cools-Lartigue J, Ferri L, Mueller C, Zuckerman J, Haas B, Tillman B, Guttman M, Chesney T, Zuk V, Mahar A, Hsu A, Chan W, Vasdev R, Coburn N, Hallet J, D'Souza K, Huynh C, Ling LCJ, Warburton R, Hwang H, Hameed M, Glass L, Williamson H, Murphy P, Tang E, Leslie K, Hawel J, Kerr L, Zablotny S, Roldan H, He W, Jiang X, Zheng B, Lee L, Fiore J Jr, Feldman L, Fried G, Mueller C, Valanci S, Balvardi S, Cipolla J, Kaneva P, Demyttenaere S, Boutros M, Lee L, Feldman L, Fiore J, Balvardi S, Alhashemi M, Cipolla J, Lee L, Fiore J Jr, Feldman L, Miles A, Purich K, Verhoeff K, Shapiro J, Bigam D, Kung J, Fecso A, Chesney T, Mosko J, Skubleny D, Hamilton P, Ghosh S, Widder S, Schiller D, Do U, El Kefraoui C, Pook M, Barone N, Balvardi S, Montgomery H, Nguyen-Powanda P, Rajabiyazdi F, Elhaj H, Lapointe-Gagner M, Olleik G, Kaneva P, Antoun A, Safa N, Di Lena E, Meterissian S, Meguerditchian A, Fried G, Alhashemi M, Lee F, Baldini G, Feldman L, Fiore J Jr, Serrano Aybar PE, Parpia S, Ruo L, Tywonek K, Lee S, O'Neill C, Faisal N, Alfayyadh A, Gundayao M, Meyers BM, Habashi R, Kruse C, McKechnie T, Levin M, Aldrich K, Grantcharov T, Langerman A, Forbes H, Anantha R, Fawcett V, Hetherington A, Pravong V, Gervais M, Rakovich G, Selvam R, Hu R, Musselman R, Raiche I, Moloo H, Liu R, Elnahas A, Alkhamesi N, Hawel J, Tang E, Alnumay A, Schlachta C, Walser E, Zhang C, Cristancho S, Ott M, Lee A, Niu B, Balaa F, Gawad N, Ren K, Qiu Y, Hamann K, How N, Leveille C, Davidson A, Eqbal A, Sardiwalla Y, Korostensky M, McKechnie T, Lee E, Yang I, Ren K, Muaddi H, Stukel T, de Mestral C, Nathens A, Karanicolas P, Frigault J, Lemieux S, Breton D, Bouchard P, Bouchard A, Grégoire R, Letarte F, Bouchard G, Drolet S, Frigault J, Avoine S, Drolet S, Letarte F, Bouchard A, Gagné J, Thibault C, Grégoire R, Jutras Bouthillette N, Gosselin M, Bouchard P, Rosenzveig A, Stuleanu T, Jarrar A, Kolozsvari N, Skelhorne-Gross G, Nenshi R, Jerath A, Gomez D, Singh K, Amir T, Liu E, Farquharson S, Mao R, Lan L, Yan J, Allard-Coutu A, Mierzwa A, Tin R, Brisebois R, Bradley N, Wigen R, Walser E, Hartford L, Van Koughnett J, Vogt K, Hilsden R, Parry N, Allen L, Leslie K, Raskin R, Jones J, Neumann K, Dwyer C, Strickland M, Bradley N, O'Dochartaigh D, Lobay K, Kabaroff A, Chang E, Widder S, Anantha R, Sun W, Beck J, Anantha R, Liu R, Davidson J, Jones S, Van Hooren T, Van Koughnett J, Ott M, Schmitz E, Raiche I, Sun W, El Hafid M, Dang J, Mocanu V, Lutzak G, Sultanian R, Wong C, Karmali S, Schmitz E, Petrera M, Pickell M, Auer R, Patro N, Li B, Lee Y, Wilson H, Mocanu V, Sun W, Dang J, Jogiat U, Kung J, Switzer N, Karmali S, Wong C, Li C, Al Hinai A, Cieply A, Hawes H, Joos E, Saleh A, Li C, Saleh A, Engels P, Drung J, Allen L, Leslie K, Pang G, Kwong M, Schlachta C, Alkhamesi N, Hawel J, Elnahas A, Guidolin K, Ellsmere J, Chadi S, Quereshy F, Chang D, Hutter M, Spence R, Abou Khalil M, Boutros M, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Longtin Y, Liberman S, Demyttenaere S, Montpetit P, Poirier M, Mukherjee K, Sebajang H, Younan R, Schwenter F, De Broux E, Larsen K, Skelhorne-Gross G, Beckett A, Nantais J, Gomez D, Lan L, Mao R, Kay J, Lohre R, Ayeni O, Goel D, de Sa D, He R, Hylton D, Bedard E, Johnson S, Laing B, Valji A, Hanna W, Turner S, Akhtar-Danesh G, Akhtar-Danesh N, Shargall Y, Akhtar-Danesh G, Akhtar-Danesh N, Shargall Y, Hirpara D, Gupta V, Kidane B, Limbachia J, Sullivan K, Farrokhyar F, Leontiadis G, Patel Y, Churchill I, Hylton D, Xie F, Seely A, Spicer J, Kidane B, Turner S, Yasufuku K, Hanna W, Jogiat U, Sun W, Dang J, Mocanu V, Kung J, Karmali S, Turner S, Switzer N, Patel Y, Churchill I, Sullivan K, Beauchamp M, Wald J, Mbuagbaw L, Agzarian J, Shargall Y, Finley C, Fahim C, Hanna W, Abbas M, Olaiya O, Begum H, Mbuagbaw L, Finley C, Hanna W, Agzarian J, Shargall Y, Ednie A, Palma D, Warner A, Malthaner R, Fortin D, Qiabi M, Nayak R, Nguyen T, Louie A, Rodrigues G, Yaremko B, Laba J, Inculet R, Alaichi J, Patel Y, Hanna W, Turner S, Mador B, Lai H, White J, Kim M, Hirpara D, Kidane B, Louie A, Zuk V, Darling G, Rousseau M, Chesney T, Coburn N, Hallet J, Lee Y, Samarasinghe Y, Lee M, Thiru L, Shargall Y, Finley C, Hanna W, Levine O, Juergens R, Agzarian J, Nayak R, Brogly S, Li W, Lougheed D, Petsikas D, Mistry N, Gatti A, Churchill I, Patel Y, Hanna W, Abdul S, Anestee C, Gilbert S, Sundaresan S, Seely A, Villeneuve P, Maziak D, Razzak R, Ashrafi A, Tregobov N, Hassanzadeh N, Stone S, Panjwani A, Bong T, Bond R, Hafizi A, De Meo M, Rayes R, Milette S, Vagai M, Usatii M, Chandrasekaran A, Giannias B, Bourdeau F, Sangwan V, Bertos N, Moraes C, Huang S, Quail D, Walsh L, Camilleri-Broet S, Fiset P, Cools-Lartigue J, Ferri L, Spicer J, Kammili A, Bilgic E, Quaiattini A, Maurice-Ventouris M, Najmeh S, Mueller C, Esther L, Begum H, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Finley C, Shargall Y, Lee Y, Lu J, Malhan R, Shargall Y, Finley C, Hanna W, Agzarian J, Brophy S, Brennan K, French D, Resende V, Momtazi M, Solaja O, Gilbert S, Maziak D, Seely A, Sundaresan S, Villeneuve P, Sisson D, Donahoe L, Bedard P, Hansen A, De Perrot M, Alghamedi A, Simone A, Begum H, Hanna W, Shargall Y, Turner S, Huang J, Lai H, Bedard E, Shargall Y, Murthy S, Lin J, Darling G, Malthaner R, Kidane B, Seely A, Li H, Crowther M, Linkins L, Lau E, Schneider L, Hanna W, Finley C, Agzarian J, Douketis J, Greenberg B, Gupta V, Allen-Avodabo C, Davis L, Zhao H, Kidane B, Darling G, Coburn N, Huynh C, Cools-Lartigue J, Ferri L, Najmeh S, Sirois C, Mulder D, Spicer J, Al Rawahi A, Aftab Abdul S, Nguyen D, Anstee C, Delic E, Gilbert S, Maziak D, Villeneuve P, Seely A, Sisson D, Sasewich H, Islam T, Low D, Darling G, Turner S, Humer M, Abdul S, Nguyen D, Al Rawahi A, Anstee C, Delic E, Gilbert S, Villeneuve P, Maziak D, Seely A, Le Nguyen D, Aftab Abdul S, Al Rawahi A, Anstee C, Delic E, Gilbert S, Villeneuve P, Maziak D, Seely A, Patel Y, Kay M, Churchill I, Sullivan K, Shargall Y, Shayegan B, Adili A, Hanna W, Kaafarani M, Huynh C, Chouiali F, Muthukrishnan N, Maleki F, Ovens K, Gold M, Sorin M, Falutz R, Rayes R, Forghani R, Spicer J, Hunka N, Kennedy R, Bigsby R, Bharadwaj S, Gowing S, Churchill I, Gatti A, Hylton D, Sullivan K, Patel Y, Farrokhyar F, Leontiadis G, Hanna W, Finley C, Begum H, Pearce K, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Shargall Y, Akhtar-Danesh N, Jones D, Anstee C, Kumar S, Gingrich M, Simone A, Ahmadzai Z, Thavorn K, Seely A, Gupta V, Namavarian A, Mohammed A, Uddin S, Jones D, Behzadi A, Brar A, Qu L, Qiabi M, Nayak R, Malthaner R, Peters E, Buduhan G, Tan L, Liu R, Srinathan S, Kidane B, Gupta V, Levy J, Kidane B, Mahar A, Ringash J, Sutradhar R, Darling G, Coburn N, Robinson M, Bednarek L, Buduhan G, Liu R, Tan L, Srinathan S, Kidane B, Wang H, French D, MacDonald D, Graham K, Enns S, Buduhan G, Srinathan S, Liu R, Tan A, Kidane B, Bruinooge A, Poole E, Pascoe C, Karakach T, Buduhan G, Tan L, Srinathan S, Halayko A, Kidane B, Verhoeff K, Mocanu V, Fang B, Dang J, Kung J, Switzer N, Birch D, Karmali S, Johnson G, Singh H, Vergis A, Park J, Hershorn O, Hochman D, Helewa R, Johnson G, Robertson R, Vergis A, Johnson G, Vergis A, Singh H, Park J, Helewa R, Azin A, Cahill C, Lipson M, Afzal A, Maclean A, Wong C, Roen S, Buie W, McKechnie T, Anpalagan T, Chu M, Lee Y, Amin N, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, McKechnie T, Ramji K, Kruse C, Jaffer H, Rebello R, Amin N, Doumouras A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Hajjar R, Oliero M, Cuisiniere T, Fragoso G, Calvé A, Djediai S, Annabi B, Richard C, Santos M, Purich K, Zhou Y, Dodd S, Ring B, Yuan Y, White J, Garfinkle R, Dell'Aniello S, Bhatnagar S, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Vasilevsky C, Brassard P, Boutros M, Garfinkle R, Salama E, Amar-Zifkin A, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Talwar G, Daniel R, McKechnie T, Levine O, Eskicioglu C, AlSulaim H, Alqahtani M, Garfinkle R, Al-Masrouri S, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Boutros M, McKechnie T, Chen A, Patel A, Lee Y, Doumouras A, Hong D, Eskicioglu C, Brissette V, Al Busaidi N, Rajabiyazdi F, Moon J, Demian M, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Boutros M, Selvam R, Moloo H, MacRae H, Alam F, Raiche I, Holland J, Cwintal M, Rigas G, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Pang A, Boutros M, Holland J, Moon J, Marinescu D, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Pang A, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Brown C, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang P, Ghuman A, Li M, Muncner S, Mihajlovic I, Dykstra M, Snelgrove R, Wang H, Monton O, Smith A, Moon J, Demian M, Garfinkle R, Vasilevsky C, Rajabiyazdi F, Boutros M, AlAamer O, AlSelaim N, AlMalki M, Al-Osail A, Ruxton R, Manuel P, Mohamed F, Motamedi MK, Serahati S, Rajendran L, Brown C, Raval M, Karimuddin A, Ghuman A, Phang T, Caminsky N, Moon J, Rajabiyazdi F, Chadi S, Alavi K, Paquette I, MacLean T, Wexner S, Liberman S, Steele S, Park J, Patel S, Bordeianou L, Auer R, Sylla P, Morin N, Ghuman A, Boutros M, Bayat Z, Kennedy E, Victor C, Govindarajan A, Liang J, Vasilevsky C, Pang A, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Morin N, Boutros M, Marinescu D, Roy H, Baig Z, Karimmudin A, Raval M, Brown C, Phang T, Gill D, Ginther N, Moon J, Marinescu D, Pang A, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Moon J, Pang A, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Salama E, Alrashid F, Vasilevsky C, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Morin N, Boutros M, Wiseman V, Zhang L, MacDonald P, Merchant SM, Wattie Barnett K, Caycedo-Marulanda A, Patel SV, Harra Z, Vasilevsky C, Ghitulescu G, Morin N, Boutros M, Pang A, Hegagi M, Alqahtani M, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Alghaithi N, Marinescu D, Al-Masrouri S, Pang A, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Papillon E, Kasteel N, Kaur G, Bindra S, Malhotra A, Graham C, MacLean A, Beck P, Jijon H, Ferraz J, Buie W, Szwimer R, Moon J, Demian M, Pang A, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Rajabiyazdi F, Boutros M, Azin A, Merchant S, Kong W, Gyawali B, Hanna T, Chung W, Nanji S, Patel S, Booth C, Li V, Awan A, Serrano P, Jacobson M, Chanco M, Wen V, Singh N, Peiris L, Pasieka J, Ghatage P, Buie D, MacLean T, Bouchard-Fortier A, Mack L, Marini W, Zheng W, Swallow C, Reedijk M, DiPasquale A, Peiris L, Prus-Czrnecka Z, Delmar L, Gagnon N, Villiard R, Martel É, Cadrin-Chênevert A, Ledoux É, Racicot C, Mysuria S, Bazzarelli A, Pao J, Chen L, Zhang M, McKevitt E, Warburton R, Kuusk U, Van Laeken N, Bovill E, Isaac K, Dingee C, Hunter-Smith A, Cuthbert C, Fergus K, Barbera L, Efegoma Y, Howell D, Isherwood S, Levasseur N, Scheer A, Simmons C, Srikantham A, Temple-Orberle C, Xu Y, Metcalfe K, Quan M, Alqaydi A, la J, Merchant S, Digby G, Pravong V, Brind'Amour A, Sidéris L, Dubé P, De Guerke L, Fortin S, Auclair M, Trilling B, Tremblay J, Di Lena É, Hopkins B, Wong S, Meterissian S, Di Lena É, Barone N, Hopkins B, Dumitra S, Kaneva P, Fiore J, Meterissian S, Mysuria S, McKevitt E, Warburton R, Chen L, Bazzarelli A, Pao J, Bovill E, Zhang M, Kuusk U, Isaac K, Van Laeken N, Dingee C, Kapur H, McKevitt E, Warburton R, Pao J, Dingee C, Bazarelli A, Kuusk U, Chen L, Cadili L, DeGirolamo K, McKevitt E, Pao J, Dingee C, Bazzarelli A, Warburton R, Ng D, Ali A, Eymae D, Lee K, Brar S, Conner J, Magalhaes M, Swallow C, Allen K, Baliski C, Cyr D, Sari A, Messenger D, Driman D, Assarzadegan N, Juda A, Swallow C, Kennedy E, Brar M, Conner J, Kirsch R, Allard-Coutu A, Singh K, Lamontagne A, Gamache Y, Allard-Coutu A, Mardinger C, Lee C, Duckworth R, Brindle M, Fraulin F, Austen L, Kortbeek J, Hyndman M, Nguyen D, Jamjoum G, Meguerditchian A, Langer S, Yuan Xu Y, Kong S, Quan M, Lim D, Retrouvey H, Kerrebijn I, Butler K, O'Neill A, Cil T, Zhong T, Hofer S, McCready D, Metcalfe K, Lim D, Greene B, Look Hong N, Parapini M, Skipworth J, Mah A, Desai S, Chung S, Scudamore C, Segedi M, Vasilyeva E, Li J, Kim P, Verhoeff K, Deprato A, Purich K, Kung J, Bigam D, Dajani K, Lenet T, Gilbert R, Smoot R, Martel G, Tzeng C, Rocha F, Yohanathan L, Cleary S, Bertens K, Reyna-Sepulveda F, Badrudin D, Gala-Lopez B, Hanna N, Brogly S, Wei X, Booth C, Nanji S, Zuckerman J, Coburn N, Mahar A, Callum J, Kaliwal Y, Jayaraman S, Wei A, Martel G, Hallet J, Zuckerman J, Jayaraman S, Wei A, Mahar A, Kaliwal Y, Martel G, Coburn N, Hallet J, Henault D, Barrette B, Pelletier S, Thebault P, Beaudry-Simoneau E, Rong Z, Plasse M, Dagenais ARM, Létourneau R, Lapointe R, Vandenbroucke-Menu F, Nguyen B, Soucy G, Turcotte S, Lemke M, Waugh E, Leslie K, Quan D, Skaro A, Tang E, Lund M, Allen L, Glinka J, Jada G, Quan D, Skaro A, Tang E, Park L, Daza J, Li V, Msallak H, Zhang B, Workneh A, Faisal S, Faisal R, Fabbro M, Gu C, Claassen M, Zuk V, Hallet J, Martel G, Sapisochin G, Serrano P, Glinka J, Skaro A, Leslie K, Jada G, Quan D, Tang E, Waugh E, Lemke M, Glinka J, Skaro A, Leslie K, Tang E, Waugh E, Breadner D, Liu R, Tang E, Allen L, Welch S, Skaro A, Leslie K, Glinka J, Waugh E, Tang E, Jada G, Quan D, Skaro A, Webb A, Lester E, Shapiro A, Eurich D, Bigam D, Essaji Y, Shrader H, Nayyar A, Suraju M, Williams-Perez S, Ear P, Chan C, Smith V, Rivers-Bowerman M, Costa A, Stueck A, Campbell N, Allen S, Gala-Lopez B, Gilbert R, Lenet T, Cleary S, Smoot R, Tzeng C, Rocha F, Martel G, Bertens K, Mir Z, Golding H, McKeown S, Nanji S, Flemming J, Groome P, Mir Z, Djerboua M, Nanji S, Flemming J, Groome P, Elbekri S, Turcotte S, Girard E, Morency-Potvin P, Lapointe R, Vandenbroucke-Menu F, Dagenais M, Roy A, Letourneau R, Plasse M, Simoneau E, Rong Z, Zuker N, Oakley M, Chartrand G, Misheva B, Bendavid Y, Frigault J, Lemieux S, Breton D, Bouchard G, Drolet S, Melland-Smith M, Smith L, Tan J, Kahn U, McLean C, Mocanu V, Birch D, Karmali S, Switzer N, Fortin M, Paré X, Doyon A, Keshavjee S, Schwenger K, Yadav J, Fischer S, Jackson T, Allard J, Okrainec A, Lee Y, Anvari S, Chu M, Lovrics O, Aditya I, Malhan R, Khondker A, Walsh M, Doumouras A, Hong D, He W, Vergis A, Hardy K, Romanescu R, Deaninck F, Linton J, Fowler-Woods M, Fowler-Woods A, Shingoose G, Vergis A, Hardy K, Zmudzinski M, Cloutier Z, McKechnie T, Lee Y, Archer V, Doumouras A, Shiroky J, Abu Halimah J, Ramji K, Boudreau V, Mierzwa A, Mocanu V, Marcil G, Dang J, Switzer N, Birch D, Karmali S, Mierzwa A, Jarrar A, Hardy-Henry A, Kolozsvari N, Lin W, Hagen J, Connell M, Sun W, Dang J, Mocanu V, Kung J, Switzer N, Birch D, and Karmali S
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- Canada, Humans
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- 2021
