sábado, 19 de febrero de 2011


Study of Breast Biopsies Finds Surgery Used Too Extensively

Too many women with abnormal mammograms or other breast problems are undergoing surgical biopsies when they should be having needle biopsies, which are safer, less invasive and cheaper, new research shows.
Kelly Jordan for The New York Times
A study by Dr. Stephen R. Grobmyer, the director of the breast cancer program at the University of Florida in Gainesville, has found that too many surgical biopsies are being performed.

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study in Florida found that 30 percent of the breast biopsies there from 2003 to 2008 were surgical. The rate should be 10 percent or less, according to medical guidelines.
The figures in the rest of the country are likely to be similar to Florida’s, researchers say, which would translate to more than 300,000 women a year having unnecessary surgery, at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. Many of these women do not even have cancer: about 80 percent of breast biopsies are benign. For women who do have cancer, a surgical biopsy means two operations instead of one, and may make the cancer surgery more difficult than it would have been if a needle biopsy had been done.
Dr. Stephen R. Grobmyer, the senior author of the Florida study, said he and his colleagues started their research because they kept seeing patients referred from otherhospitals who had undergone surgical biopsies (also called open biopsies) when a needle should have been used.
“After a while you keep seeing this, you say something’s going on here,” said Dr. Grobmyer, who is director of the breast cancer program at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
The reason for the overuse of open biopsies is not known. Researchers say the problem may occur because not all doctors keep up with medical advances and guidelines. But they also say that some surgeons keep doing open biopsies because needle biopsies are usually performed by radiologists. The surgeon would have to refer the patient to a radiologist, and lose the biopsy fee.
A surgical biopsy requires an inchlong incision, stitches and sometimes sedation or general anesthesia. It leaves a scar. A needle biopsy requires only numbing with a local anesthetic, uses a tiny incision and no stitches and carries less risk of infection and scarring.
If the abnormality in the breast is too small to be felt and has been detected by a mammogram or other imaging method, the needle biopsy must also be guided by imaging — mammography, ultrasound or M.R.I. — and will often have to be performed by a radiologist. If a lump can be felt, imaging is not needed to guide the needle, and a surgeon can perform it.
“Surgeons really have to let go of the patient when they have an image abnormality,” said Dr. I. Michael Leitman, the chief of general surgery at Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan. “They are giving away a potential surgery. But the standards require it. And I’m a surgeon.”
Dr. Grobmyer’s study, published by The American Journal of Surgery, is based on 172,342 biopsies entered into a state database in Florida. It is the largest study of open biopsy rates in the United States, and the first to include patients with and without cancer.
About 1.6 million breast biopsies a year are performed in the United States. But in 2010, only about 261,000 found cancer (207,000 women had invasive breast cancer, and another 54,000 had a condition called ductal carcinoma in situ, in which cancer cells have not invaded the surrounding tissue).
Hospitals charge $5,000 to $6,000 for a needle biopsy, and double that for an open biopsy, according to Dr. Grobmyer’s article. Doctors’ fees for an open biopsy range from $1,500 to $2,500, he said, and $750 to $1,500 for a needle biopsy.
A surgeon who was not part of Dr. Grobmyer’s study said she often encountered patients referred from other hospitals whose open biopsies should have been done with a needle.
“I see it all the time,” said the surgeon, Dr. Elisa R. Port, the chief of breast surgery atMount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan. “People are causing harm and should be held accountable.”
Dr. Melvin J. Silverstein, a breast cancer surgeon at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach, Calif., and a clinical professor of surgery at the University of Southern California, said it was “outrageous” that 30 percent of breast biopsies were done by surgery.
He said some of the unnecessary procedures were being performed by surgeons who did not want to lose biopsy fees by sending patients to a radiologist.
“I hate to even say that,” Dr. Silverstein said. “But I don’t know how else to explain these numbers.”
study at Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan (Dr. Leitman was an author), published in 2009, found that the rate of open breast biopsies in 2007 varied with the type of surgeon.
Breast surgeons employed by the hospital and involved in teaching had a 10 percent rate. Breast surgeons in private practice who operated at Beth Israel had a 35 percent rate. Among general surgeons, who do not specialize in breast surgery (some who were on staff at the hospital and some who were not), the rate was 37 percent. All the doctors earn biopsy fees, so they all had the same incentive.
The lead author of the study, Dr. Susan K. Boolbol, chief of breast surgery at Beth Israel, said the difference could be explained, in part, by training. She said the academic breast surgeons on the hospital staff were more likely than the others to keep up with new developments in the field and to work closely with radiologists. As for the idea that the motivation was money, she said, “A huge part of me doesn’t want to believe it’s true.”
She said that when she asked surgeons in the study why they were doing open biopsies, many said patients wanted them. “My comeback was, ‘Do you think you had an inherent bias in the way you explained it?’ ” In the past seven years, she said she had only one patient choose an open biopsy over a needle biopsy.
Dr. Boolbol says some patients fear that sticking a needle into a cancer will cause it to spread, and she spends a lot of time explaining that it is not true. She said that open biopsy rates declined among surgeons at Beth Israel who were told about her study’s findings, but newcomers still tended to have higher rates.
“This is a constant education process for surgeons,” she said.
One way for hospitals to stop excess open biopsies is to ban them, Dr. Silverstein said, unless they are truly necessary, as in uncommon cases in which a needle cannot reach the spot.
“We made a rule,” he said. “If it can be done with a needle, it has to be. We embarrass you if you do an open biopsy. We bring you before a tumor board to explain.”
Dr. Silverstein says that when he lectures and asks how many surgeons in the audience perform open biopsies, no hands go up. “Nobody will admit it,” he said.
He said there is more to be gained by taking his message straight to the patients. He and other doctors say that any woman who is told that she needs a surgical biopsy should ask why, and consider a second opinion.
“Maybe we have to get patients to say, ‘This guy took a big chunk out of me and I didn’t even have cancer, and now I’m deformed,’ ” Dr. Silverstein said. “Who just overthrew Mubarak? The people. This is exactly the same thing.”

