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The Indian Journal Of Surgery[JOURNAL]

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Venous Thromboembolism and COVID-19-an Epidemiological Perspective.

Khanna AK, Khanna D

Indian J Surg · 2023 Feb · PMID 35529246 · Full text

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), was declared as pandemic by World Health Organization (WHO) in March 2020. The outbreak has caused 5,232,56... The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), was declared as pandemic by World Health Organization (WHO) in March 2020. The outbreak has caused 5,232,562 deaths worldwide until December 3rd, 2021. Though primarily affecting the respiratory system, involvement of other organ systems have been reported in severe disease. Venous thromboembolism (VTE) has been recognized as an important complication. Previous studies have reported the prevalence of VTE in intensive care unit (ICU) patients between 7 and 85% and in non-ICU patients between 0 and 19%. COVID-19 patients that are at high risk for VTE are also at increased risk for bleeding. In such cases, anticoagulation may potentially be harmful. Thereby, it is important to understand the risk factors for VTE predisposition in the COVID-19 patients, timing of VTE, and the rate of occurrence of VTE in hospitalized patients post-discharge. Comparison of the rate of occurrence of VTE in COVID-19 patients with the non-COVID-19 patients with similar disease severity is required to truly interpret the reportedly high rates of VTE in COVID-19 patients. Several pathophysiological mechanisms have been reported for the development of VTE in COVID-19. Autopsy-based studies have contributed to the existing knowledge. d-dimer, presently, seems to be the most suitable investigation for risk-identification of VTE supported by Doppler studies and overall clinical context. Further, prospective studies and clinical trials are essentially required to fill the gaps in evidence for occurrence, risk prediction and management of VTE in COVID-19 patients.

Surgical and Anaesthetic Challenges Faced During Successful Management of a Complex Tracheal Injury Using Montgomery T Tube in a Zonal Hospital.

Panchal G, Dubey R, Saxena N … +2 more , Nagi GS, Sharma I

Indian J Surg · 2023 Apr · PMID 35529245 · Full text

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Sclerotherapy in Hemorrhoids.

He A, Chen M

Indian J Surg · 2023 Apr · PMID 35469212 · Full text

Injection sclerotherapy for all grades of interhemorrhoids in various situations and co-morbidities has become popular method of treatment. Several types of surgical operations both conventional and stapled hemorrhoidect... Injection sclerotherapy for all grades of interhemorrhoids in various situations and co-morbidities has become popular method of treatment. Several types of surgical operations both conventional and stapled hemorrhoidectomy has many and serious described side effects. On the contrary, proctoscopic injection sclerotherapy using some of the modern sclerosants and thin bore needle injections is an office-based ambulatory method of treatment of internal hemorrhoids; it is low in cost, devoid of any major complications besides it is quite successful as reported. Its safety and efficacy has been published in recent years. This manuscript is a result of thorough systemic review using PRISMA guidelines on various sclerosing agents, their merits and demerits, methods of administration, and outcome in internal hemorrhoids.

The Israeli Surgical Oral Board Examination: Improved Objectivity Increases Knowledge Authenticity.

Pines G, Ben-Ishay O, Hochstein D … +5 more , Lahat G, Ohana G, Sebbag G, Kluger Y, Halvey A

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 35437339 · Full text

The oral board examination in general surgery in Israel was recently revised aiming for improved objectivity and standardization. Herein, we describe the current exam model. Between 05/2018 and 11/2020, two exams per yea... The oral board examination in general surgery in Israel was recently revised aiming for improved objectivity and standardization. Herein, we describe the current exam model. Between 05/2018 and 11/2020, two exams per year were conducted with the current exam model. The examination consists of 12 stations, each focusing on a different field. Passing score is 80%. At the end of the examination, examiners and candidates complete a questionnaire regarding the examination's process and quality (scale 1-5). A total of 142 residents attended six oral board examinations. Mean pass rate was 76.6 ± 9.5%. Questions with overall highest pass rates were acute-care surgery (86.6 ± 4.8%), foregut surgery (84.6 ± 7.6%), and colorectal surgery (84 ± 8.1%). Questions with the highest fail rates were surgical oncology (31.7 ± 13.3%) and abdominal-wall surgery (28.8 ± 16.9%). Examiners' feedback scored highest the following: standardization of the exam (4.45 ± 0.63) and whether the presented cases reflect the daily work of an attending surgeon (4.35 ± 0.87). Candidates' feedback scored highest the following: did the examiners treat you in an appropriate manner (4.08 ± 1.17). In conclusion, oral exams are challenging and bear limitations, but properly constructed exams allow good evaluation of the trainees' thinking process and decision-making skills, without compromising exam's integrity and standardization.