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19. Peripheral nerve block anesthesia/analgesia for patients undergoing primary hip and knee arthroplasty: recommendations from the International Consensus on Anesthesia-Related Outcomes after Surgery (ICAROS) group based on a systematic review and meta-analysis of current literature.
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Memtsoudis SG, Cozowicz C, Bekeris J, Bekere D, Liu J, Soffin EM, Mariano ER, Johnson RL, Go G, Hargett MJ, Lee BH, Wendel P, Brouillette M, Kim SJ, Baaklini L, Wetmore DS, Hong G, Goto R, Jivanelli B, Athanassoglou V, Argyra E, Barrington MJ, Borgeat A, De Andres J, El-Boghdadly K, Elkassabany NM, Gautier P, Gerner P, Gonzalez Della Valle A, Goytizolo E, Guo Z, Hogg R, Kehlet H, Kessler P, Kopp S, Lavand'homme P, Macfarlane A, MacLean C, Mantilla C, McIsaac D, McLawhorn A, Neal JM, Parks M, Parvizi J, Peng P, Pichler L, Poeran J, Poultsides L, Schwenk ES, Sites BD, Stundner O, Sun EC, Viscusi E, Votta-Velis EG, Wu CL, YaDeau J, and Sharrock NE
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- Consensus, Humans, Pain, Postoperative, Peripheral Nerves, Analgesia, Anesthesia, Conduction, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip adverse effects, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Evidence-based international expert consensus regarding the impact of peripheral nerve block (PNB) use in total hip/knee arthroplasty surgery., Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis: randomized controlled and observational studies investigating the impact of PNB utilization on major complications, including mortality, cardiac, pulmonary, gastrointestinal, renal, thromboembolic, neurologic, infectious, and bleeding complications.Medline, PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library including Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, NHS Economic Evaluation Database, were queried from 1946 to August 4, 2020.The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach was used to assess evidence quality and for the development of recommendations., Results: Analysis of 122 studies revealed that PNB use (compared with no use) was associated with lower ORs for (OR with 95% CIs) for numerous complications (total hip and knee arthroplasties (THA/TKA), respectively): cognitive dysfunction (OR 0.30, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.53/OR 0.52, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.80), respiratory failure (OR 0.36, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.74/OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.18 to 0.75), cardiac complications (OR 0.84, 95% CI 0.76 to 0.93/OR 0.83, 95% CI 0.79 to 0.86), surgical site infections (OR 0.55 95% CI 0.47 to 0.64/OR 0.86 95% CI 0.80 to 0.91), thromboembolism (OR 0.74, 95% CI 0.58 to 0.96/OR 0.90, 95% CI 0.84 to 0.96) and blood transfusion (OR 0.84, 95% CI 0.83 to 0.86/OR 0.91, 95% CI 0.90 to 0.92)., Conclusions: Based on the current body of evidence, the consensus group recommends PNB use in THA/TKA for improved outcomes., Recommendation: PNB use is recommended for patients undergoing THA and TKA except when contraindications preclude their use. Furthermore, the alignment of provider skills and practice location resources needs to be ensured. Evidence level: moderate; recommendation: strong., Competing Interests: Competing interests: SGM is a director on the boards of the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) and the Society of Anesthesia and Sleep Medicine (SASM). He is a one-time consultant for Sandoz and the holder of US Patent Multicatheter Infusion System. US-2017-0361063. He is the owner of SGM Consulting, LLC and Centauros Healthcare Analytics and Consulting. SGM is also a shareholder in Parvizi Surgical Innovations LLC and HATH. None of the above relations influenced the conduct of the present project., (© American Society of Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine 2021. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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20. Prognostic association of frailty with post-arrest outcomes following cardiac arrest: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Mowbray FI, Manlongat D, Correia RH, Strum RP, Fernando SM, McIsaac D, de Wit K, Worster A, Costa AP, Griffith LE, Douma M, Nolan JP, Muscedere J, Couban R, and Foroutan F
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- Aftercare, Aged, Humans, Patient Discharge, Prognosis, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Frailty, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To synthesize the current evidence examining the association between frailty and a series of post-arrest outcomes following the provision of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)., Data Sources: We searched MEDLINE, PubMed (exclusive of MEDLINE), EMBASE, CINAHL, and Web of Science from inception to August 2020 for observational studies that examined an association between frailty and post-arrest health outcomes, including in-hospital and post-discharge mortality. We conducted citation tracking for all eligible studies., Study Selection: Our search yielded 20,480 citations after removing duplicate records. We screened titles, abstracts and full-texts independently and in duplicate., Data Extraction: The prognosis research strategy group (PROGRESS) and the critical appraisal and data extraction for systematic review of prediction modelling studies (CHARMS) guidelines were followed. Study and outcome-specific risk of bias were assessed using the Quality in Prognosis Studies (QUIPS) instrument. We rated the certainty of evidence using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) recommendations for prognostic factor research., Data Synthesis: Four studies were included in this review and three were eligible for statistical pooling. Our sample comprised 1,134 persons who experienced in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). The mean age of the sample was 71 years. The study results were pooled according to the specific frailty instrument. Three studies used the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) and adjusted age (our minimum confounder); the presence of frailty was associated with an approximate three-fold increase in the odds of dying in-hospital after IHCA (aOR = 2.93; 95% CI = 2.43-3.53, high certainty). Frailty was also associated with decreased incidence of ROSC (return of spontaneous circulation) and discharge home following IHCA. One study with high risk of bias used the Hospital Frailty Risk Score and reported a 43% decrease in the odds of discharge home for patients with frailty following IHCA., Conclusion: High certainty evidence was found for an association between frailty and in-hospital mortality following IHCA. Frailty is a robust prognostic factor that contributes valuable information and can inform shared-decision making and policies surrounding advance care directives. Registration: PROSPERO Registration # CRD42020212922., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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21. Implementation of a systematic tobacco treatment protocol in a surgical outpatient setting: a feasibility study.