Diagnosis and Management of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis


Diagnosis and Management of Cerebral Venous Thrombosis
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Google será pronto un buscador sociable: aumenta la importancia de compartir


Posted: 18 Feb 2011 08:23 AM PST
Me ha parecido tremendamente importante el último movimiento de Google, su nueva jugada en la partida por el grafo social, decisivo en la era social-web para todo tipo de mercados durante los próximos tiempos.
Aparece en un momento clave, semanas después de que diversas noticias en medios internacionales pongan en duda la calidad de los resultados del gigante, la creciente presencia de resultados que son realmente spam.
La confianza social, cómo medirla o crear un sustituto creíble de la misma en versión virtual, es uno de los temas más importantes de la Internet de hoy.  Dicho en otras palabras, ante la sobreinformación que muchos/as relatan, retorna la importancia de la vieja pregunta: ¿De qué o de quién me puedo fiar (en la red)?
Es por ello que Google, rey en las búsquedas, lleva tiempo trabajando en la incorporación de lo social, probando características, mecanismos de medida de la confianza a sus resultados. Se trataba de experimentos a los que no daba mayor importancia,que relegaba a unas líneas al final de los resultados de búsqueda hasta hace poco pero que hoy, ante una web 2.0 que creo que podemos considerar ya madura, sitúa en primera línea.
Se inicia así, con esta novedad, la que otras veces hemos denominado web contextual social, la era de la confianza sin intermediarios (los mass media lo han sido durante años), el retorno a la definición de las verdades desde lo social, ya globalizado.Hemos denominado antes “redes sociables” a las que sirven de instrumentos a la revolución social. Ahora son las búsquedas las que también pueden teñir de sociabilidad la información.
La idea, comentan desde Google, además de dar mayor cobertura a la web social, es dotar de mayor control sobre los resultados para los usuarios. Y me parece muy acertada…
Hablaba ayer en unas charlas de cómo de urgente y grave es el tema de las competencias digitales, de cómo cuesta, en escuelas, para alumnos, para ciudadanos en general, saber extraer el grano de la paja, conocer cuáles son los criterios más objetivos en la actualidad para distinguir lo relevante de lo menos relevante en la web. Con el movimiento que os explico hoy, Google facilita ese tipo de competencias, añade marcas sociales a la información, naturaliza la web o la asimila a lo que ya hacemos fuera de ella: guiarnos según criterios de confianza.
¿Por qué este resultado es mejor que otro? Porque link  “nombre del contacto, al que sabemos experto en el tema”, lo compartió en Twitter, Flickr, Quora, etc… (En el caso de Facebook, siendo un entorno cerrado, no es posible)

