Can J Plast Surg
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Advancements in clinical decision-making are influenced by presentations made at scientific conferences or publications in journals with extensive readership. However, many ideas shared at annual conferences fail to be published, and most surgeons attend these meetings only sporadically. ⋯ From the three North American annual general meetings reviewed, there was a modest conversion rate of mainly reconstructive case series published predominantly in a single journal, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Several years often pass from the genesis of a research hypothesis to final publication, and because the majority of presentations fail to be published, presentations should be observed with a critical eye given the more stringent peer review process and time required for final publication. In an effort to improve conversion rates, departments and faculty members must foster a culture that prioritizes publication.
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The objective of the present study was to determine whether it is possible to consistently and reliably teach medical students and resident learners how to administer local anesthetics in an almost painless manner. Using the published technique, 25 consecutive medical students and residents were taught how to inject local anesthetics for carpal tunnel release by watching the senior author perform the technique once. The learner then independently administered the anesthesia to the next patient who then scored the learner's ability to inject the local anesthetic from a pain perspective. ⋯ All 25 patients rated the entire pain experience to be less than 2/10. Eighty-four per cent of the patients indicated that the experience was better than local anesthetic given at the dentist's office. Medical students and residents can quickly and reliably learn how to administer local anesthesia for carpal tunnel release with minimal pain to the patient.
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Hair transplantation using micrografts or minigrafts is a standard procedure used for hair restoration in androgenic, burn scar and cicatricial alopecia. These grafts have also been used to reconstruct the eyebrow, eyelash, mustache, beard and pubic escutcheon. A patient who underwent successful micrograft and minigraft hair transplantation into a free osteocutaneous mandibular flap reconstruction is presented. The patient was very satisfied with his reconstruction, and the hair transplants provided excellent camouflage for the flap.
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The burn eschar serves as a medium for bacterial growth and a source of local and systemic infection. To prevent or minimize these complications, it is important to debride the eschar as early as possible. ⋯ The thickness of a single tangentially excised layer of eschar is not much greater than the actual thickness of the entire skin and often contains viable tissue. Because surgical debridement is insufficiently selective, more selective means of debriding burn eschars should be explored.
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To examine factors that affect wait times for women seeking breast reconstruction at a Canadian academic centre. ⋯ WOMEN WITH ACTIVE CANCER (DUCTAL CARCINOMA IN SITU: 43 days, invasive cancer: 40 days) had shorter wait times compared with those who had no active cancer (benign/high risk: 242 days, previously treated cancer: 343 days) (P<0.05). Women seeking delayed reconstruction had longer wait times (359 days) from referral to surgery than women seeking immediate reconstruction (98 days) (P<0.0001). Women seeking reconstruction at the time of mastectomy, with benign/high-risk disease, waited longer (242 days) than those with ductal carcinoma in situ (43 days) or invasive cancer (40 days) (P<0.001). Wait times for autologous free tissue transfer (213 days) were not significantly longer compared with implant reconstruction (116 days) (P=0.27). Women with acute cancer experienced similar wait times for implant reconstruction (44 days) as for a free tissue transfer (56 days) (P=0.46). Women with no acute cancer had similar wait times for implant (239 days) as free tissue transfer (369 days) (P=0.25). Patients requiring only plastic surgeons involved in the reconstructive effort waited longer (one surgeon: 299 days, two surgeons: 550 days) than patients requiring either two plastic surgeons and one general surgeon (130 days) or one plastic surgeon and one general surgeon (82 days) (P<0.05). Although more coordination is required with three surgeons, this is frequently associated with a diagnosis of acute cancer and, therefore, wait times are shorter.