Cochranebuhl9736
Background A single atrium is a very rare heart condition, in which the inter atrial septum is missing. These congenital heart defects usually are surgically corrected after birth. Case Presentation We present a successful surgical repair of a single atrium (SA) in a 27-year-old woman, who has a complete missing of the atrial septum, without coexisting valvular pathology. The SA diameter was 9.97 × 6.18 cm and the Systemic blood flow/pulmonary blood flow (Qp/Qs) was 4.1 due to the single atrium. Surgical correction consisted of creating a new atrial septum, using a double-velor patch. At first- and second-year follow up, the patient was in a very good condition and without any symptoms present. We consider that the diagnoses of single atrium, especially in child bearing women, should be done in appropriate time, to avoid miscarriages, preterm births and other complications associated. Conclusion There are many case reports that show good surgical repair of single atrium and without late complications. In our case, we have obtained a very good surgical repair, without AV bundle damage and no residual shunt demonstrated on intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography.With the increasing median age of survival in the UK, there is an increased burden on the provision of medical and surgical care to the population. Merestinib The 2010 National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death report, "An Age Old Problem," emphasizes the early involvement of surgical and geriatric consultant input to improve perioperative care in older patients. This study describes the development of a Geriatric Surgical Liaison Service aimed at providing consultant-led geriatrician support to improve the outcomes of older patients undergoing Emergency Laparotomy (EL). The primary outcome is the reduction in length of stay (LOS) compared to baseline data prior to geriatrician involvement. The service was designed to include one clinical session involving a consultant geriatrician and two and a half days with a junior doctor in a week. Data was collected prospectively from February 2018 till July 2018 for surgical patients aged ≥ 70 years, who underwent EL, had an inpatient stay of more than seven dayrove patient flow, release capacity, and waiting times and would be of benefit to the financially strained National Health Service (NHS). Overall, our study suggests that a collaborative, consultant-led geriatric service can improve the management of older surgical patients by potentially reducing length of stay, identifying high-risk patients, and facilitating early and appropriate specialty input alongside adequate and required outpatient follow-up. Copyright © 2020, Khan et al.Background Podcasts and their use in medical education is growing and becoming more popular, all while not knowing what podcasts are available for each specialty. Objectives To ascertain the number of podcasts available by specialty and collect basic characteristics of each podcast. Methods This was a Google-based, investigational study of medical podcasts by specialty undertaken by all authors from January to June 2019. Search terms included "podcasts in ____", where various specialties were inserted to identify current podcasts. Results Over the course of a six month period, 19 specialties were investigated for podcasting content. Emergency medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics had the most active podcasts. Obstetrics and gynecology, ophthalmology, and orthopedic surgery have the most inactive podcasts. Neurosurgery was the only specialty searched without any identifiable active podcasts. Conclusions While emergency medicine has a large number of podcasts, both active and available other specialties have less of a selection. Copyright © 2020, Little et al.Chryseobacterium indologenes are aerobic, Gram negative, nonfermentative rods that are intrinsically multi-drug resistant. Reported infections include bacteremia, pneumonia, meningitis, myositis, keratitis, and indwelling devices. We present the clinical course of a 52-year-old African male with a medical history of end stage renal disease (ESRD) in hemodialysis with multiple episodes of central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSI) presenting with symptoms of chills, malaise, and localized erythema on insertion site of permacath. Blood cultures obtained from catheter showed C. indologenes. Successful response was obtained with piperacillin/tazobactam based on sensitivity and removal of indwelling catheter. Given the increase in the number of cases reported in the literature, guidelines for the management of this pathogen should be considered. Copyright © 2020, Izaguirre-Anariba et al.Renal transplant patients on immunosuppression are at risk for malignancy. One form of malignancy that commonly affects this population is Kaposi-sarcoma. Kaposi-sarcoma is a human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8)-driven process classically associated with skin lesions in immunocompromised patients. The pulmonary system may be involved in disseminated disease. In this case, a renal transplant patient was re-admitted with acute hypoxic respiratory failure and hemoptysis of an unclear etiology. Following a broad workup, HHV-8 PCR and a lymph node biopsy confirmed pulmonary Kaposi-sarcoma. Workup for multicentric Castleman disease was negative. The patient was treated with liposomal doxorubicin, ganciclovir, and prednisone. Her immunosuppression was changed to sirolimus and she is scheduled to complete six cycles of liposomal doxorubicin. Copyright © 2020, Scheetz et al.Objective The aim of the current study is to determine the feasibility and accuracy of ultrasound-guided core biopsy for staging the axilla in clinically node-negative patients with invasive breast cancer. Introduction Historically, in breast cancer patients, axillary lymph node dissection was performed to stage axilla. Because of the high morbidity of axillary lymph node dissection, sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) became the standard of care in patients with clinically node-negative breast cancer. However, SLNB is expensive, time consuming, can cause morbidity and can be complicated by seroma formation, sensory nerve injury, lymphedema, etc. Many centers rely on the availability of frozen section on sentinel lymph nodes to avoid a second procedure with the accuracy of procedure ranging from 73 to 96%, however, the availability of frozen section is limited in our part of the world. Pre-operative identification of axillary node positivity in patients with clinically negative nodes by ultrasound imaging of the axilla would allow one-stage axillary clearance and can decrease the need for SLNB from 21% to 70%.