Otro dato interesante es que Google reconoce, que tiene en cuenta signos “sociales”, además de otros tradicionales en sus resultados, dando más importancia a lo más valorado en las redes sociales a las que tiene acceso.
Es importante, a la luz de este movimiento, participar como expertos en la web social, porque además de estar aumentando nuestra red de contactos profesionales, estaremos influyendo de forma natural y relevante en los resultados de Google.
Resulta curiosa  también la coherencia del tema con las tendencias actuales de uso de la web, cuando podemos decir queparticipación es tanto crear como compartir.
Veíamos, en este sentido, hace unos meses, cómo se estancaba la producción de contenidos, cómo aumentaba la importancia de los conversadores, cómo se generalizaba el fenómeno “compartir”: Se comparten 100 millones de enlaces diarios en público (Google puede leer, gracias a un acuerdo con Twitter, los resultados allí, pero no enFacebook y otros entornos más cerrados).
No se trata, finalmente, de nada nuevo (en Techcrunch analizan Servicios especializados como Greplin,  me contaban hace un tiempo sobre Glass, como ejemplos). La idea de añadir una capa social, un filtro de confianza para lo que exploramos en la web es antigua ya, pero no su generalización. De eso, creo, si logran integrar con la maestría que les caracteriza, el matiz social a su interface, se encargará Google.
En fin… los cambios estarán disponibles, en inglés, durante la próxima semana,  a ver qué tal…

Ethnic Differences Emerge in Plastic


Ethnic Differences Emerge in Plastic Surgery


Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
In Flushing, Queens, Dr. Steve Lee sees Asian patients requesting double-eyelid surgeries.


At a plastic surgery clinic in Upper Manhattan that caters to Dominicans, one of the most popular procedures is an operation to lift women’s buttocks, because — as the doctor explains — “they all like the curve.”
Video
Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times
An image showing different types of double-eyelid surgeries.


In Flushing, Queens, surgeons have their attention trained a few feet higher, on upturned noses that their Chinese patients want flipped down. Russian women in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, are having their breasts enlarged, while Koreans in Chinatown are having jaw lines slimmed.
As the demand for surgical enhancement explodes around the world, New York has developed a host of niche markets that allow the city’s many immigrants to get tucks and tweaks that are carefully tailored to their cultural preferences and ideals of beauty. Just as they can find Lebanese grape leaves or bowls of Vietnamese pho that taste of home, immigrants can locate surgeons able to recreate the cleavage of Thalía, the Mexican singer, or the bright eyes of Lee Hyori, the Korean pop star.
They can also find a growing number of doctors offering layaway plans to help them afford operations. If the price is still too high, illegal surgery by unlicensed practitioners is available in many neighborhoods.
As these specialized clinics reshape Asian eyelids and Latina silhouettes, they provide a pore-level perspective on the aspirations and insecurities of immigrants in 21st-century New York — a mosaic portrait buffed with Botox.
“When a patient comes in from a certain ethnic background and of a certain age, we know what they’re going to be looking for,” said Dr. Kaveh Alizadeh, the president of Long Island Plastic Surgical Group, which has three clinics in the city. “We are sort of amateur sociologists.”
Dr. Alizadeh, himself an immigrant from Iran, admits that the results can seem less like science than like stereotyping. Still, he and other doctors who work in ethnic communities say they can scan their appointment books and spot unmistakable trends: Many Egyptians are getting face lifts. Many Italians are reshaping their knees. Dr. Alizadeh says his fellow Iranians favor nose jobs.
And there is no questioning the surge in demand in immigrant neighborhoods, where Mandarin and Arabic are spoken in the operating room and patients range in age “from 18 to 80,” as one doctor put it.
About 750,000 Asians in the United States underwent cosmetic procedures, from surgery to less invasive work like Botox injections, in 2009 — roughly 5 percent of the Asian population, and more than double the number in 2000, according to projections by theAmerican Society of Plastic Surgeons. Among Latinos, the number was about 1.4 million, nearly 3 percent of that population and a threefold increase from nine years earlier. In 2009, about 4 percent of whites had cosmetic work done.
In New York, new clinics have opened in immigrant enclaves, and existing practices have expanded to keep up with demand.
The extreme makeover is, in many ways, a tradition among the city’s immigrants. A century ago, in the early days of cosmetic surgery, European Jews underwent nose jobs and Irish immigrants had their ears pinned back in attempts to look “more American,” said Victoria Pitts-Taylor, a professor of sociology at Queens College who has written about popular attitudes toward plastic surgery.
“The bulk of those operations were targeted at assimilation issues,” Ms. Pitts-Taylor said.
Today, the motivations appear as varied and complex as the procedures. Rather than striving to fit in to their new country, many immigrants reshape themselves to their home culture’s trends and tastes.
“My patients are proud of looking Hispanic,” said Dr. Jeffrey S. Yager, who speaks Spanish and has tripled the size of his office since opening it in 1997 in Washington Heights, a largely Dominican neighborhood in Manhattan. “I don’t get the patients who want to obscure their ethnicity.”
While clinics that advertise in the local Russian, Spanish and Chinese media have much in common with one another and with those serving nonimmigrants — everyone wants a flat stomach and a smooth forehead — their core businesses are as different as the languages spoken by their patients.
Dr. Holly J. Berns, an anesthesiologist, feels as if she is on a seesaw when she travels from Dr. Yager’s office to suburban clinics. On Long Island, she said, “they’re doing everything they can to get the fat taken out of their buttocks.” In Washington Heights, “it’s the opposite — they just want their rear ends enlarged and rounded.”
Italia Vigniero, 27, a Dominican patient of Dr. Yager’s, received breast implants in 2008 and is considering a buttocks lift to attain, as she called it, “the silhouette of a woman.”
“We Latinas define ourselves with our bodies,” she said. “We always have curves.”