Review of Mesenteric Ischemia in COVID-19 Patients.

Gupta A, Sharma O, Srikanth K … +3 more , Mishra R, Tandon A, Rajput D

Indian J Surg · 2023 Feb · PMID 35309713 · Full text

The new coronavirus (COVID-19) infection, first detected in Wuhan, China in 2019 has become a pandemic that has spread to nearly every country in the world. Through October 11, 2021, more than 23 billion confirmed cases... The new coronavirus (COVID-19) infection, first detected in Wuhan, China in 2019 has become a pandemic that has spread to nearly every country in the world. Through October 11, 2021, more than 23 billion confirmed cases and 4.8 million fatalities were reported globally. The bulk of individuals afflicted in India during the first wave were elderly persons. The second wave, however, resulted in more severe diseases and mortality in even younger age groups due to mutations in the wild virus. Symptoms may range from being asymptomatic to fatal acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In addition to respiratory symptoms, patients may present with gastrointestinal symptoms such as stomach pain, vomiting, loose stools, or mesenteric vein thrombosis. The frequency of patients presenting with thromboembolic symptoms has recently increased. According to certain studies, the prevalence of venous thromboembolism among hospitalized patients ranges from 9 to 25%. It was also shown that the incidence is significantly greater among critically sick patients, with a prevalence of 21-31%. Although the exact origin of thromboembolism is unknown, it is considered to be produced by several altered pathways that manifest as pulmonary embolism, myocardial infarction, stroke, limb gangrene, and acute mesenteric ischemia. Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is becoming an increasingly prevalent cause of acute surgical abdomen in both intensive care unit (ICU) and emergency room (ER) patients. Mesenteric ischemia should be evaluated in situations with unexplained stomach discomfort. In suspected situations, appropriate imaging techniques and early intervention, either non-surgical or surgical, are necessary to avert mortality. The purpose of this article is to look at the data on acute mesenteric ischemia in people infected with COVID-19.

Surgical Education and Academic Surgery:

Sharma D

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 35250195 · Full text

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Trends in the Use of Augmented Reality, Virtual Reality, and Mixed Reality in Surgical Research: a Global Bibliometric and Visualized Analysis.

Zhang J, Yu N, Wang B … +1 more , Lv X

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 35228782 · Full text

There have been many major developments in the use of augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), and mixed reality (MR) technologies in the context of global surgical research, yet few reports on the trends in this fi... There have been many major developments in the use of augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), and mixed reality (MR) technologies in the context of global surgical research, yet few reports on the trends in this field have been published to date. This study was therefore designed to explore these worldwide trends in this clinically important field. Relevant studies published from 1 January 2009 through 13 October 2020 were retrieved from the Science Citation Index-Expanded (SCI-E) tool of the Web of Science database. Bibliometric techniques were then used to analyze the resultant data, with visual bibliographic coupling, co-authorship, co-citation, co-occurrence, and publication trend analyses subsequently being conducted with GraphPad Prism 8 and with the visualization of similarities (VOS) software tool. There is no patient and public involved. In total, 6221 relevant studies were incorporated into this analysis. At a high level, clear global annual increases in the number of publications in this field were observed. The USA made the greatest contributions to this field over the studied period, with the highest H-index value, the most citations, and the greatest total link strength for analyzed publications. The country with the highest number of average citations per publication was Scotland. The journal contributed the greatest number of publications in this field. The University of London was the institution that produced the greatest volume of research in this field. Overall, studies could be broadly classified into five clusters: Neurological Research, Surgical Techniques, Technological Products, Rehabilitative Medicine, and Clinical Therapy. The trends detected in the present analysis suggest that the number of global publications pertaining to the use of AR, VR, and MR techniques in surgical research is likely to increase in the coming years. Particular attention should be paid to emerging trends in related fields including MR, extended reality, head-mounted displays, navigation, and holographic images.