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Sadek J, Moloo H, Belanger P, Nadeau K, Aitken D, Foss K, Zwiep T, McIsaac D, Williams L, Raiche I, Musselman R, and Mullen KA
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- Adult, Ambulatory Care, Clinical Protocols, Cohort Studies, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Surgicenters, Smoking Cessation
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Background: Smoking cessation programs started as late as 4 weeks before surgery reduce perioperative morbidity and death, yet outpatient clinic interventions are rarely provided. Our aim was to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a tobacco treatment protocol designed for an outpatient surgical setting., Methods: We completed a pre-post feasibility study of the implementation of a systematic, evidence-based tobacco treatment protocol in an outpatient colorectal surgery clinic. Outcomes included smoking prevalence, pre- and postimplementation smoker identification and intervention rates, recruitment, retention, smoking cessation and provider satisfaction., Results: Preimplementation, 15.5% of 116 surveyed patients were smokers. Fewer than 10% of surveyed patients reported being asked about smoking, and none were offered any cessation intervention. Over a 16-month postimplementation period, 1198 patients were seen on 2103 visits. Of these, 950 (79.3%) patients were asked smoking status on first visit and 1030 (86.0%) were asked on at least 1 visit. Of 169 identified smokers, 99 (58.6%) were referred to follow-up support using an opt-out approach. At 1-, 3- and 6-month follow-up, intention-to-quit rates among 78 enrolled patients were 24.4%, 22.9% and 19.2%, respectively. Postimplementation staff surveys reported that the protocol was easy to use, that staff would use it again and that it had positive patient responses., Conclusion: Implementation of our smoking cessation protocol in an outpatient surgical clinic was found to be feasible and used minimal clinic resources. This protocol could lead to increases in identification and documentation of smoking status, delivery of smoking cessation interventions and rates of smoking reduction and cessation., Competing Interests: None declared., (© 2021 Joule Inc. or its licensors.)
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- 2021
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22. A Cross-Sectional Survey to Determine the Prevalence of Burnout Syndrome Among Anesthesia Providers in Zambian Hospitals.
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Mumbwe MC, McIsaac D, Jarman A, and Bould MD
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- Adult, Anesthesiologists trends, Burnout, Psychological diagnosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Surveys and Questionnaires, Zambia epidemiology, Anesthesiologists psychology, Burnout, Professional, Burnout, Psychological epidemiology, Burnout, Psychological psychology
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Background: Burnout is a psychological syndrome that results from chronic exposure to job stress. It is defined by a triad of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment. In research, mostly from high-income countries, burnout is common in health care professionals, especially in anesthesiologists. Burnout can negatively impact patient safety, the physical and mental health of the anesthetist, and institutional efficiency. However, data on burnout for anesthesia providers in low- and middle-income countries are poorly described. This study sought to determine the prevalence of burnout syndrome among all anesthesia providers (physician and nonphysician) working in Zambian hospitals and to determine which sociodemographic and occupational factors were associated with burnout., Methods: A questionnaire was sent to all Zambian anesthesia providers working in private and public hospitals. The questionnaire assessed burnout using the Maslach Burnout Inventory Human Services Survey, a validated 22-item survey widely used to measure burnout among health professionals. Sociodemographic and occupational factors postulated to be associated with burnout were also assessed., Results: Surveys were distributed to all 184 anesthesia providers in Zambia; 160 were returned. This resulted in a response rate representing 87% of all anesthesia providers in the country. Eighty-six percentage of respondents were nonphysician anesthesia providers. Burnout was present in 51.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 43.2-59.2) of participants. Logistic regression analysis revealed that "not having the right team to carry out work to an appropriate standard" (odds ratio, 2.91, 95% CI, 1.33-6.39; P = .008), and "being a nonphysician" (odds ratio, 3.4, 95% CI, 1.25-12.34; P = .019) were significantly associated with burnout in this population., Conclusions: In a cross-sectional survey of anesthesia providers in Zambia, >50% of the respondents met the criteria for burnout. The risk was particularly high among nonphysician providers who typically work in isolated rural practice. Efforts to decrease burnout rates through policy and educational initiatives to increase the quantity and quality of training for anesthesia providers should be considered.
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- 2020
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23. Robotic surgery improves transfusion rate and perioperative outcomes using a broad implementation process and multiple surgeon learning curves.
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McAlpine K, Forster AJ, Breau RH, McIsaac D, Tufts J, Mallick R, Cagiannos I, Morash C, and Lavallée LT
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Introduction: Data from a randomized trial suggest transfusion rates are similar for robotic and open prostatectomy. The objective of this study was to compare perioperative outcomes of robotic and open prostatectomy at a Canadian academic centre., Methods: A retrospective review of all prostatectomies performed by all surgeons at The Ottawa Hospital between 2009 and 2016 was completed. Cases and outcomes were identified using an administrative data warehouse. Extracted data included patient factors (age, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, Elixhauser comorbidity score), operative factors (length of operation, surgical approach, anesthesia type), and perioperative outcomes (length of recovery room and hospital stay, transfusion rate, hospital cost). Baseline characteristics and outcomes were compared between robotic and open surgical approaches. The primary outcome was transfusion during the index admission., Results: A total of 1606 prostatectomies were performed by 12 surgeons during the study period (840 robotic, 766 open). The rate of transfusion was lower in patients undergoing robotic compared to open surgery (0.6% vs. 11.2%; p<0.001). The robotic prostatectomy cohort had a shorter length of stay in the recovery room (155.7 vs. 231.1 minutes; p<0.001) and shorter length of hospital admission (1.4 vs. 2.8 days; p<0.001). Hospital costs per case were approximately $800 more for robotic prostatectomy ($11 475 vs. $10 656; p<0.001)., Conclusions: This hospital-wide analysis revealed that robotic prostatectomy is associated with a lower transfusion rate compared to the open approach. Further studies emphasizing patient-reported outcomes are needed.
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- 2019
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24. Are Peripheral Nerve Blocks Indicated in Ambulatory Knee Surgery?
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McCartney CJL and McIsaac D
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- Humans, Knee, Knee Joint surgery, Anesthesia, Conduction, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Nerve Block
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- 2019
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25. Canadian Surgery Forum 2018: St. John's, NL Sept. 13-15, 2018.
