domingo, 8 de julio de 2012

Vídeos médicos dr Edgar Estrada


hace 12 horas


Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 3

Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 3
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 12 horas

Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 2

Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 2
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 13 horas

Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 1

Ortopedia Pediátrica y Medicina Integrativa - PARTE 1
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 3 semanas
hace 3 semanas




hace 1 año

Envejecimiento y sistema músculo esquelético - DR. edgar estrada

Envejecimiento y sistema músculo esquelético - DR. edgar estrada
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 1 año

PARTE 3 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada

PARTE 3 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 1 año

PARTE 2 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada

PARTE 2 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 1 año

PARTE 1 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada

PARTE 1 - VI encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.
hace 1 año

VI -Encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada

VI -Encuentro Latinoamericano de cirujanos de cadera y rodilla, Doctor edgar estrada
doctoredgarestrada doctoredgarestrada ha subido vídeos.

Medicina de rehabilitación. Alerta


09:08 am SLP Realiza el IMSS hasta 10 mil sesiones de ...
Pulso de San Luis
Cerca de 120 mil sesiones de terapia física y ocupacional se realizan al año en el Hospital General 50, derivadas de pacientes que se sometieron a una cirugía, accidente o enfermedad, indicó la jefa de Medicina y Rehabilitación Física, Magaly Campos ...
Ver todos los artículos sobre este tema »
Revelan que lumbalgia afecta a 80% de la población del país
Mi Morelia.com
La directora de la Unidad de Medicina Física y Rehabilitación número 1 del IMSS, Lucía Magdalena Allen Hermosillo, invitó a los derechohabientes a no pasar por alto cualquier molestia de espalda y atenderse con su médico en la Unidad de Medicina...
Ver todos los artículos sobre este tema »

sábado, 7 de julio de 2012

Más sobre emesis posoperatoria


Valoración de la eficiencia de la profilaxis antiemética farmacológica en diferentes grupos de riesgo tras anestesia general en la población quirúrgica de Cataluña 
 V. Mazoa, P. Vila, S. Sabatéb, C. Orregoc y J. Caneta , en nombre del Grupo PONVICAT
Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim. 2012;59(5):244-253
Resumen
Objetivo: Valorar la eficiencia de la profilaxis antiemetica farmacológica en pacientes sometidos a una intervención quirúrgica, bajo anestesia general, en diferentes grupos de riesgo de nauseas y vómitos postoperatorios (NVPO). Material y métodos: Se diseño un estudio multicéntrico aleatorio prospectivo observacional de cohortes. Se estudiaron 1.239 pacientes procedentes de 26 hospitales sometidos a cirugía programada con anestesia general. Fueron registradas las características poblacionales, los factores de riesgo de NVPO, la técnica anestésica, el tipo de cirugía, la duración, la fluidoterapia, la profilaxis antiemetica administrada y la incidencia de NVPO en las primeras 24 h. Se realizo un análisis estratificado (riesgo bajo, moderado y alto) encaminado a evaluar la asociación entre profilaxis y NVPO mediante un modelo de regresión logística ajustado por propensity score. Posteriormente, se calculo en cada uno de los estratos el número de pacientes que es necesario tratar (NNT), para evitar un episodio de NVPO. Resultados: La incidencia de NVPO en el estrato de bajo riesgo fue del 21,6% sin profilaxis y del 8,6% con profilaxis, en el de riesgo moderado fue del 31,3% frente al 17,7% y en el de alto riesgo del 46,5% frente al 32,7%. Hubo un efecto protector de la profilaxis de forma significativa en los 3 estratos (odds ratio entre pacientes tratados y no tratados) y el NNT (IC del 95%) fue de 7 (5-11) en el estrato de bajo riesgo, 7 (5-13) en el de riesgo moderado y 6 (4-16) en el de riesgo elevado. Conclusiones: La eficiencia de la profilaxis antiemetica farmacológica en pacientes sometidos a cirugía con anestesia general fue similar en todos los grupos de riesgo. La privación de profilaxis antiemetica en los pacientes de bajo riesgo puede no estar justificada por criterios de coste-efectividad. Las futuras guías clínicas para la mejora de la calidad asistencial, de los pacientes intervenidos con anestesia general deberán considerar la conveniencia de una
profilaxis universal de las NVPO.
http://apps.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_
articulo=90142543&pident_usuario=
0&pcontactid=&pident_revista=344&ty=64&accion=L&origen=elsevier&web
=www.elsevier.es&lan=
es&fichero=344v59n05a90142543pdf001.pdf