“My personality doesn’t go with small breasts,” she added. Using the words “pecho” and “personalidad” — Spanish for “breast” and “personality” — she coined a term that could serve as Dr. Yager’s motto: “Now, I’m a person with a lot of ‘pechonalidad!’ ”


In Flushing, home to a vibrant Asian community with many recent immigrants, Dr. Steve Lee, a native of Taiwan, performs some procedures that are rarely, if ever, done in Dr. Yager’s clinic. Some Chinese, he said, believe that prominent earlobes are auspicious, so Dr. Lee was not surprised when a male client asked him to inject a cosmetic filler into his earlobes to make them longer.
“The bigger the earlobes, the more prosperous you are,” said Dr. Jerry W. Chang, another plastic surgeon in Flushing who understood the impulse.
Other patients request that an upturned nose be turned “all the way down,” in keeping with a traditional belief that prominent nostrils allow fortune to spill out, Dr. Lee said.
Perhaps the most sought-after procedure among Asians is “double-eyelid surgery,” which creates a crease in the eyelid that can make the eye look rounder. Some people criticize the operation, which is hugely popular in many Asian countries, as a throwback to medical procedures meant to obscure ethnic features.
“You want to be part of the acceptable culture and the acceptable ethnicity, so you want to look more Westernized,” said Margaret M. Chin, a professor of sociology at Hunter College who specializes in Asian immigrant culture. “I feel sad that they feel like they have to do this.”
During consultations before surgery, Dr. Lee shows patients a slide show of a white woman with a natural crease in her eyelids and Asian women without it. He discusses the techniques — a stitch here, a cut there — that can bridge the anatomical differences. But he, like several other Asian plastic surgeons, said the procedure had little to do with assimilation.
“One of the traits of beauty is to have large eyes,” Dr. Lee said, “and to get that effect you have to have the double eyelids.”
For all the cultural differences, New York plastic surgeons acknowledge that ethnic neighborhoods are not islands. American pop culture, they say, has strongly influenced how immigrants and their children believe they should look, and reality television shows like “Bridalplasty” have encouraged surgical solutions.
In Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, Dr. Elena Ocher, a Russian immigrant, attributes the wave of young Russian women requesting breast implants — by far her clinic’s most popular procedure among that group — to American culture, not Russian. “The new generations of Russians are very American, and there’s something in America about large breasts,” she said. “What is this fixation?”
Maya Bronfman, 30, an accountant from Moldova, said many of her Russian friends had undergone procedures, but she shrugged off notions of American beauty ideals. “Everyone in New York is some sort of an immigrant,” she said. “They’re just doing it to feel good.”
Dr. Ocher said that about 90 percent of her Russian patients seek operations on the body. But among her Arab clients, the vast majority want surgery on the face. “Arab people never completely expose any body parts,” she explained.
Iranian and Italian women sign up for an array of procedures, from the face to the feet, Dr. Ocher said. She has noticed that Italians tend to care more about their knees.
“The knees should look young,” she said. “Italian girls wear a lot of miniskirts.”