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Jayaraman S, Lee L, Mata J, Droeser R, Kaneva P, Liberman S, Charlebois P, Stein B, Fried G, Feldman L, Schellenberg M, Inaba K, Cheng V, Bardes J, Lam L, Benjamin E, Matsushima K, Demetriades D, Schellenberg M, Inaba K, Cho J, Strumwasser A, Grabo D, Bir C, Eastman A, Demetriades D, Schellenberg M, Inaba K, Bardes J, Orozco N, Chen J, Park C, Kang T, Demetriades D, Jung J, Elfassy J, Grantcharov T, Jung J, Grantcharov T, Jung J, Grantcharov T, Taylor J, Stem M, Yu D, Chen S, Fang S, Gearhart S, Safar B, Efron J, Serrano P, Parpia S, McCarty D, Solis N, Valencia M, Jibrael S, Wei A, Gallinger S, Simunovic M, Hummadi A, Rabie M, Al Skaini M, Shamshad H, Shah S, Verhoeff K, Glen P, Taheri A, Min B, Tsang B, Fawcett V, Widder S, Yang M, Wanis K, Gilani O, Vogt K, Ott M, VanKoughnett J, Vinden C, Balvardi S, St Louis E, Yousef Y, Toobaie A, Guadagno E, Baird R, Poenaru D, Kleiman A, Mador B, Widder S, Serrano P, Moulton C, Lee E, Li C, Beyfuss K, Solomon H, Sela N, McAlister V, Ritter A, Gallinger S, Hallet J, Tsang M, Martel G, Jalink D, Husien M, Gu C, Levine M, Otiti S, Nginyangi J, Yeo C, Ring J, Holden M, Ungi T, Fichtinger G, Zevin B, Fang B, Dang J, Karmali S, Serrano P, Kim M, Zhang B, Duceppe E, Rieder S, Maeda A, Okrainec A, Jackson T, Kegel F, Lachance S, Landry T, Feldman L, Fried G, Mueller C, Lee L, Kegel F, Kegel F, Lachance S, Lee L, Joharifard S, Nyiemah E, Howe C, Dobboh C, Kortimai LG, Kabeto A, Beste J, Garraway N, Riviello R, Hameed S, Shinde S, Marcil G, Prasad S, Arminan J, Debru E, Church N, Gill R, Mitchell P, Delisle M, Chernos C, Park J, Hardy K, Vergis A, Guez M, Hong D, Guez M, Hong D, Koichopolos J, Hilsden R, Thompson D, Myslik F, Vandeline J, Leeper R, Doumouras A, Govind S, Hong D, Govind S, Valanci S, Alhassan N, Lee L, Feldman L, Fried G, Mueller C, Wong T, Nadkarni N, Chia S, Seow D, Carter D, Li C, Valencia M, Ruo L, Parpia S, Simunovic M, Levine O, Serrano P, Vogt K, Allen L, Murphy P, van Heest R, Saleh F, Widder S, Minor S, Engels P, Joos E, Wang C, Nenshi R, Meschino M, Laane C, Parry N, Hameed M, Lacoul A, Lee L, Chrystoja C, Ramjist J, Sutradhar R, Lix L, Simunovic M, Baxter N, Urbach D, Ahlin J, Patel S, Nanji S, Merchant S, Lajkosz K, Brogly S, Groome P, Sutherland J, Liu G, Crump T, Bair M, Karimuddin A, Sutherland J, Peterson A, Karimuddin A, Liu G, Crump T, Koichopolos J, Hawel J, Shlomovitz E, Habaz I, Elnahas A, Alkhamesi N, Schlachta C, Akhtar-Danesh G, Doumouras A, Hong D, Daodu T, Nguyen V, Dearden R, Datta I, Hampton L, Kirkpatrick A, McKee J, Regehr J, Brindley P, Martin D, LaPorta A, Park J, Vergis A, Gillman L, DeGirolamo K, Hameed M, D'Souza K, Hartford L, Gray D, Murphy P, Hilsden R, Clarke C, Vogt K, Wigen R, Allen L, Garcia-Ochoa C, Gray S, Maciver A, Parry N, Van Koughnett J, Leslie K, Zwiep T, Ahn S, Greenberg J, Balaa F, McIsaac D, Musselman R, Raiche I, Williams L, Moloo H, Nguyen M, Naidu D, Karanicolas P, Nadler A, Raskin R, Khokhotva V, Poirier R, Plourde C, Paré A, Marchand M, Leclair M, Deshaies J, Hebbard P, Ratnayake I, Decker K, MacIntosh E, Najarali Z, Valencia M, Zhang B, Alhusaini A, Solis N, Duceppe E, Parpia S, Ruo L, Simunovic M, Serrano P, Murphy P, Murphy P, McClure A, Dakouo M, Vogt K, Vinden C, Behman R, Nathens A, Hong NL, Pechlivanoglou P, Karanicolas P, Lung K, Leslie K, Parry N, Vogt K, Leeper R, Simone P, Leslie K, Schemitsch E, Laane C, Chen L, Rosenkrantz L, Schuurman N, Hameed M, Joos E, George R, Shavit E, Pawliwec A, Rana Z, Laane C, Joos E, Evans D, Dawe P, Brown R, Hameed M, Lefebvre G, Devenny K, Héroux D, Bowman C, Mimeault R, Calder L, Baker L, Winter R, Cahill C, Fergusson D, Williams L, Schroeder T, Kahnamoui K, Elkheir S, Farrokhyar F, Wainman B, Hershorn O, Lim S, Hardy K, Vergis A, Arora A, Wright F, Nadler A, Escallon J, Gotlib L, Allen M, Gawad N, Raîche I, Jeyakumar G, Li D, Aarts M, Meschino M, Giles A, Dumitra T, Alam R, Fiore J, Mata J, Fried G, Vassiliou M, Mueller C, Lee L, Feldman L, Al Busaidi O, Brobbey A, Stelfox T, Chowdhury T, Kortbeek J, Ball C, AlShahwan N, Fraser S, Gawad N, Tran A, Martel A, Baxter N, Allen M, Manhas N, Balaa F, Mannina D, Khokhotva V, Tran A, Gawad N, Martel A, Manhas N, Allen M, Balaa F, Behman R, Behman A, Haas B, Hong NL, Pechlivanoglou P, Karanicolas P, Gawad N, Fowler A, Mimeault R, Raiche I, Findlay-Shirras L, Decker K, Singh H, Biswanger N, Park J, Gosselin-Tardif A, Khalil MA, Gutierrez JM, Guigui A, Feldman L, Lee L, Mueller C, Ferri L, Roberts D, Stelfox T, Moore L, Holcomb J, Harvin J, Sadek J, Belanger P, Nadeau K, Mullen K, Aitkens D, Foss K, MacIsaac D, Williams L, Musselman R, Raiche I, Moloo H, Zhang S, Ring J, Methot M, Zevin B, Yu D, Hookey L, Patel S, Yates J, Perelman I, Saidenberg E, Khair S, Taylor J, Lampron J, Tinmouth A, Lim S, Hammond S, Park J, Hochman D, Lê M, Rabbani R, Abou-Setta A, Zarychanski R, Patel S, Yu D, Elsoh B, Goldacre B, Nash G, Trepanier M, Alhassan N, Wong-Chong N, Sabapathy C, Chaudhury P, Liberman S, Charlebois P, Stein B, Feldman L, Lee L, Bradley N, Dakin C, Holm N, Henderson W, Roche M, Sawka A, Tang E, Murphy P, Allen L, Huang B, Vogt K, Gimon T, Rochon R, Lipson M, Buie W, MacLean A, Lau E, Alkhamesi N, Schlachta C, Mocanu V, Dang J, Tavakoli I, Switzer N, Tian C, de Gara C, Birch D, Karmali S, Young P, Chiu C, Meneghetti A, Warnock G, Meloche M, Panton O, Istl A, Gan A, Colquhoun P, Habashi R, Stogryn S, Abou-Setta A, Metcalfe J, Hardy K, Clouston K, Vergis A, Zondervan N, McLaughlin K, Springer J, Doumouras A, Lee J, Amin N, Caddedu M, Eskicioglu C, Hong D, Cahill C, Fowler A, Warraich A, Moloo H, Musselman R, Raiche I, Williams L, Keren D, Kloos N, Gregg S, MacLean A, Mohamed R, Dixon E, Rochan R, Ball C, Taylor J, Stem M, Yu D, Chen S, Fang S, Gearhart S, Safar B, Efron J, Yu D, Stem M, Taylor J, Chen S, Fang S, Gearhart S, Safar B, Efron J, Domouras A, Springer J, Elkheir S, Eskicioglu C, Kelly S, Yang I, Forbes S, Wong-Chong N, Khalil MA, Garfinkle R, Bhatnagar S, Ghitulescu G, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Boutros M, Garfinkle R, Wong-Chong N, Petrucci A, Sylla P, Wexner S, Bhatnagar S, Morin N, Boutros M, Garfinkle R, Sigler G, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Bhatnagar S, Faria J, Gordon P, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Garfinkle R, Khalil MA, Bhatnagar S, Wong-Chong N, Azoulay L, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Boutros M, Alhassan N, Wong-Chong N, Trepanier M, Chaudhury P, Liberman A, Charlebois P, Stein B, Lee L, Alhassan N, Yang M, Wong-Chong N, Liberman A, Charlebois P, Stein B, Fried G, Lee L, Khorasani S, de Buck van Overstraeten A, Kennedy E, Hong NL, Mata J, Fiore J, Pecorelli N, Mouldoveanu D, Gosselin-Tardiff A, Lee L, Liberman S, Stein B, Charlebois P, Feldman L, Chau J, Bhatnagar S, Khalil