Military medicine
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Anesthesiologists have long used multimodal analgesia for effective pain control. Opioid-sparing anesthetics are gaining popularity among practitioners in light of increasing concerns for both immediate opioid side effects and the long-term opioid misuse among susceptible patients. Currently, there is a critical gap in knowledge regarding outcomes after an opioid-free anesthetic (OFA) during general anesthesia. We hypothesized that an opioid-free general anesthetic will not be inferior to a traditional opioid anesthetic (OA) as measured by the perioperative outcomes of postanesthesia care unit (PACU) duration, 12-hour postoperative summed pain intensity (SPI12) scores, total morphine equivalent doses (MEDs) utilized in the 12-hour postoperative inpatient (MED12) and total MEDs utilized in the 90-day outpatient periods (MED90). ⋯ To our knowledge, this is the first matched cohort study directly comparing an OFA with a traditional anesthetic for general anesthesia in a wide range of surgical and clinical scenarios. There was no significant difference in SPI12 between the OFA group and OA group, suggesting that patients' subjective pain was similar immediately after surgery whether or not they received intraoperative opioids. Concurrently, no "catch-up" effect was observed as the PACU duration; MED12 and MED90 were not different between the OFA and OA groups. However, there were many covariates identified in this study because of the small sample size or each group. Additional research is needed to explore if these findings can be extrapolated to a larger more heterogeneous population. Our preliminary work suggests that eliminating patient exposure to opioids in the intraoperative period does not have a deleterious effect on perioperative patient outcomes.
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Pressure to meet U.S. military weight requirements during service may predispose some service members to develop psychiatric disorders such as eating disorders or unhealthy eating behaviors, which may persist after military discharge. Specifically, research examining U.S. military veterans has found that in weight management programs, veterans with binge-eating behaviors have shown poor treatment outcomes. Overall, previous research suggests that veterans experience considerable and persistent disordered eating problems, and in addition may experience a higher prevalence of disordered eating in comparison to the general U.S. population. Research on Post-9/11 Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) veterans is needed as this group frequently presents with high rates of medical and psychiatric disorders. The current study used clinician-administered structured interviews to examine relationships between psychiatric, health, and demographic variables in a sample of Post-9/11 OEF/OIF/OND veterans with binge-eating or overeating behavior or neither. ⋯ Further research is needed to inform the development of effective treatments for disordered eating problems, as evidenced by an anticipated increase of veterans entering the VA healthcare system and the high rate of binge eating observed in our study and prior research in Post-9/11 veterans. Moreover, our study findings suggest the relevance of screening veterans for compulsive buying. This study was limited by its relatively small sample which only examined disordered eating behaviors. Future studies could simultaneously explore binge-eating behaviors and binge-eating disorder diagnoses in larger samples. Study strengths include a diverse sample of Post-9/11 veterans with sizable female representation.
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Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is commonly used in asymptomatic screening testing, but is suboptimal for this purpose as it will identify many old persistent positives that are no longer infectious. This can result in placement of individuals that are not infectious to others into isolation. This results in substantial adverse impact to military manning and operations, without any benefit to public health. ⋯ This allows for determination of sensitivity for infectious virus. Also, Navy Region Japan's experience with a comprehensive antigen testing strategy is described. The challenges presented by persistent positive PCR test results are examined, as well as the real-world benefits from implementing widespread use of antigen testing.
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The purpose of this scoping review was to systematically evaluate literature addressing menstrual suppression in the military population and to identify gaps in the literature. ⋯ Six gaps were identified: (1) readiness, (2) single branch of service, (3) options for suppression, (4) hesitance to suppress, (5) provider practices, and (6) stagnant research. Recommendations for future research, practice, and military health policy are provided. Expanding research on menstrual suppression in U.S. military service members will enhance the health of military service members, provider practices, and military health policy to promote military readiness.
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Anterior glenohumeral instability is an increasingly common injury among young military servicemen. First-time dislocations occurring in combination with anterior labral tears and humeral avulsion of glenohumeral ligament lesions, although rare, significantly contribute to further shoulder dysfunction with recurrent instability and pain. ⋯ To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case presented in the literature describing management of a simultaneous anterior shoulder dislocation, humeral avulsion of glenohumeral ligament lesion, and pectoralis major tendon rupture treated with a single operation. After aggressive rehabilitation, the patient was able to successfully pass Special Forces selection and has near full function of the operative shoulder with remarkable satisfaction scores.