For Autistic Children, a School’s Coffee Shop Imparts Skills While Raising Money


For Autistic Children, a School’s Coffee Shop Imparts Skills While Raising Money

EDISON, N.J. — The coffee shop at Woodrow Wilson Middle School is serious about service with a smile. When Edward Lin, a seventh grader, stared silently at his feet the other day instead of greeting a customer, his teacher prodded him.
Aaron Houston for The New York Times
Two students, Jose Villar, left, and Collins Darkwa, sell coffee and pastries from the shop at Woodrow Wilson Middle School.
“How can I help you?” the boy mumbled, still staring at his feet.
His teacher prodded him again. Edward looked up. Then he wrote out the customer’s order and, finally, broke into a smile, braces and all.
Edward is in a special class for children with autism or multiple learning disabilities that is charged with running the coffee shop every Friday morning. Setting up in the home economics room, Edward and 11 classmates have rung up more than $1,000 in sales of coffee, tea, doughnuts, cookies and cupcakes to the school’s staff since October. On request, they deliver to classrooms.
The coffee shop was the idea of their teacher, Thomas Macchiaverna, 26, who saw it as a means to instill not only social niceties in children who often have difficulty with human interaction, but also business acumen and life skills beyond the classroom. “The overall goal here is to make these kids functional members of society,” he said. “It’s a different avenue than the standard educational curriculum. It’s outside the box, which you have to be with this kind of program.”
The profits from the coffee sales — averaging $100 a week — have helped pay for things like a recent bowling trip and a Thanksgiving feast for the class; as part of cost-cutting this year, the Edison district eliminated money for field trips.
The Edison coffee shop illustrates how schools across New Jersey are finding ways to expand their special education programs and services outside the traditional classroom to better serve students with autism and severe learning disabilities, many of whom were once sent out of the district to costly, specialized programs.
At Northern Burlington Regional High School in Columbus, special education students run their own auto-detailing shop on site, cleaning dozens of cars a year owned by parents and school staff. And along the Jersey Shore, students with autism at Southern Regional High School in Manahawkin started their own ice cream business and opened a gardening center where they grow plants and vegetables to sell; in the past three years, they have earned about $10,000 to support activities.
But such efforts have fallen short in other schools, prompting Gov. Chris Christie last month to propose as an alternative the creation across the state of more public schools devoted to students with autism, to ease the financial pressure on districts and to ensure quality of instruction.
Statewide, as diagnoses for autism spectrum disorders have risen, the overall number of special education students has increased 3.5 percent to 199,207 since 2008, while out-of-district placements have increased by 1.5 percent to 14,615 during that same period, according to state statistics.
In Edison, 80 of the 850 students at Woodrow Wilson Middle School receive special education services. The school started a self-contained special education class last year that now has a dozen students, all boys between 11 and 13 years old. Academically, their reading and math skills range from first to seventh grade, said Mr. Macchiaverna, who is called “Mr. Mac.”
The new coffee shop got off to a shaky start. The first day it opened, the machine was mistakenly unplugged, and there was almost no coffee. The next week, the school had no drinkable tap water after a flood in the area, but teachers saved the day by bringing jugs of bottled water from home. And then came the snow days and delayed openings.
The coffee itself was once so dark that it got complaints. And one student spilled hot water on his leg and had a mild burn, despite supervision by Mr. Macchiaverna, two assistant teachers, a speech teacher and a life-skills teacher.
But since then, the coffee has improved and the students have settled into a comfortable routine.
On a recent Friday, the coffee shop opened for business with folksy music (think Cat Stevens) playing over speakers. Teachers like to pass time there during their free periods, drawn as much by the convenience as the friendly service. Fifteen have standing orders. Others donate the doughnuts and handmade pastries for sale.
“The teachers love it,” said Cori Jensen, a music teacher, with a $2 cup of tea in hand. “We wish we could have it every day.”
The students take turns doing the various jobs in the coffee shop. Mr. Macchiaverna pointed out the lessons built into each one. For instance, the students at the cash register use their math skills to make change, while those delivering coffee learn to navigate the school.
And above all, he said, they practice people skills. Even here, customers can be demanding.
“I want a bacon, egg and cheese on a bagel,” said Michael Franciscus, the gym teacher, who orders off the menu every week just to joke with the students.
“We don’t have any; we have coffee,” replied Norman Shamy, 12, looking perplexed.
“Irish coffee? Cafe latte?” Mr. Franciscus continued. He settled for a $1 cupcake.
“He’s funny,” said Norman, adding that the shop was his favorite part of school because, “I like talking to the customers.”
Jenni Carlock, Noman’s stepmother, said that he looked forward to the coffee shop days. “It gives him direction and teaches him leadership skills,” she said.
Patricia Cotoia, the school principal, is a coffee shop regular. “It’s not about the coffee or the cookies, it’s about the interaction and seeing how capable the kids are,” said Ms. Cotoia, who will invite parents to the shop in the spring.
“We may have to switch to iced coffee in May,” she said, “but we’ll get there.”