MA, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Boutros M, Fournier FR, Bouchard P, Khalil MA, Bhatnagar S, Khalil JA, Vasilevsky C, Morin N, Ghitulescu G, Faria J, Boutros M, Khalil MA, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Ghitulescu G, Motter J, Boutros M, Wong-Chong N, Mottl J, Hwang G, Kelly J, Nassif G, Albert M, Lee L, Monson J, Wong-Chong N, Lee L, Kelly J, Nassif G, Albert M, Monson J, McLeod J, Cha J, Raval M, Phang T, Brown C, Karimuddin A, Karimuddin A, Robertson R, Letarte F, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang T, Brown C, Antoun A, Sigler G, Garfinkle R, Morin N, Vasilevsky C, Pelsser V, Ghitulescu G, Boutros M, Hyun E, Clouston-Chambers K, Hochman D, Helewa R, Park J, Candy S, Mir Z, Hanna N, Zevin B, Patel S, Azin A, Hirpara D, Quereshy F, Jackson T, Okrainec A, O'Brien C, Chadi S, Punnen S, Raval M, Karimuddin A, Phang T, Brown C, Yoon H, Brown C, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang T, Xiong W, Stuart H, Andrews J, Selvam R, Wong S, Hopman W, MacDonald P, Patel S, Dossa F, Medeiros B, Keng C, Acuna S, Hamid J, Baxter N, Ghuman A, Kasteel N, Brown C, Karimuddin A, Raval M, Phang T, Dossa F, Baxter N, Buie D, McMullen T, Elwi A, MacLean T, Wang H, Coutinho F, Le Q, Shack L, Roy H, Kennedy R, Hanna N, Zevin B, Bunn J, Mir Z, Chung W, Elmi M, Wakeam E, Azin A, Presutti R, Keshavjee S, Cil T, McCready D, Cheung V, Schieman C, Bailey J, Nelson G, Batchelor T, Grondin S, Graham A, Safieddine N, Johnson S, Hanna W, Cheung V, Schieman C, Bailey J, Nelson G, Low D, Safieddine N, Grondin S, Seely A, Bedard E, Finley C, Nayak R, Brogly S, Lajkosz K, Lougheed D, Petsikas D, Kinio A, Resende VF, Anstee C, Seely A, Maziak D, Gilbert S, Shamji F, Sundaresan S, Villeneuve P, Ojah J, Ashrafi A, Najjar A, Yamani I, Sersar S, Batouk A, Parente D, Laliberte A, McInnis M, McDonald C, Hasnain Y, Yasufuku K, Safieddine N, Waddell T, Chopra N, Nicholson-Smith C, Malthaner R, Patel R, Doubova M, Robaidi H, Anstee C, Delic E, Fazekas A, Gilbert S, Maziak D, Shamji F, Sundaresan S, Villeneuve P, Seely A, Taylor J, Hanna W, Hughes K, Pinkney P, Lopez-Hernandez Y, Coret M, Schneider L, Agzarian J, Finley C, Tran A, Shargall Y, Mehta M, Pearce K, Hanna W, Schneider L, Farrokhyar F, Agzarian J, Finley C, Shargall Y, Gupta V, Coburn N, Kidane B, Hess K, Compton C, Ringash J, Darling G, Mahar A, Gupta V, Kidane B, Ringash J, Sutradhar R, Darling G, Coburn N, Thomas P, Vernon J, Shargall Y, Schieman C, Finley C, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Spicer J, Renaud S, Seitlinger J, Al Lawati Y, Guerrera F, Falcoz P, Massard G, Ferri L, Hylton D, Huang J, Turner S, French D, Wen C, Masters J, Kidane B, Spicer J, Taylor J, Finley C, Shargall Y, Fahim C, Farrokhyar F, Yasufuku K, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Spicer J, Renaud S, Seitlinger J, St-Pierre D, Garfinkle R, Al Lawati Y, Guerrera F, Ruffini E, Falcoz P, Massard G, Ferri L, Agzarian J, Inra M, Abdelsattar Z, Allen M, Cassivi S, Nichols F 3rd, Wigle D, Blackmon S, Shen K, Gowing S, Robaidi H, Anstee C, Seely A, Beigee FS, Sheikhy K, Dezfouli AA, Shargall Y, Lopez-Hernandez Y, Schnurr T, Schneider L, Linkins L, Crowther M, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Finley C, Waddell T, de Perrot M, Uddin S, Douketis J, Taylor J, Finley C, Shargall Y, Agzarian J, Hanna W, Martel A, Angka L, Jeong A, Sadiq M, Kilgour M, de Souza CT, Baker L, Kennedy M, Auer R, Hallet J, Adam R, Karanicolas P, Memeo R, Goéré D, Piardi T, Lermite E, Turrini O, Lemke M, Li J, Dixon E, Tun-Abraham M, Hernandez-Alejandro R, Bennett S, Martel G, Navarro F, Sa Cunha A, Pessaux P, Hallet J, Isenberg-Grzeda E, Kazdan J, Beyfuss K, Myrehaug S, Singh S, Chan D, Law C, Nessim C, Paull G, Ibrahim A, Sabri E, Rodriguez-Qizilbash S, Berger-Richardson D, Younan R, Hétu J, Wright F, Johnson-Obaseki S, Angarita F, Elmi M, Zhang Y, Hong NL, Govindarajan A, Taylor E, Bayat Z, Bischof D, McCart A, Elmi M, Wakeam E, Azin A, Presutti R, Keshavjee S, McCready D, Cil T, Elmi M, Sequeira S, Azin A, Elnahas A, McCready D, Cil T, Samman S, Cornacchi S, Foster G, Thabane L, Thomson S, Lovrics O, Martin S, Lovrics P, Latchana N, Davis L, Coburn N, Mahar A, Liu Y, Hammad A, Kagedan D, Earle C, Hallet J, Zhang Y, Elmi M, Angarita F, Hong NL, Pang G, Hong NL, Paull G, Kupper S, Kagedan D, Nessim C, Quan M, Wright F, Hsiao R, Bongers P, Lustgarten M, Goldstein D, Dhar P, Rotstein L, Pasternak J, Nostedt J, Gibson-Brokop L, McCall M, Schiller D, Park J, Ratnayake I, Hebbard P, Mukhi S, Mack L, Singh N, Chanco M, Hilchie-Pye A, Kenyon C, Mathieson A, Burke J, Nason R, Kupper S, Austin J, Brar M, Wright F, Quan M, Hurton S, Quan M, Kong S, Xu Y, Thibedeau M, Cheung W, Dort J, Karim S, Crump T, Bouchard-Fortier A, Jeong Y, Mahar A, Li Q, Bubis L, Gupta V, Coburn N, Hirpara D, O'Rourke C, Azin A, Quereshy F, Chadi S, Dharampal N, Smith K, Harvey A, Pashcke R, Rudmik L, Chandarana S, Buac S, Latosinsky S, Shahvary N, Gervais M, Leblanc G, Brackstone M, Guidolin K, Yaremko B, Gaede S, Lynn K, Kornecki A, Muscedere G, Shmuilovich O, BenNachum I, Mouawad M, Gelman N, Lock M, Jayaraman S, Jayaraman S, Daza J, Solis N, Parpia S, Gallinger S, Moulton C, Levine M, Serrano P, Horkoff M, Sutherland F, Dixon E, Ball C, Bathe O, Moser M, Shaw J, Beck G, Luo Y, Ahmed S, Wall C, Domes T, Jana K, Waugh E, Tsang M, Jayaraman S, Tang E, Baird J, Newell P, Hansen P, Gough M, Garcia-Ochoa C, McArthur E, Tun-Abraham M, Hawel J, Skaro A, Leslie K, Garcia-Ochoa C, McArthur E, Tun-Abraham M, Leslie K, Skaro A, Gauvin G, Goel N, Mutabdzic D, Lambreton F, Kilcoyne M, Nadler A, Ang K, Karachristos A, Cooper H, Hoffman J, Reddy S, Park L, Gilbert R, Shorr R, Workneh A, Bertens K, Abou-Khalil J, Balaa F, Martel G, Smith H, Bertens K, Levy J, Hammad A, Davis L, Gupta V, Jeong Y, Mahar A, Coburn N, Hallet J, Mahar A, Jayaraman S, Serrano P, Martel G, Beyfuss K, Coburn N, Piardi T, Pessaux P, Hallet J, Ellis J, Bakanisi B, Sadeghi M, Beyfuss K, Michaelson S, Karanicolas P, Law C, Nathens A, Coburn N, Giles A, Daza J, Doumouras A, Serrano P, Tandan V, Ruo L, Marcaccio M, Dath D, Connell M, Selvam R, Patel S, Kleiman A, Bennett A, Wasey N, Sorial R, Macdonald S, Johnson D, Klassen D, Leung C, Vergis A, Botkin C, Azin A, Hirpara D, Jackson T, Okrainec A, Elnahas A, Chadi S, Quereshy F, Bahasadri M, Saleh F, Bahasadri M, Saleh F, Saleh F, Bahasadri M, MacLellan S, Tan J, Jun H, Cheah H, Wong K, Harvey N, Smith A, Cassie S, Sun S, Vallis J, Twells L, Lester K, Gregory D, Vallis J, Lester K, Gregory D, Twells L, Dang J, Sun W, Switzer N, Raghavji F, Birch D, Karmali S, Dang J, Switzer N, Delisle M, Laffin M, Gill R, Birch D, Karmali S, Marcil G, Bourget-Murray J, Switzer N, Shinde S, Debru E, Church N, Reso A, Mitchell P, Gill R, Sun W, Dang J, Switzer N, Tian C, de Gara C, Birch D, Karmali S, Jarrar A, Eipe N, Budiansky A, Walsh C, Mamazza J, Rashid M, and Engels P
