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1.
Asian Spine Journal ; : 618-627, 2021.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-913688

ABSTRACT

Methods@#Data on demographic characteristics and medical comorbidities of patients who underwent PLF with subsequent readmission were obtained from the HCUP-NRD. The perioperative characteristics that were significantly different between patients readmitted with and without an active diagnosis of IBO were identified with bivariate analysis for both 30-day and 90-day readmissions. The significant characteristics were then included in a multivariate analysis to identify those that were independently associated with 30- day and 90-day readmissions. @*Results@#Drug abuse (odds ratio [OR], 4.00), uncomplicated diabetes (OR, 2.06), having Medicare insurance (OR, 1.65), age 55–64 years (OR, 2.42), age 65–79 years (OR, 2.77), and age >80 years (OR, 3.87) were significant risk factors for 30-day readmission attributable to IBO after a PLF procedure. @*Conclusions@#Of the several preoperative risk factors identified for readmission with IBO after PLF surgery, drug abuse had the strongest association and was likely to be the most clinically relevant factor. Physicians and care teams should understand the risks of opioid-based pain management regimens, attempt to manage pain with a multimodal approach, and minimize the opioid use.

2.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery ; (12): 318-324, 2018.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-689667

ABSTRACT

<p><b>OBJECTIVE</b>To compare the short-term outcomes between robotic and laparoscopic radical total gastrectomy in gastric cancer patients with BMI index ≥24 kg/m.</p><p><b>METHOD</b>Clinical data of 93 gastric cancer patients who underwent robotic and laparoscopic radical total gastrectomy at PLA General Hospital from April 2016 to April 2017 were retrospectively analyzed. The retrospective cohort study was adopted.</p><p><b>INCLUSION CRITERIA</b>preoperatively definite diagnosis of primary gastric cancer by endoscopy and biopsy; preoperative BMI ≥24 kg/m; no previous abdominal surgery; no previous chemotherapy and radiotherapy; no distant metastasis or invasion into adjacent organs before operation or during operation; receiving radical gastrectomy; Roux-en-Y reconstruction of digestive tract in open procedure. According to approaches of minimally invasive surgery, 24 patients underwent robotic surgery and 69 underwent laparoscopic surgery. The intraoperative parameters (overall operative time, pneumoperitoneal time, open procedure time, intraoperative blood loss, transfusion rate, number of total retrieved lymph nodes and metastatic lymph nodes) and postoperative parameters (drainage in the first postoperative day, the first defecation time, morbidity of postoperative complication and hospital stay) were compared between two groups. Correlation of the above parameters were analyzed.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b>Of 93 patients, 77 were male and 16 female with an average age of (60.0±10.6) years. The average BMI was (26.8±1.3) kg/m in whole patients, (26.9±1.6) kg/m in robotic group and (26.8±1.7) kg/m in laparoscopic group. No significant differences in age, gender, BMI, preoperative ASA class, postoperative pathological findings and clinical classification were observed between two groups, which made short-term parameters between two groups comparable. The robotic group had a significantly longer overall operative time [(301.2±68.9) minutes vs. (247.3±59.6) minutes, P=0.000], longer open procedure time [(141.5±26.3) minutes vs. (92.5±36.7) minutes, P=0.029] and higher cost than laparoscopy group[(17.5×10 ± 9.7×10) yuan vs. (10.0×10 ± 2.3×10) yuan, P=0.001]. Pneumoperitoneal operative time, intraoperative blood loss, transfusion rate, number of total retrieved lymph nodes, number of harvested metastatic lymph nodes and postoperative short-term efficacy were similar between the two groups (all P>0.05). In robotic group, pneumoperitoneal operative time was positively correlated with overall operative time (r=0.708, P=0.010); total cost was positively correlated with postoperative hospital stay (r=0.493, P=0.000) and open procedure time was negatively correlated with the first defecation time (r=-0.962, P=0.038). In laparoscopy group, total cost was positively correlated with overall operative time (r=0.411, P=0.046), drainage volume in the first postoperative day was positively correlated with the number of total dissected lymph node (r=0.540, P=0.006), postoperative hospital stay was positively correlated with intraoperative blood loss (r=0.574, P=0.003), total cost was positively correlated with intraoperative blood loss and hospital stay (r=0.609, P=0.002; r=0.865, P=0.000), drainage volume in the first postoperative day was positively correlated with BMI (r=0.533, P=0.007).</p><p><b>CONCLUSION</b>For gastric cancer patients with BMI ≥24 kg/m, robotic radical total gastrectomy is associated with longer operative time and higher cost, but is less vulnerable to the change of BMI and more in favor of the realization of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) than laparoscopic radical total gastectomy.</p>


Subject(s)
Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Body Mass Index , Gastrectomy , Methods , Laparoscopy , Length of Stay , Operative Time , Retrospective Studies , Robotic Surgical Procedures , Stomach Neoplasms , General Surgery , Treatment Outcome
3.
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica ; (12): 668-674, 2015.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-257085

ABSTRACT

With the advance of drug development and research techniques, the drug metabolic processes and mechanism can be more deeply achieved. As the drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics process are mediated by drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters, study of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters has become an important part for drug development. The traditional immunoassays with low sensitivity and poor specificity can not reflect the accurate expression level of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters. We now give a brief review on the quantitative study of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters by mass spectrometry-based proteomic approach.


Subject(s)
Humans , Enzymes , Chemistry , Inactivation, Metabolic , Mass Spectrometry , Membrane Transport Proteins , Chemistry , Pharmacokinetics , Proteomics
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