Lesiones iatrogénicas de la vía biliar

Lesiones iatrogénicas de la vía biliar

Resumen

Las lesiones de la vía biliar se pueden producir por múltiples causas, siendo las lesiones iatrogénicas de la vía biliar las más frecuentes. Son situaciones clínicas complejas producidas en pacientes aparentemente sanos que se asocian a una morbilidad importante y una mortalidad baja pero no despreciable. Un tratamiento correcto requiere un alto nivel de sospecha en el intraoperatorio y en el postoperatorio inmediato, y un abordaje multidisciplinario entre cirujanos, radiólogos y endoscopistas para ofrecer al paciente el mejor diagnóstico inicial, las mejores opciones terapéuticas y el mejor manejo y seguimiento de las complicaciones. Con esta revisión pretendemos describir la situación actual de la literatura con respecto a este tipo de lesiones y su manejo terapéutico, y hemos efectuado un algoritmo terapéutico.

Cir Esp.2010; 88 :211-21
Palabras clave: Via biliar. Lesión iatrogénica. Colecistectomia. Cirugía. Revisión.

http://www.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=13156111&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid&pident_revista=36&ty=55&accion=L&origen=elsevier&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=36v88n04a13156111pdf001.pdf

Cirugía Española Complicaciones por cálculos y clips intraabdominales abandonados durante una colecistectomía laparoscópica

Cirugía Española
Complicaciones por cálculos y clips intraabdominales abandonados durante una colecistectomía laparoscópica

Los cálculos biliares y clips abandonados en la cavidad abdominal tras una colecistectomía laparoscópica pueden dar lugar a complicaciones que, aunque poco frecuentes, pueden ser graves. Realizamos una revisión de las distintas complicaciones, su incidencia, factores de riesgo relacionados, manejo y recomendaciones para reducir la morbilidad relacionada con material ectópico (cálculos o clips) en el peritoneo.

Cir Esp. 2008;84:3-9.

Palabras clave: Colecistectomía laparoscópica. Perforación de vesícula biliar. Cálculos abandonados en abdomen. Clips quirúrgicos. Complicaciones. Absceso intraabdominal. Adherencias.


http://www.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=13123811&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid&pident_revista=36&ty=74&accion=L&origen=elsevier&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=36v84n01a13123811pdf001.pdf

Cirugía Española

Cirugía Española
Guías para la reposición de las pérdidas sanguíneas en cirugía abdominal de urgencia

La reposición de la pérdidas sanguíneas en cirugía abdominal urgente desempeña un papel clave para la supervivencia, sobre todo en los pacientes que presentan una pérdida de sangre masiva provocada por la rotura del hígado, el bazo y los vasos mesentéricos, así como en el hemoperitoneo masivo secundario a un embarazo ectópico. Para manejar con éxito a estos pacientes debe seguirse un algoritmo claro previamente consensuado y aceptado por los miembros del servicio, tanto para el rápido diagnóstico y utilización de maniobras quirúrgicas precisas para el control de la fuente de hemorragia como, sobre todo, para el control de la alteración de los factores de la coagulación y la consecuente necesidad de una precisa pauta de uso de los distintos componentes sanguíneos que deben utilizarse en su reposición. El uso de estas guías reduce la mortalidad de forma significativa. En este contexto, el uso de la autotransfusión intraoperatoria ha demostrado ser un procedimiento seguro y con un buena relación coste-efectividad que se puede utilizar incluso por vía laparoscópica. Sin embargo, su utilización está poco extendida, sistematizada y mal organizada, a tenor de los datos publicados en la bibliografía.

Cir Esp. 2003;74:62-8.

Palabras clave: Hemorragia masiva. Cirugía abdominal urgente. Transfusión masiva. Alteración de los factores de la coagulación. Autotransfusión intraoperatoria.


http://www.elsevier.es/watermark/ctl_servlet?_f=10&pident_articulo=13050977&pident_usuario=0&pcontactid&pident_revista=36&ty=86&accion=L&origen=elsevier&web=www.elsevier.es&lan=es&fichero=36v74n02a13050977pdf001.pdf