Post-decolonisation: Global Health and Global Surgery's Coming of Age.

Chawla B, Lindert J, Sharma D

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 35221585 · Full text

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Emerging Trend to Have Locally Advanced Malignancies at Initial Presentation: Ignorance, Self-Neglect, or Pandemic Anxiety?

Jayasundara J

Indian J Surg · 2023 Feb · PMID 35194348 · Full text

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High Altitude-Induced Testicular Infarct: a Rare Occupational Hazard.

Deskit P, Badwal M, Wangchuk PT

Indian J Surg · 2022 Dec · PMID 35125751 · Full text

Visit to high altitude with its hypoxic hypobaric environment poses various physiological and biochemical challenges to a human body. If the body is not able to cope up to this changed environment, it leads to various ma... Visit to high altitude with its hypoxic hypobaric environment poses various physiological and biochemical challenges to a human body. If the body is not able to cope up to this changed environment, it leads to various maladies of high altitude like high altitude cerebral oedema, high altitude pulmonary oedema and spontaneous vascular thrombosis. There are reports of high altitude-induced deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, mesenteric ischemia etc. We report a unique case of high altitude-induced testicular infarct in a previously healthy individual after a brief stay at the high-altitude region Ladakh.

Complications and Outcomes of Surgical Patients Operated During COVID 19: a Single Centre Study.

Verma S, Garg P, Gera M … +2 more , Agarwal S, Verma A

Indian J Surg · 2022 Dec · PMID 35125750 · Full text

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Through-Knee Amputation-Time to Recall the Neglected Technique.

Rangarajan A, K G B

Indian J Surg · 2022 Dec · PMID 35125749 · Full text

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The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: a Global Commitment to Surgical Education.

Bhatt J, Biyani CS, Rane A … +1 more , McKirdy M

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 35095225 · Full text

The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow is a community of health professionals working together to develop and improve patient care. The College is dedicated to supporting its members through education, t... The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow is a community of health professionals working together to develop and improve patient care. The College is dedicated to supporting its members through education, training and continuing professional development. Furthermore, the College is committed to good global citizenship and has supported Fellows, Members and staff in their volunteering efforts.

Circumferential Scar on Wrist of Children: an Explicit Warning Sign of Rubber Band Syndrome.

Kumar PS, Gupta A, Singh RJIT

Indian J Surg · 2022 Dec · PMID 35095224 · Full text

"Common habits develop into rare syndromes." This idiom holds true when one such colorful rubber band put on the wrist of a child gets forgotten, burrows through the skin, and presents with a swollen paralyzed hand with... "Common habits develop into rare syndromes." This idiom holds true when one such colorful rubber band put on the wrist of a child gets forgotten, burrows through the skin, and presents with a swollen paralyzed hand with a circumferential scar on the wrist. We present two cases of rubber band syndrome (Dhaga syndrome) who presented with painful, swollen, complete claw hand. Until 2019, only 15 cases were reported with predominance of Indian children. MRI is the gold standard investigation where a high degree of clinical suspicion is diagnostic. Surgical exploration with removal of the constricting band and excision of neuroma in continuity of ulnar and median nerves for preventing neurological deficit and tenolysis of tendons depending on the depth of the band is unambiguous treatment of choice. Where history is not forthcoming, a circumferential scar on the wrist of a child demands exploration.

Postgraduate Surgical Education in Bhutan.

Dargay S, Tenzin T, Tenzin K

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 34848934 · Full text

Postgraduate medical education in Bhutan began in 2014 which marked a new era in the medical education in the country. From a mere handful of surgeons in 2003 to the numbers today, general surgical services have come a l... Postgraduate medical education in Bhutan began in 2014 which marked a new era in the medical education in the country. From a mere handful of surgeons in 2003 to the numbers today, general surgical services have come a long way in Bhutan. Medical education has progressed tremendously to adoption of modern medical educational methods promoting objectivity in all aspects. This article dwells with the historical perspective as well as the state of the general surgical education and the services in Bhutan. It is the first of its kind of article to be written.

