Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Sacral chordomas are rare malignant bone tumors and are often very large for complete resection. Particle therapy for these tumors, which are adjacent to the gastrointestinal tract, is restricted because the tolerance dose of the intestine is low. This study aimed to demonstrate the technical aspects and treatment results of space-making particle therapy with surgical spacer placement for sacral chordoma. We aimed to investigate the dosimetric change in the particle therapy before and after spacer placement and the safety, efficacy, and long-term outcomes of space-making particle therapy. ⋯ Considering improvements in the dose-volume histogram after spacer placement, low recurrence rates within the gross tumor volume, good survival rates, and low incidences of side effects, treatment of sacral chordoma with space-making particle therapy shows promise.
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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in severely injured trauma patients and is associated with poor outcomes. A positive fluid balance is associated with AKI and poor long-term renal outcomes among general ICU and cardiac surgery patients. Currently, the optimal endpoint of resuscitation of severely injured trauma patients is unknown, which may result in excess fluid administration. We hypothesized that positive fluid balance is common after severe trauma and is associated with increased AKI development. ⋯ Positive fluid balance in excess of 2 L at 48 hours occurs in half of severely injured trauma patients, and fluid positivity is independently and incrementally associated with AKI development. Fluid responsiveness should be investigated as an end point of post-traumatic resuscitation to prevent unnecessary fluid administration and subsequent AKI.
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Observational Study
Telephone Follow-Up for Emergency General Surgery Procedures: Safety and Implication for Health Resource Use: Telephone Follow-Up after Surgery.
It is unknown whether replacing clinic follow-up visits with telephone follow-up for low-risk core emergency general surgery (cEGS) procedures is safe. We measured the efficacy of telephone follow-up to determine if it could safely reduce the need for routine postoperative clinic visits in this population. ⋯ Post-discharge telephone follow-up in cEGS patients reduced the need for clinic follow-up visits by 68%. Missed complications were infrequent and low grade; telephone screening identified the single high-grade complication. Telephone follow-up for low-risk EGS patients is safe and increases efficiency of postoperative resource use.