soft tissue surgery
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2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (17) ◽  
pp. 3887
Author(s):  
Andreas Enz ◽  
Imad Kamaleddine ◽  
Justus Groß ◽  
Clemens Schafmayer ◽  
Emad Alwafai ◽  
...  

(1) Background: The sterile latex surgical glove is an important part of protecting both the patient and the surgical team from infections. However, mechanical stress can damage the integrity of the glove material and thus may lead to infections. (2) Method: A total of 896 gloves from 448 surgeries were tested and evaluated by the water tightening test according to EN455 and ASTM D5151-19. (3) Results: From 448 surgeries, 18.8% of the interventions showed glove damage. In vascular surgery, gloves were damaged in 20.8%, in thoracic surgery 9.1%, in laparoscopic interventions 21.7%, in the subgroup hernia surgeries (TAPP) 17.6% and in open interventions 17.6%. A total of 101 damages were found on 896 gloves; one glove could have several damages. During vascular surgery, 60% of the damages were on the subordinated hand of the surgeon, and 73.3% of the damages had a size of 1 mm. In laparoscopic procedures, the subordinated hand was also more frequently affected (61.3%) than the dominant hand; 64.5% of the damages were 1 mm in size. In the hernia surgery subgroup (TAPP), no damage was larger than 1 mm; 66.7% were in the subordinated hand area. The duration of surgery had no influence on the lesion rate. (4) Conclusion: The damage rate in low impact procedures is high and represents an underestimated problem in soft tissue surgery. The use of single gloving can therefore lead to the risk of infection. EN455 and ASTM D5151-19 does not take into consideration the risk of intraoperative lesions. Double gloving and glove change algorithms should be established.


In Practice ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 244-256
Author(s):  
Alasdair Hotston Moore

Author(s):  
Peter Wong ◽  
Shaneil Fransch ◽  
Charles Gallagher ◽  
Kate Louise Francis ◽  
Abhay Khot ◽  
...  

Purpose The aim of this study is to report the safety and eff-cacy of soft-tissue surgery incorporating split transfer of tibi-alis anterior to peroneus brevis (SPLATT-PB) for children with hemiplegic spastic equinovarus. Methods This was a retrospective case series of children and adolescents with spastic hemiplegia who had a novel combination of SPLATT-TB, intramuscular tenotomy of tibialis posterior and either spasticity management or gastrocsole-us lengthening as the index surgery. The principal outcome measures were changes in pain and difficulty with shoe wear and radiological parameters obtained from weight-bearing anteroposterior and lateral radiographs of the affected foot before and after surgery. Results A total of 63 patients with symptomatic spastic equinovarus met the inclusion criteria. Mean age at surgery was 9.8 years (6 to 18) and the mean follow-up was seven years (range 3 to 10 years). Foot pain and problems with shoe wear improved after surgery. Seven radiological criteria showed a clinically and statistically significant improvement at follow-up, the majority being in the normal range. There were 11 surgical adverse events, all classified as Modified Cla-vien-Dindo Grade II. Three patients required further surgery for recurrent equinus, eight patients required further surgery for valgus deformities and four patients required bony surgery for residual varus deformities. Conclusion Soft-tissue surgery for spastic equinovarus was successful in the majority of children with spastic hemiplegia, particularly between ages eight and 12 years, resulting in a plantigrade, flexible foot with minimal pain or limitations in shoe-wear. Children younger than 8 years at index surgery were more prone to overcorrection into valgus. Children older than 12 years had persistent varus deformities requiring bony surgery. Level of evidence Level IV, retrospective case series


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 423
Author(s):  
Abbie V. Viscardi ◽  
Emily J. Reppert ◽  
Michael D. Kleinhenz ◽  
Payton Wise ◽  
Zhoumeng Lin ◽  
...  

The amount of scientific data evaluating sheep pain responses after analgesia treatment is limited. The aims of this study were to compare the efficacy of flunixin meglumine (FLU) and meloxicam (MEL) at relieving post-surgical pain in sheep and to evaluate the utility of the Sheep Grimace Scale (SGS). Thirty ewes were assigned to one of three treatment groups: oral MEL or intravenous FLU to manage pain associated with a laparotomy procedure, or a non-surgical control (CON) group. Behavior and physiologic outcome measures were collected pre-procedure and up to 48 h post-procedure. There were no significant differences in behavior, gait, degree of inflammation or pain around the surgical site when MEL and FLU sheep were compared, suggesting that both drugs provided similar levels of analgesia. Significant differences in behavior, gait, abdominal inflammation and pain were found when surgical sheep were compared to non-surgical controls. More work is needed to characterize the amount of pain relief provided by MEL and FLU. The SGS had moderate reliability between scorers; however, the results were inconsistent with the other study outcome measures. The SGS may have some utility as a pain assessment tool but should be used in conjunction with other pain measures.


Author(s):  
Valentina Brioschi ◽  
Lucy Andrews ◽  
Peter Fordyce ◽  
Olivier Restif ◽  
Jane Ladlow ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 36
Author(s):  
Clément Lebret ◽  
Elsa Garot ◽  
Mélodie Amorim Pereira ◽  
Jean-Christophe Fricain ◽  
Sylvain Catros ◽  
...  

Introduction: Frenectomy is an oral surgical procedure usually performed with a scalpel. Several authors recently reported the interest of laser, as a minimally invasive and efficient alternative tool to perform frenectomy. This study aimed to compare the perioperative management of patients requiring a frenectomy using scalpel versus laser. Materials and methods: A systematic review of the literature has been carried out from Pubmed and Scopus databases following PRISMA guidelines. PICO method was used to select the relevant articles. Clinical studies comparing the perioperative outcomes of patients requiring frenectomies using scalpel versus laser were included. Results: Ten articles involving 375 patients were included. Pre-operative parameter (anxiety before surgery) and per-operative data such as anesthesia, surgery duration, bleeding, suture and difficulty were assessed. The post-operative outcomes investigated were pain, analgesics use, functional discomfort, edema, healing and satisfaction of patients. Laser achieved satisfactory peri-operative outcomes such as shorter operative time, without suturing requirement, as well as less post-operative pain and functional discomfort. Discussion: The low number of eligible studies, the different type of lasers used and heterogeneity across the methodology of the selected studies were the limits of the study. Conclusion: Laser-assisted surgery became an attractive tool to perform oral soft tissue surgery.


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