Retroperitoneal Bronchogenic Cyst Mimicking a Pancreatic Cystic Lesion with Extremely High Level of Intralesional Fluid CA-19.9 Antigen: Benign in Disguise.

Clementino-Filho J, Surjan RCT, Taglieri E … +1 more , Ardengh JC

Indian J Surg · 2022 Aug · PMID 34848933 · Full text

Bronchogenic cysts are congenital benign tumors resulting from abnormal budding of the primitive foregut. Usually presented on the posterior mediastinum, its presence on the retroperitoneum is extremely rare. We present... Bronchogenic cysts are congenital benign tumors resulting from abnormal budding of the primitive foregut. Usually presented on the posterior mediastinum, its presence on the retroperitoneum is extremely rare. We present an asymptomatic lady patient with a retroperitoneal cystic lesion that was submitted to endoscopic ultrasound-guided biopsies and intracystic fluid aspiration with histology excluding malignance despite intracystic fluid biochemical analysis that disclosed extremely high carbohydrate antigen 19-9. Definite diagnosis of bronchogenic cyst was only possible after complete surgical resection of the lesion. Furthermore, we discuss the use of this antigen as a tumor marker in this situation and its relevance to the preoperative diagnosis of such lesions.

The Basics of Research Article Licensing.

Yelamanchi R, Gupta N, Goswami B … +1 more , Durga CK

Indian J Surg · 2022 Apr · PMID 34840445 · Full text

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Buccal Fat Pad Injury-Delayed Presentation.

Sinha A, Lakshmanan S, Singhal M … +1 more , Sagar S

Indian J Surg · 2022 Oct · PMID 34690459 · Full text

COVID-19 pandemic has been a major challenge for health care services all around the world. With increasing COVID-19 cases and lockdown enforcement, there has been a significant delay in the presentation of patients in t... COVID-19 pandemic has been a major challenge for health care services all around the world. With increasing COVID-19 cases and lockdown enforcement, there has been a significant delay in the presentation of patients in the emergency department; also the fear in people of contracting COVID-19 from the hospital is an additional factor. The following case report describes such an incidence of delay in presentation of buccal fat pad injury patient to the emergency department.

Multidisciplinary Management of COVID-Associated Mucormycosis Syndemic in India.

Mehta R, Nagarkar NM, Jindal A … +12 more , Rao KN, Nidhin SB, Arora RD, Sharma A, Wankhede A, Satpute S, Chakravarty S, Agrawal NK, Pranita, Kannauje P, Behera A, Thangaraju P

Indian J Surg · 2022 Oct · PMID 34642558 · Full text

UNLABELLED: The study aimed to determine clinical presentation, contributing factors, medical and surgical management, and outcome of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-associated mucormycosis (CAM). A cro... UNLABELLED: The study aimed to determine clinical presentation, contributing factors, medical and surgical management, and outcome of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-associated mucormycosis (CAM). A cross-sectional, single-center study was conducted on patients receiving multidisciplinary treatment for mucormycosis following the second wave of COVID-19 pandemic from April to June 2021 in India. Clinicoepidemiological factors were analyzed, 30-day overall survival and disease-specific survival were determined, and -test was used to determine the statistical significance. A total of 215 patients were included in the study, the cases were stratified into sino-nasal 95 (44.2%), sino-naso-orbital 32 (14.9%), sino-naso-palatal 55 (25.6%), sino-naso-cerebral 12 (5.6%), sino-naso-orbito-cerebral 16 (7.4%), and sino-naso-orbito-palato-cerebral 5 (2.3%) based on their presentation. A multidisciplinary team treated patients by surgical wound debridement and medical therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics and amphotericin B. Across all disease stages, cumulative 30-day disease-specific survival is 94% ( < 0.001, intergroup comparison, Breslow (generalized Wilcoxon) CI 95%) and overall 30-day survival is 87.9% ( < 0.001, intergroup comparison, Breslow (generalized Wilcoxon) CI 95%) (censored). Early identification, triaging, and proper multidisciplinary team management with systemic antifungals, surgical debridement, and control of comorbidities lead to desirable outcomes in COVID-associated mucormycosis. The patients with intracranial involvement have a higher chance of mortality compared to the other group. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12262-021-03134-0.
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