Articles: surgery.
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Annals of plastic surgery · May 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialA controlled, randomized, double-blind study of ketorolac for postoperative analgesia after plastic surgery.
The present study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ketorolac compared with metamizol (Nolotil) in the control of pain after plastic surgery. Almost no literature exists on postoperative pain control in this specialty. A multiple-dose, randomized, double-blind study of parallel design was carried out. ⋯ Ketorolac and metamizol were found to be equally safe and effective in reducing postoperative pain after plastic surgery. It should be noted that 52% of patients in the ketorolac group and 48% in the metamizol group considered their postoperative analgesia to be very good. Nevertheless, for surgical procedures or for patients in whom postoperative hematoma formation is a particular concern, ketorolac probably should not be used.
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The medical profession is besieged by concerns about cost containment. This in turn has focused attention on the use of ambulatory surgical facilities. However, the costs of hospital outpatient surgery programs usually prevent them from being competitive when compared with the costs of using office surgical facilities. ⋯ A death occurred in 1 in 57,000 cases (0.0017 percent). The overall risk is comparable in an accredited office (plastic surgical facility) and in a free-standing or hospital ambulatory surgical facility. This study documents an excellent safety record for plastic surgery done in accredited office surgical facilities by board-certified plastic surgeons.
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Annals of plastic surgery · Apr 1997
Tissue expansion in children: a retrospective study of complications.
We retrospectively reviewed 105 consecutive children in whom 191 tissue expanders were placed by the Plastic Surgical Service at The Children's Hospital from 1987 to 1995. The age range was 1 month to 28 years. The series included 68 females and 37 males. ⋯ These complication rates were not related to either the gender, site of implantation, number of expanders, use of closed suction drains, or the indication for expansion. The complications were related to age, being higher in children (age 1-12 years) compared with infants and adolescents. Tissue expanders can be successfully used in children to construct and reconstruct a variety of cutaneous defects, but there is an irreducible minimum for the three major complications.
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Perioperative complications in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients are described in a small series of case reports. No study to date systematically evaluates perioperative complications in a large number of OSA patients receiving surgeries other than those involving the pharynx. ⋯ The incidence of respiratory complications related to difficulties in airway management in OSA patients was higher than that reported in a recent study for all patients receiving general anesthesia (4%). The perioperative complications observed in these OSA patients are consistent with the underlying pathogenesis of OSA, pharyngeal obstruction. The absence of observed perioperative arrhythmias and myocardial ischemia is consistent with previous findings that sleep-related cardiac ischemia is uncommon in OSA patients. Our results suggest it is prudent to cautiously manage all OSA patients receiving surgeries involving general anesthesia.