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- 2018
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26. Age-stratified perioperative mortality after urological surgeries.
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Wallace B, Breau RH, Cnossen S, Knee C, Mcisaac D, Mallick R, Cagiannos I, Morash C, and Lavallée LT
- Abstract
Introduction: More elderly patients are presenting for surgical consultation. Understanding the risk of mortality by age group after urological surgery is important for patient selection and counselling., Methods: A historical cohort study of The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) database from 2006-2015 was performed. Current procedural terminology (CPT) codes for similar surgical procedures were grouped for analyses. Urological procedures commonly performed in elderly patients were identified and stratified by patient age and surgical approach (open vs. laparoscopic/robotic). The primary outcome was the absolute risk of death by 30 days stratified by age for each surgical procedure. The secondary outcome was risk of death by surgical approach (open vs. laparoscopic/robotic)., Results: Twelve urological procedures were reviewed including 124 262 patients. A total of 1011 (0.8%) deaths occurred by 30 days after surgery. The procedure with the highest incidence of mortality by 30 days was open nephroureterectomy (2.9 %). In patients 80 years and over, the procedure with the highest incidence of death was open radical nephrectomy (5.32%). There was an increased risk of mortality with increasing age group for all procedures. Unadjusted risk of mortality was consistently higher in patients who receive open compared to laparoscopic surgery., Conclusions: There is an increasing risk of mortality with age and with open surgical approach in urology. Knowledge regarding the absolute risk of mortality in patients receiving common urological surgeries may improve patient selection and counselling.
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- 2018
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27. A retrospective assessment of prognostication in 456,685 patients undergoing elective major non-cardiac surgery.
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McIsaac D, Lavallée LT, and van Walraven C
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Ontario, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Risk, Survival, Death, Elective Surgical Procedures statistics & numerical data, Patient Selection, Surgical Procedures, Operative statistics & numerical data
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Background: The accuracy of patient prognostication varies extensively in studies of select populations. Prognostication is an important component of patient selection for elective surgery. This retrospective study assessed patient prognostication prior to elective surgery by comparing the observed with the expected number of deaths in such patients., Study Design: We used population-based administrative data to identify all adults undergoing one of 13 most common elective major non-cardiac gender-neutral surgeries in Ontario, Canada from 2002-2014. Survival status within one year of surgery was determined by linking to vital statistics. Expected death risk was determined with health administrative data and a previously derived and externally validated index., Results: We identified 456,685 patients of which 17,266 (3.8%) died within one year of surgery. Patients whose expected one-year death risk was > 25% accounted for 5.3% of the entire cohort (n = 24,178) but 51.7% of all deaths (n = 8,927). The overall observed death risk was significantly lower than expected (standardized mortality ratio [SMR], 0.72; 95% confidence interval, 0.71 to 0.73; P < 0.0001). The SMRs were significantly < 1 (values ranged from 0.54 [partial liver resection] to 0.93 [total knee replacement]) in 11/13 (85%) surgery types. Improved outcomes were especially notable in patients with a higher expected death risk. Only 35/5,539 (0.6%) surgeons had one-year patient death risks that exceeded the population average., Conclusions: The observed number of deaths within one year of elective surgery is significantly lower than expected, with minimal inter-surgeon variation. These results suggest that patient selection for major elective non-cardiac surgery identified individuals with better than expected survival and whose survival was not adversely influenced by their surgery.
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- 2017
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28. Prevalence of symptoms at the end of life in an acute care hospital: a retrospective cohort study.
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Kobewka D, Ronksley P, McIsaac D, Mulpuru S, and Forster A
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Background: There is currently debate over the benefits and harms of physician-assisted death. One of the factors influencing this debate is concern about symptoms in the days before death. The objective of this study was to describe the frequency of symptoms before death and determine patient characteristics associated with these symptoms., Methods: We reviewed the medical record of every patient who died at a multisite academic teaching hospital over a 3-month period. We determined the number of episodes of pain, dyspnea, agitation and nausea during the final 48 hours of life and assessed the patient and encounter characteristics associated with 2 or more episodes of symptoms., Results: A total of 480 patients died during the study period. Of these patients, 29.2% (140/480) had 2 or more symptoms in the final 48 hours of life. Higher Elixhauser comorbidity scores (relative risk [RR] 1.35, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.23-1.49), having a family doctor (RR 2.33, 95% CI 1.02-5.38), being admitted to the medical oncology service (RR 1.51, 95% CI 1.11-2.05) and having a documented order for no resuscitation written early during the stay in hospital (RR 1.38, 95% CI 1.01-1.89) were independently associated with symptoms. Admission to intensive care was associated with fewer symptoms (RR 0.39, CI 95% 0.19-0.80)., Interpretation: Symptoms are common in the final 48 hours of life, particularly in patients with multimorbidity who want limitations on the aggressiveness of their care. An integrated palliative approach is needed for select at-risk patients., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2017
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29. Risk assessment tools to predict location of discharge and need for supportive services for medical patients after discharge from hospital: a systematic review protocol.
