Surgeons performing laparoscopy have significant ergonomic problems, especially finger numbness and eye strain. Junior laparoscopic surgeons and surgeons with <2 years of laparoscopic surgical experience are more affected.
Pediatric tracheostomy has been reported to be a surgical procedure with significant morbidity and mortality. The use of tracheostomy in airway management has changed over time as regards indication and outcome. A review of the last 13 years' experience in our institution was carried out to focus on this group of patients and the recent trends in airway management. A retrospective analysis of hospital records was done and information collected with respect to age, gender, indication for tracheostomy, duration, complications, and follow-up. Thirty-nine tracheotomies were done in 36 patients, of whom males outnumbered females 2:1. The mean patient age was 41.6 months while nearly a third were newborns. The indications were congenital and acquired obstructive lesions. Apart from nine cases, all have been treated and decannulated. Follow-up ranged from 1 month to 8 years, and decannulation time from 48 h to 45 months. Home tracheostomy care was very well managed by the parents. One tracheostomy-related death was encountered. Complications were minor and transient and occurred post-decannulation in our series, in contrast to the major complications, both acute and chronic, reported in the literature. More neonates and infants are undergoing tracheostomy and surviving. Pediatric tracheostomy is a safe procedure with home care by parents feasible.
Gastric transposition (GT) is one of the options for the esophageal replacement in children with esophageal atresia with or without tracheoesophageal fistula (EATEF). To date, no manometric studies have been conducted on the intrathoracic stomach after GT in EATEF patients; hence, this study was designed. Babies ( n=18) of EATEF who underwent esophageal replacement by GT were studied and manometry was correlated with the clinical outcome, age at surgery, and route of GT. The mean age at evaluation was 30.5 months (range 4-84 months). These cases were sub-stratified into group I (GT during neonatal period) and group II (GT during post-neonatal period). Mean age at surgery was 6 days and 7.8 months in groups I and II, respectively. There was no propulsive antegrade propagated peristaltic waves in any of the patients. Mean resting pressure and mean peak pressures were 19.5 and 50.4 mm Hg in groups I and II, respectively. Mass contractions to liquid swallow was noted in 77 and 55% of patients in groups I and II, respectively. There was no significant difference in the pressure parameters or appearance of mass contractions between group-I and group-II patients. Similarly, there was no significant difference in pressure parameters or appearance of mass contractions between the children who had transhiatal vs retrosternal GT. It needs to be determined whether the mass contractions noted in GT ever progress to a coordinated propulsive rhythmic contractions and whether this has a final bearing on the long-term functional outcome of GT patients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.