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2.
Bariatr Surg Pract Patient Care ; 9(4): 143-149, 2014 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25516819

ABSTRACT

Background: Routine esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) prior to bariatric surgery has not been consistently shown to change the management of the patient. A study was performed to estimate the proportion of patients undergoing bariatric surgery evaluation who had abnormal findings on preoperative EGD that resulted in alteration of management and, second, to evaluate potential risk factors for occurrence of abnormal findings on the EGD. Methods: An observational, retrospective study in which all 232 patients who were cleared to undergo bariatric surgery and who underwent preoperative EGD between 2006 and 2013 were included at a single tertiary dedicated bariatric center for weight loss management. Abnormal findings on screening EGD and medical or surgical management alteration based on the EGD findings were reviewed. Results: Abnormal findings on screening EGD were found in 143 patients (61.6%). Thirty-five patients had medical management altered (15.1%), while four patients (1.7%) had surgical management altered. Being aged >55 years and the presence of gastroesophageal reflux disease were associated with occurrence of an abnormal finding on screening EGD. Conclusions: While abnormalities on preoperative EGD are often found in patients undergoing bariatric surgery evaluation, rarely do the findings change surgical management. Alternative methods for screening for common GI conditions should be considered in appropriate patients.

3.
Eplasty ; 11: e1, 2011 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21245984

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Wound healing trajectories (percent healing vs time) provide a dynamic picture of the decrease in wound burden over the entire continuum of the healing process. Trajectories can be robustly compared using survival statistics methodology. Improvement in healing can be determined by shifting the curve from "impaired" healing toward "ideal" healing. Although this concept of shifting the curve "to the left" has been demonstrated in acute incisional healing depicted by the gain in tensile strength, and in other chronic wounds, it has not been utilized for chronic pressure ulcers. METHODS: Wound healing trajectories were constructed for 211 patients enrolled in 8 separate randomized clinical trials for grade III and IV pressure ulcers. Trajectories were constructed for patients achieving ≥90% or more healing within 112 days and those who achieved less than <90% wound closure. Kaplan-Meier curves were constructed for all patients receiving an experimental treatment and for those receiving placebo vehicles. RESULTS: Different trajectories were achieved for the faster healing patients. Eighty-one percent of patients reached 90% healing within 112 days; 80% of those in treatment groups and 85% of those in placebo groups. Linear regression suggested that all patients entered into the clinical trials would achieve 90% healing by 18 weeks. Only 17% of the patients achieved total healing (100% wound closure) within the 112-day study period. Linear regression suggested that it would take 110 weeks to achieve total healing in all patients. CONCLUSION: Wound healing trajectories provide a more complete description of treatment efficacy than do fixed endpoints, such as the number of patients achieving 100% closure at one defined time point. Since more successful healers have different trajectories than less successful healers, shifting the trajectory to the left from "impaired" toward "ideal" healing may provide a better endpoint to determine treatment efficacy.

4.
J Tissue Eng Regen Med ; 2(5): 279-87, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18512267

ABSTRACT

Electrical stimulation affects the deposition of extracellular matrices and cellular differentiation. Type I collagen is one of the most abundant extracellular matrix proteins; however, not much is known about the effects of electrical stimulation on collagen type I deposition in C2C12 cells. Thus, we studied the effects of electrical voltage and stimulation frequency in 3D cultured C2C12 muscle cells in terms of metabolic activity, type I collagen deposition and cell morphology. Electrically excitable C2C12 muscle cells were seeded in collagen scaffolds and stimulated with rectangular signals of voltage (2, 5, 7 V) and frequency (1, 2 Hz), using parallel carbon electrodes spaced 1 cm apart. Metabolic activity was quantified by the glucose:lactate concentration ratio in the medium. Apoptotic activity was assessed by TUNEL staining and changes in collagen deposition were identified by immunohistology. The ultrastructure of the tissue was examined by TEM. Glucose and lactate analysis indicated that all groups had similar metabolic activity. TUNEL stain showed no significant difference in apoptotic damage induced by electrical stimulation compared to the control. Samples stimulated at 2 Hz exhibited reduced collagen deposition compared to the control and 1 Hz stimulated samples. Muscle-protein marker desmin was highly expressed in constructs stimulated with 1 Hz/5 V sample. TEM revealed that the stimulated samples developed highly organized sarcomeres, which coincided with improved contractile properties in the 1 Hz/5 V- and 2 Hz/5 V-stimulated groups. Our data implicate that a specific electrical frequency may modulate type I collagen accumulation and a specific voltage may affect the differentiation of muscle sarcomeres in excitable cells.


Subject(s)
Electric Stimulation , Muscles/physiology , Animals , Apoptosis , Cell Line , Immunohistochemistry , In Situ Nick-End Labeling , Mice , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Muscles/cytology , Tissue Engineering
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