The urachus is a remnant of the allantois. Failure to obliterate can result in one of four anomalies, urachal cyst being most common. Urachal cysts are relatively rare, especially in adults. This paper presents a patient with an umbilical hernia and a ruptured urachal cyst. A 39-year-old male presented with concern for umbilical hernia, but he also noted drainage. Computed tomography scan showed a urachal cyst and umbilical hernia. The urachal cyst was excised and umbilical hernia closed primarily. The incidence of an urachal cyst is unknown, but persists in roughly 2% of adults. Diagnosis is with ultrasound or CT scan. Management is excision due to risk of urachal carcinoma, which is present in over 50% of specimens. Review of literature did not reveal any other cases of a patient with both an urachal cyst and an umbilical hernia, thus making this case a unique presentation for this condition.
Introduction Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common sleep disorder with obesity being a significant risk factor. Undiagnosed OSA increases the risk of complications at the time of surgery and those with severe OSA at increased risk of post-operative MI, stroke, arrhythmias, and death as well as readmission and acuity of post-operative care. Because of this, our Bariatric program screens all patients pre-operatively with a STOP-BANG questionnaire. Those with severe OSA (AHI or REI > 29) require pre-treatment with PAP therapy until compliance is reached before the patient is eligible for surgery. This study examines those that screened at high risk for OSA with a STOP-BANG score > 2 to see if there was a specific cutoff that predicts those having severe OSA in order to better expedite sleep testing as recent supply chain issues have greatly impacted the timeliness of care for these patients. Methods During the months of January to June 2022, demographic, clinical and sleep data was collected on all new patients being evaluated by the Bariatric Sleep clinic for use in quality assessment. Bariatric patients with BMI < 50 and no significant cardiac or pulmonary disease were tested using HSAT, whereas those who met one or more of the above comorbidities underwent PSG. Results There were 143 bariatrics patients who screened as “high risk” for OSA with a STOP-BANG score > 2 during these 6 months and 112 (78%) of them completed sleep testing. There were 25 patients (22%) with severe OSA. The average STOP-BANG score for those with severe OSA was 4.3. Women averaged 4.0 (range 3-6), while men averaged higher at 4.8 (range 4-6) likely reflecting that male gender garners an extra point with the STOP-BANG. STOP-BANG scores increased with age: 20s x=3, 30s x=4.1, 40s x=4.4, 50s x=4.6, 60s x=6. Conclusion There was no specific cutoff for the STOP-BANG score that predicted severe OSA in our bariatric patients to help our program triage those most at surgical risk in order to place them in an expedited sleep testing and PAP therapy pathway. Overall, STOP-BANG scores were impacted by gender and age. Support (if any)
In 2018, general surgery topped the number of robotic cases. Over 90% of residents participate, but only 65% of programs have a formal curriculum, and less than half track progress. Many are insufficient at training due to an observational role. This paper reviews Marshall University General Surgery Residency program’s robotic curriculum, which started in 2018. The curriculum consists of a weekend course and simulations, enabling residents obtain certification. Residents participated in Intuitive’s Resident Robotic Olympics with first place in 2019 and second and third place in 2020. For the 2021 year, the robotic curriculum was revised into phases based on year. Deadlines and forms help improve and track progress. It is important to develop a curriculum with a protocol for training, monitoring, and credentialing to ensure proficiency. Marshall University General Surgery robotic curriculum has been successful at improving robotic skill, enabling residents to obtain a robotic surgery certification upon graduation.
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