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Kobewka DM, McIsaac D, Chassé M, Thavorn K, Mulpuru S, Lavallée LT, English S, Presseau J, and Forster AJ
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- Humans, Nursing Homes, Patient Readmission, Rehabilitation, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Hospitalization, Models, Theoretical, Patient Discharge, Risk Assessment methods
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Background: Patients who are discharged from hospital after an acute medical illness often have impaired function that prevents them from returning to their previous place of residence. Assessing each patient's post-discharge needs takes time and resources but is important in order to reduce unplanned readmissions and adverse events post-discharge., Methods/design: We will conduct a systematic review to synthesize the evidence on prognostic models and their reported accuracy in predicting the location of discharge after a medical admission to an acute care hospital. We will perform searches in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and COCHRANE databases. Pre-defined study, population, and model characteristics will be reported. We will write a narrative summary of included studies. Methodological quality of the studies will be assessed using the QUIPS tool, and the quality of evidence will be evaluated using the GRADE tool., Discussion: Early and accurate assessment of patient needs for supportive services after discharge has the potential to improve patient outcomes and health system efficiency. This systematic review will identify factors that can accurately predict location of discharge using existing tools and identify priority knowledge gaps to inform future research., Systematic Review Registration: PROSPERO CRD42016037144.
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- 2017
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30. The impact of frailty on outcomes and healthcare resource usage after total joint arthroplasty: a population-based cohort study.
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McIsaac DI, Beaulé PE, Bryson GL, and Van Walraven C
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Health Care Costs, Humans, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Ontario epidemiology, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip mortality, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee mortality, Frail Elderly
- Abstract
Aims: Total joint arthroplasty (TJA) is commonly performed in elderly patients. Frailty, an aggregate expression of vulnerability, becomes increasingly common with advanced age, and independently predicts adverse outcomes and the use of resources after a variety of non-cardiac surgical procedures. Our aim was to assess the impact of frailty on outcomes after TJA., Patients and Methods: We analysed the impact of pre-operative frailty on death and the use of resources after elective TJA in a population-based cohort study using linked administrative data from Ontario, Canada., Results: Of 125 163 patients aged > 65 years having elective TJA, 3023 (2.4%) were frail according to the Johns Hopkins ACG frailty-defining diagnoses indicator. One year follow-up was complete for all patients. Frail patients had a higher adjusted one year risk of mortality (hazard ratio 3.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.62 to 3.51), a higher rate of admission to intensive care (odds ratio (OR) 2.52, 95% CI 2.21 to 2.89), increased length of stay (incidence rate ratio 1.62, 95% CI 1.59 to 1.65), a higher rate of discharge to institutional care (OR 2.09, 95% CI 1.93 to 2.25), a higher rate of re-admission (OR 1.33, 95% CI 1.07 to 1.66) and increased costs at 30, 90 and 365 days post-operatively. Frailty affected outcomes after total hip arthroplasty more than after total knee arthroplasty., Take Home Message: Frailty is an important risk factor for death after elective TJA, and increases post-operative resource utilisation across many metrics. Processes to optimise the outcomes and efficiency of TJA in frail patients are needed. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:799-805., (©2016 The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery.)
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- 2016
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31. Cerebral Oximetry Monitoring to Maintain Normal Cerebral Oxygen Saturation during High-risk Cardiac Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial.
- Author
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Deschamps A, Hall R, Grocott H, Mazer CD, Choi PT, Turgeon AF, de Medicis E, Bussières JS, Hudson C, Syed S, Seal D, Herd S, Lambert J, Denault A, Deschamps A, Mutch A, Turgeon A, Denault A, Todd A, Jerath A, Fayad A, Finnegan B, Kent B, Kennedy B, Cuthbertson BH, Kavanagh B, Warriner B, MacAdams C, Lehmann C, Fudorow C, Hudson C, McCartney C, McIsaac D, Dubois D, Campbell D, Mazer D, Neilpovitz D, Rosen D, Cheng D, Drapeau D, Dillane D, Tran D, Mckeen D, Wijeysundera D, Jacobsohn E, Couture E, de Medicis E, Alam F, Abdallah F, Ralley FE, Chung F, Lellouche F, Dobson G, Germain G, Djaiani G, Gilron I, Hare G, Bryson G, Clarke H, McDonald H, Roman-Smith H, Grocott H, Yang H, Douketis J, Paul J, Beaubien J, Bussières J, Pridham J, Armstrong JN, Parlow J, Murkin J, Gamble J, Duttchen K, Karkouti K, Turner K, Baghirzada L, Szabo L, Lalu M, Wasowicz M, Bautista M, Jacka M, Murphy M, Schmidt M, Verret M, Perrault MA, Beaudet N, Buckley N, Choi P, MacDougall P, Jones P, Drolet P, Beaulieu P, Taneja R, Martin R, Hall R, George R, Chun R, McMullen S, Beattie S, Sampson S, Choi S, Kowalski S, McCluskey S, Syed S, Boet S, Ramsay T, Saha T, Mutter T, Chowdhury T, Uppal V, and Mckay W
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Feasibility Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Prospective Studies, Risk, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology, Monitoring, Intraoperative methods, Oximetry methods, Oxygen blood
- Abstract
Background: Cerebral oxygen desaturation during cardiac surgery has been associated with adverse perioperative outcomes. Before a large multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT) on the impact of preventing desaturations on perioperative outcomes, the authors undertook a randomized prospective, parallel-arm, multicenter feasibility RCT to determine whether an intervention algorithm could prevent desaturations., Methods: Eight Canadian sites randomized 201 patients between April 2012 and October 2013. The primary outcome was the success rate of reversing cerebral desaturations below 10% relative to baseline in the intervention group. Anesthesiologists were blinded to the cerebral saturation values in the control group. Intensive care unit personnel were blinded to cerebral saturation values for both groups. Secondary outcomes included the area under the curve of cerebral desaturation load, enrolment rates, and a 30-day follow-up for adverse events., Results: Cerebral desaturations occurred in 71 (70%) of the 102 intervention group patients and 56 (57%) of the 99 control group patients (P = 0.04). Reversal was successful in 69 (97%) of the intervention group patients. The mean cerebral desaturation load (SD) in the operating room was smaller for intervention group patients compared with control group patients (104 [217] %.min vs. 398 [869] %.min, mean difference, -294; 95% CI, -562 to -26; P = 0.03). This was also true in the intensive care unit (P = 0.02). There were no differences in adverse events between the groups., Conclusions: Study sites were successful in reversal of desaturation, patient recruitment, randomization, and follow-up in cardiac surgery, supporting the feasibility of conducting a large multicenter RCT.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Endogenous digitalis-like activity in the plasma of the toad Bufo marinus.
- Author
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Flier JS, Maratos-Flier E, Pallotta JA, and McIsaac D
- Subjects
- Animals, Binding, Competitive, Cardiac Glycosides immunology, Cross Reactions, Digitalis Glycosides immunology, Immunoassay, Ouabain pharmacology, Sodium-Potassium-Exchanging ATPase antagonists & inhibitors, Bufo marinus blood, Cardiac Glycosides blood
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Prenatal detection of neural tube defects. Comparison between alpha-fetoprotein and beta-trace protein assays.
- Author
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Milunsky A, Macri JN, Weiss RR, Alpert E, McIsaac DG, and Joshi MS
- Subjects
- Amniotic Fluid analysis, Anencephaly diagnosis, Central Nervous System embryology, Cerebrospinal Fluid Proteins analysis, Congenital Abnormalities diagnosis, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Spinal Dysraphism diagnosis, Beta-Globulins analysis, Central Nervous System abnormalities, Fetal Proteins analysis, Prenatal Diagnosis, alpha-Fetoproteins analysis
- Abstract
The prenatal diagnosis of neural tube defects is now possible in about 90 per cent of cases by assaying the amniotic fluid for alpha fetoprotein. The accuracy of beta-trace protein assays on amniotic fluid samples from defective fetuses was compared to alpha-fetoprotein studies. At present, alpha-fetoprotein studies provide more reliable results.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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