Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Predicting Futility in Severely Injured Patients: Using Arrival Lab Values and Physiology to Support Evidence-Based Resource Stewardship.
The recent pandemic exposed a largely unrecognized threat to medical resources, including daily available blood products. Some of the most severely injured patients who arrive in extremis consume tremendous resources yet succumb shortly after arrival. We sought to identify cut points available early in the patient's resuscitation that predicted 100% mortality. ⋯ The use of evidence-based STOP criteria provides cut points of futility to help guide early decisions for discontinuing aggressive treatment of severely injured patients arriving in extremis.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Closed Incision Negative Pressure Therapy to Reduce Surgical Site Infection in High-Risk Gastrointestinal Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Despite institutional perioperative bundles and national infection prevention guidelines, surgical site infection (SSI) after a major abdominal operation remains a significant source of morbidity. Negative pressure therapy (NPT) has revolutionized care for open wounds but the role of closed incision NPT (ciNPT) remains unclear. ⋯ In this multi-institutional, randomized controlled trial of patients undergoing colorectal or hepatopancreatobiliary surgery, incidence of incisional SSIs between ciNPT and conventional wound therapy was not statistically significant. Future trials should focus on patient populations undergoing specific procedures types that have the highest risk for SSI.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Low vs Standard-Dose Indocyanine Green in the Identification of Biliary Anatomy Using Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial.
Near-infrared fluorescence imaging using intravenous indocyanine green (ICG) facilitates intraoperative identification of biliary anatomy. We hypothesize that a much lower dose of ICG than the standard decreases hepatic and background fluorescence and improves bile duct visualization. ⋯ Low-dose ICG leads to quantitative improvement of biliary visualization using near-infrared fluorescence imaging by minimizing liver fluorescence; this further facilitates routine use during hepatobiliary operations.