Journal of clinical anesthesia
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Letter Case Reports Retracted Publication
Bilateral erector spinae nerve block using one injection for bilateral breast cancer surgery.
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Review Meta Analysis
Depth of anesthesia measured by bispectral index and postoperative mortality: A meta-analysis of observational studies.
Whether anesthesia depth affects postoperative mortality remains uncertain. ⋯ We observed a significant relationship between deep anesthesia and long-term mortality, though this was not significant 30 days following surgery. In patients who had received cardiac surgery, deep anesthesia may increase mortality. However, this trend was not observed in patients who had undergone other forms of surgery.
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This study aimed to explore the effects of platelet-rich plasmapheresis (PRP) on the amount of postoperative blood loss and the requirements for allogeneic fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and red blood cell (RBC) transfusions during cardiovascular surgery. ⋯ Conducting PRP before cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and transfusing autologous platelet-rich plasma (aPRP) after reversal of heparin could reduce postoperative blood loss, the requirements for blood products transfusion during cardiovascular surgery. A higher mean platelet count in aPRP may improve the final outcome. However, there was a high degree of undetermined heterogeneity among the analyzed trials, and larger and more precise RCTs are needed to confirm these conclusions.
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Comparative Study
Academic faculty demonstrate higher well-being than residents: Pennsylvania anesthesiology programs' results of the 2017-2018 ACGME well-being survey.
Physician burnout and suicide are at epidemic proportions. There is very little data directly comparing resident versus faculty well-being. The 2017-2018 ACGME resident and faculty surveys mark the first time that well-being questions were included. The purpose of this study was to determine whether responses to ACGME well-being questions would differ significantly between anesthesiology residents and academic anesthesiology faculty. ⋯ Pennsylvania academic anesthesiology faculty survey responses demonstrated a higher level of well-being compared to their residents. The variation in scoring suggests that anesthesiology residents and faculty have differing perceptions of various well-being domains. Information from well-being surveys can help provide programs with focus areas that they can intervene on to improve physician well-being.