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1.
Rev. colomb. cardiol ; 27(5): 461-468, sep.-oct. 2020. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: biblio-1289256

ABSTRACT

Resumen Introducción: ¿Cuál es la situación actual técnica y productiva de los cuatro bancos que están certificados en buenas prácticas para tejido cardiovascular en Colombia si se comparan con estándares internacionales? Objetivo: Caracterizar la capacidad técnica y la actividad de los bancos certificados del país para tejido cardiovascular durante el periodo de tiempo 2014 a 2016. Metodología: Mediante una encuesta realizada por vía teleconferencia a cada banco, se evaluaron ítems de donación, extracción, procesamiento, almacenamiento, distribución y capacidad de producción de los tejidos cardiovasculares. La información referida por las instituciones fue complementada con actas de certificación de buenas prácticas del INVIMA y la suministrada por el INS de las estadísticas reportadas por los mismos bancos durante el periodo 2014 a 2016. Resultados: El tejido cardiovascular procesado por los bancos colombianos procede principalmente de donantes con muerte encefálica y es extraído directamente en el quirófano; la edad de los donantes va desde recién nacidos hasta los 60 años. Cuando se requiere, el antibiótico de elección es la vancomicina. El almacenamiento más usado es la criopreservación y su distribución se hace principalmente a grupos quirúrgicos preestablecidos e intrainstitucionales. Conclusiones: El desarrollo del banqueo de este tipo de tejido está muy rezagado en Colombia respecto a otros países, debido a las dificultades de donación, extracción y utilización por grupos con alta experticia; adicionalmente, la normativa utilizada para evaluar estas instituciones está muy desactualizada.


Abstract Introduction: A study is performed to determine if the current technical and productive situation of the four cardiovascular tissue banks that have Good Practice Certificates in Colombia compare with international standards. Objective: To determine the technical capacity and activity of the banks certified by the country for cardiovascular tissue during the period from 2014 to 2016. Methodology: The items analysed using a questionnaire completed by teleconference to each bank were, donation, extraction, processing, storage, distribution, and production capacity of the cardiovascular tissues. The information provided by the institutions was complemented with the Minutes of Good Practice Certification of the Colombia National Food and Drug Surveillance Institute (INVIMA) as well as the statistics reported by the banks themselves and provided by the National Health Institute (INS) during the period 2014 to 2016. Results: The cardiovascular tissue processed by Colombian tissue banks mainly comes from donors with brain death, and is extracted directly in the operating theatre. The age of the donors go from newborn up to 60 years-old. When used, the antibiotic of choice is vancomycin. The most used storage method is cryopreservation, and is mainly distributed to established and institutional surgical groups. Conclusions: The development of this type of tissue bank is lagging behind in Colombia compared to other countries. This is due to the difficulties in donation, extraction, and use by groups with high expertise. Furthermore, the guidelines used to evaluate these institutions are very out of date.


Subject(s)
Tissue Banks , Tissue Donors , Tissue Transplantation
2.
Asian Journal of Andrology ; (6): 134-139, 2020.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-842472

ABSTRACT

Penile urethral strictures have been managed by a staged surgical approach. In selected cases, spongiofibrosis can be excised, a neo-urethral plate created using buccal mucosa graft (BMG) and tubularized during the same procedure, performing a 'two-in-one' stage approach. We aim to identify stricture factors which indicate suitability for this two-in-one stage approach. We assess surgical outcome and compare with staged reconstruction. We conducted an observational descriptive study. The data were prospectively collected from two-in-one stage and staged penile urethroplasties using BMG in a single center between 2007 and 2017. The minimum follow-up was 6 months. Outcomes were assessed clinically, radiologically, and by flow-rate analysis. Failure was defined as recurrent stricture or any subsequent surgical or endoscopic intervention. Descriptive analysis of stricture characteristics and statistical comparison was made between groups. Of 425 penile urethroplasties, 139 met the inclusion criteria: 59 two-in-one stage and 80 staged. The mean stricture length was 2.8 cm (single stage) and 4.5 cm (staged). Etiology was lichen sclerosus (LS) 52.5% (single stage) and 73.8% hypospadias related (staged). 40.7% of patients had previous failed urethroplasties in the single-stage group and 81.2% in the staged. The most common stricture locations were navicular fossa (39.0%) and distal penile urethra (59.3%) in the single-stage group and mid or proximal penile urethra (58.7%) in the staged group. Success rates were 89.8% (single stage) and 81.3% (staged). A trend toward a single-stage approach for select penile urethral strictures was noted. We conclude that a single-stage substitution penile urethroplasty using BMG as a 'two-in-one' approach is associated with excellent functional outcomes. The most suitable strictures for this approach are distal, primary, and LS-related strictures.

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