Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Ultrasound-Guided Percutaneous Cryoneurolysis for the Treatment of Pain following Traumatic Rib Fracture: A Randomized, Active-Controlled, Participant- and Observer-Masked Study.
Traumatic rib fractures are associated with pain lasting weeks to months and a decreased ability to inspire deeply or cough to clear secretions. Ultrasound-guided percutaneous cryoneurolysis involves reversibly ablating peripheral nerve(s) using exceptionally low temperature with a transdermal probe, resulting in a prolonged nerve block with a duration measured in months. The authors hypothesized that cryoneurolysis would improve analgesia and inspired volume after rib fracture. ⋯ Ultrasound-guided percutaneous cryoneurolysis improves maximum inspired lung volume while concurrently decreasing pain and opioid consumption after traumatic rib fracture. These results should be considered preliminary, requiring confirmation with a trial including a larger sample size.
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Antibiotics play a crucial role in preventing surgical site infections, yet adherence to Infectious Disease Society of America guidelines varies widely. This qualitative study aimed to explore factors influencing perioperative antibiotic administration and assess the potential impact of a clinical decision support tool on guideline adherence. ⋯ Nonadherence to antibiotic guidelines in the perioperative setting often results from a lack of structured workflow. The interviews provide a foundation for developing a clinical decision support tool tailored to provider needs, aiming to improve user satisfaction and promote better adherence to perioperative antibiotic guidelines.
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With estimated global postoperative mortality rates at 1% to 4% leading to approximately 3 million to 12 million deaths per year, an urgent need exists for reliable measures of perioperative risk. Existing approaches suffer from poor performance, place a high burden on clinicians to gather data, or do not incorporate intraoperative data. Previous work demonstrated that intraoperative anesthetics induce prefrontal electroencephalogram (EEG) oscillations in the alpha band (8 to 12 Hz) that correlate with postoperative cognitive outcomes. ⋯ Intraoperative EEG alpha power is independently associated with postoperative mortality and adverse outcomes, suggesting it could represent a broad measure of postoperative physical resilience and provide clinicians with a low-burden, personalized measure of postoperative risk.