 

 
 

Atentamente
Anestesiología y Medicina del Dolor

La palabra del día. Reloj

http://www.elcastellano.org/libro/resenas/

 
reloj
Antigua palabra proveniente del latín horologium y esta del griegohôrologion —compuesta por hôra 'hora'+ legion 'indicar', 'anunciar'—, que se extendió a varias lenguas latinas: horloge, en francés; relógio, en portugués;orologio, en italiano; rellotge, en catalán. En la forma española hay aféresis deho- y apofonía en ro, que cambia a re, así como apócope de los tres fonemas finales del latín. Entre los latinos se empleaba generalmente con la denotación de 'reloj de sol', pero Vitruvio y Casiodoro llamaron horologium aquatile'reloj de agua' a la clepsidra. Corominas asegura que la palabra arribó al castellano a partir del catalán, pasando inicialmente por reloje y afirma que se llegó a la forma actual a partir del plural relojes.
Recordemos que en Andalucía y en muchas regiones de América es frecuente oír reló.
Al parecer, el primer reloj público con agujas, tal como los de hoy, se instaló en 1326 en Alemania, el segundo, en 1344 en Padua, el tercero, de fabricación alemana, se ubicó en París en 1370; el cuarto fue el de la catedral de Barcelona, en 1393 y el quinto, el de Sevilla, en 1396. Como vemos, las nuevas tecnologías se difundían a fines de la Edad Media algo más lentamente que hoy. 

Before Birth, Dad’s ID


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/20/health/paternity-blood-tests-that-work-early-in-a-pregnancy.html?pagewanted=2&src=recg

Before Birth, Dad’s ID

Steve Ruark for The New York Times
Dr. Ravinder Dhallan, founder of Ravgen, which has developed a noninvasive prenatal DNA paternity test.

Enlarge This Image
It is an uncomfortable question that, in today’s world, is often asked by expectant mothers who had more than one male partner at the time they became pregnant. Who is the father?
Steve Ruark for The New York Times
A Ravgen researcher at the company’s labs in Columbia, Md., last month. It charges $950 to $1,650 for its paternity test.

