Browsing by Author "Merrell, Ronald C."
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Item Low-bandwidth telemedicine for pre- and postoperative evaluation in mobile surgical services(2005) Rodas, Edgar B.; Moraw, Francisco; Tamariz, Francisco; Coney, Stephen W.; Merrell, Ronald C.Low-bandwidth telemedicine was used for the pre- and postoperative evaluation of patients treated by a mobile surgery service in remote Ecuador. Realtime and store-and-forward telemedicine was employed, using PCs connected via the ordinary telephone network. Between February 2002 and July 2003, 144 patients were studied preoperatively and 50 postoperatively. It was possible to establish 20 satisfactory preoperative realtime connections, which allowed good-quality, simultaneous audiovisual transmission. Thus, there were 124 preoperative assessments done by store-and-forward telemedicine and 50 postoperative assessments. Diagnoses and management plans made by a surgeon using telemedicine were compared with those made independently by a second surgeon, who saw the patient face to face. Due to poor quality of the transmitted images, 43 patients were excluded from the preoperative study and 13 from the postoperative study. In the 101 preoperative evaluations, there was agreement in 78 cases (77%); in the 37 postoperative evaluations, there was agreement in 36 cases (97%). Telemedicine may reduce the time required on site for preoperative planning, and may provide reliable postoperative surveillance, thus improving the efficiency of mobile surgery services.Item Training to serve unmet surgical needs worldwide(2001) Blanchard, Robert J.; Merrell, Ronald C.; Geelhoed, Glenn William; Ajayi, Olajide O.; Laub, Donald R.; Rodas, Edgar B.Item Ventral herniorrhaphy aided by pneumoperitoneum(1986-08-01) Astudillo, Rubén; Merrell, Ronald C.; Sánchez, José; Olmedo, SoniaTwenty-four patients with large abdominal incisional hernias were alternately treated with preoperative pneumoperitoneum. The insufflation was performed on an outpatient basis each day for approximately one week prior to operation. The pneumoperitoneum-treated group was spared the necessity of developing abdominal wall flaps and presented a much easier peritoneal dissection. The operative time was 50 minutes in the 12 pneumoperitoneum-treated patients compared with an average of 150 minutes in the standard repair—treated group. There were no infections in the pneumoperitoneum-treated group compared with five (42%) in the other group. The postoperative stay of the pneumoperitoneum-treated group averaged 3.5 days compared with 12.5 days for the standard repair—treated group. Pneumoperitoneum is a valuable adjunct in the repair of large ventral hernias.
