Surgery/Specialties

Latest Issue of OR Manager
March 2025
Home Surgery/Specialties

Editorial asks if surveillance cameras in ASCs are a good idea

Editor's Note A proposed law would require ASCs and hospitals to install surveillance cameras in their ORs. Whether they are a good idea or not depends on why they are there, according to an editorial in Outpatient Surgery Magazine. If they are intended to enhance performance and find out why…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 21, 2015
Share

Outcomes for robotic vs nonrobotic cardiac surgery

Editor's Note Robotic-assisted cardiac surgery had significantly reduced length of stay, complications, and mortality compared with nonrobotic surgery in this study. Robotic-assisted had a higher median cost than nonrobotic surgery ($39,030 vs $36,340). The results show that robotic-assisted is as safe as nonrobotic cardiac surgery and offers surgeons an additional…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 21, 2015
Share

Comparison of US and Canadian total joint outcomes

Editor's Note The rate of major complications was significantly higher in Canada than the US after total knees, but there was no significant difference after total hips, this study finds. US patients also had substantially shorter lengths of stay, which perhaps reflects more efficient postoperative care and discharge planning, the…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 21, 2015
Share

Characteristics of total hips linked to early revision

Editor's Note Characteristics of total hip replacements (THRs) were found to be related to early prosthetic revision in this French study.  Antibiotic-free cemented and antibiotic-impregnated cemented THRs were compared with uncemented. Ceramic-on-ceramic, ceramic-on-polyethylene, and metal-on-metal THRs were compared with metal-on-polyethylene.  The antibiotic-impregnated cemented THRs had a better prognosis than uncemented,…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 21, 2015
Share

Sponsored Message

FDA labels recall of Medtronic’s heart valve loading system Class I

Editor's Note The Food and Drug Administration on August 5 categorized the recall of 6,912 units of Medtronic Cardiovascular Surgery’s EnVeo R loading system as Class I, the most serious. The loading system is used with the CoreValve Evolut R replacement heart valve. The recall was issued over concerns about…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 7, 2015
Share

FDA: Serious adverse events associated with LVADs

Editor's Note The Food and Drug Administration on August 5 issued a Safety Communication on serious adverse events linked to left ventricular assist devices (LVADs). Two implantable LVADs are approved by the FDA (HeartMate II by Thoratec Corporation and HeartWare HVAD by HeartWare Inc), and serious events have been associated…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 6, 2015
Share

Sponsored Message

Effect of music on OR performance

Editor's Note When surgeons listen to their preferred music, they’re more efficient at closing incisions, and their technique improves, this study finds. Researchers asked 15 plastic surgery residents at the University of Texas to perform layered closures on pigs’ feet. Half the resident worked in a silent OR and half…

Read More

By: OR Manager
August 5, 2015
Share

ACS Advocating for Critical Access Hospital Relief Act

Editor's Note A central issue discussed at the US House Committee on Ways and Means on July 28 was the Critical Access Hospital (CAH) Relief Act, HR 169, which is supported by the American College of Surgeons (ACS). Currently, for CAHs to receive Medicare Part A reimbursement, physicians must certify…

Read More

By: OR Manager
July 31, 2015
Share

FDA approves nonsurgical balloon device for bariatric patients

Editor's Note The Food and Drug Administration on July 28 approved a new balloon device to treat obesity without the need for a surgical procedure. The ReShape Integrated Dual Balloon System (ReShape Medical Inc, San Clemente, California) is inserted into the stomach endoscopically and then filled with saline. Patients are…

Read More

By: OR Manager
July 29, 2015
Share

Study: Cardiac CT angiography damages DNA

Editor's Note Patients exposed to radiation during cardiac computed tomographic angiography had evidence of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) damage that was associated with cell death, DNA damage in cells, and activation of genes involved in DNA repair, in this study. Most cells damaged by the CT scan were repaired, but a…

Read More

By: OR Manager
July 24, 2015
Share

Join our community

Learn More
Video Spotlight
Live chat by BoldChat