With more than half of births to women under 30 now out of wedlock, it is a question that may arise more often.
Now blood tests are becoming available that can determine paternity as early as the eighth or ninth week ofpregnancy, without an invasive procedure that could cause amiscarriage.
Besides relieving anxiety, the test results might allow women to terminate a pregnancy if the preferred man is not the father — or to continue it if he is.
Men who clearly know they are the father might be more willing to support the woman financially and emotionally during the pregnancy, which some studies suggest might lead to healthier babies.
And if the tests gain legal acceptance, some lawyers say, women and state governments might one day pursue child support payments without having to wait until the birth. Under current law, “until and unless the pregnancy produces a child, any costs associated with it are regarded as the woman’s personal problem,” said Shari Motro, a law professor at the University of Richmond.
The testing itself, however, can be awkward because it requires a blood sample from at least one of the possible fathers.
Courtney Herndon, after breaking up with her boyfriend, had a brief relationship with a man she regarded more as a friend. She found herself pregnant at age 19, without knowing which man was the father.
The friend also wanted to know, so he agreed to the testing. He turned out to be the father, and the two agreed on child support even before the baby was born.
“I got the test done and was able to go on with my life,” said Ms. Herndon, who lives in Fort Polk, La.
Estimates of the extent of paternal uncertainty vary.
Studies have found a discrepancy rate — when the presumed father is not the biological father — of anywhere from 0.8 percent to 30 percent, with the median being 3.7 percent, according to one review of such studies. Another study found that about 9 percent of birth certificates in Florida, even excluding births to teenage mothers, did not list the full names of the father, though it was not clear how much of this was related to uncertainty. Infant mortality was higher in those cases than if the father’s name was on the birth certificate.
It has already been possible to determine paternity during pregnancy using amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling, the same medical procedures used to test a fetus for Down syndrome. But those procedures are invasive and carry a small risk of inducing a miscarriage, so they are rarely used for paternity testing.
By contrast, the new tests require only blood samples from the pregnant woman and the potential father. And doctors generally do not have to be involved.
That could vastly expand testing, said Sara Katsanis of Duke University’s Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy. She is planning a study with one of the testing companies to see if prenatal paternity testing can reduce a pregnant woman’s stress.
Some noninvasive paternity tests have been offered over the Internet for about a decade, and there have been various complaints about inaccurate or even fraudulent results.
But experts say the technology has advanced to the point that such testing can now be done reliably. A brief paper describing one such test, developed by a company called Ravgen, was published recently in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine.
“I have no doubt that these tests will work clinically,” said Dr. Mark I. Evans, a professor at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and director of Comprehensive Genetics, a medical practice in New York that specializes in prenatal testing.
The tests analyze fragments of DNA from the fetus that are present in the mother’s blood in tiny amounts. The same approach is now also being used to noninvasively determine the gender of the fetus or whether it has Down syndrome. And researchers recently demonstrated that they could even determine a fetus’s entire genome this way.
Ravgen, a small company in Columbia, Md., has been offering its test on a limited basis and charges $950 to $1,650, depending on the circumstances, said Dr. Ravinder Dhallan, the chief executive.
Another test was developed by a company in Silicon Valley called Natera, and is marketed by DNA Diagnostics Center, a leading provider of conventional paternity tests. Thousands of the prenatal tests have been ordered since going on sale last August, executives say. The price is $1,775, compared with around $500 for a conventional postbirth paternity test.
Neither test has received a certification for accuracy that is necessary for use in child custody cases, though Natera has applied. The certifying organization, the AABB, is seriously considering whether it should certify prenatal tests, said Eduardo Nunes, senior director for policy, standards and global development at the organization, formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks.
Still, some experts urge caution. Natera has not yet published any data about its test in peer-reviewed journals. Ravgen’s paper in The New England Journal of Medicine discussed just 30 samples. (The test correctly distinguished the father from a randomly chosen man in all 30 cases.)
Steve Ruark for The New York Times
Xin Guo, a Ravgen reseacher. The company’s test was used in a murder investigation, though evidence was not introduced at trial.

The tests could generate controversy if they led to more abortions. However, Matthew Rabinowitz, chief executive of Natera, said that if a woman were intent on terminating a pregnancy based on paternity, she could still get an invasive test. And Dr. Dhallan of Ravgen said the test could persuade women who learned they were pregnant after a rape to keep the baby if they learned the rapist was not the father.
Ravgen’s test has been used in a murder case. In 2008, Michael Roseboro, a funeral home director in Lancaster County, Pa., was accused of killing his wife, Jan, whose body was found in the family swimming pool.
To establish a motive, prosecutors wanted to prove that Mr. Roseboro was having an affair with another woman, who was pregnant. But they did not want to wait until the baby was born.
“We became concerned that she might have an abortion, or something would happen and we’d never be able to determine whose child it was,” said Craig Stedman, the district attorney in Lancaster County.
The evidence from the prenatal test was not introduced at trial, however, because Mr. Roseboro eventually conceded that he was the father. Mr. Roseboro, who still proclaims his innocence in his wife’s death, was sentenced to life in prison.
It is possible that early testing could mean more paternal support for a pregnant woman.
One Seattle-area woman said that when she was pregnant, with two possible fathers, “Neither one really wanted to be involved and then find out the baby wasn’t theirs later.”
When the prenatal test showed that the father was her former boyfriend, he attended the delivery and supported the child. The woman spoke on the condition of anonymity, explaining, “I’m not proud of not knowing who my son’s father was.”
In some cases DNA is not destiny. Ms. Herndon’s test showed that the baby was not her ex-boyfriend’s. But they got back together and married, and he accepted the child, who is now 16 months old.
“We view our daughter as ours, mine and my husband’s,” Ms. Herndon said. The biological father sends gifts and pays child support.