PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Robot-assisted kidney cancer surgery offers many benefits, but at a cost

2013-05-08
(Press-News.org) SAN DIEGO – Robot-assisted surgery to remove kidney cancers has seen a rapid increase in use, and has both replaced and proven safer than laparoscopic procedures for the same purpose, according to a study by the Vattikuti Urology Institute at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. However, the study also shows that robotic partial nephrectomy (RPN) – while resulting in fewer complications than both open (OPN) and laparoscopic (LPN) removal of cancerous kidney tissue – also involves more "excessive" hospital charges. "Excessive hospital charges were significantly higher with robotic partial nephrectomy," says Khurshid R. Ghani, M.D., of Vattikuti Urology Institute and lead author of the study. "While we can report no cost-savings with the procedure – quite the opposite – the benefits are obvious." "It is a safe operation that has rapidly replaced LPN as the most common minimally invasive approach for partial nephrectomy. It has shown superior results compared to open surgery, and was better than laparoscopy in every respect but cost," he adds The findings will be presented May 7 at the annual meeting of the American Urological Association in San Diego. Dr. Ghani says data was mined from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS), which includes inpatient discharge information from 1,044 U.S. hospitals. Between October 2008 – when the NIS first included an identifier for robot-assisted procedures – and December 2010, the researchers found a total of 38,064 patients who underwent OPN, LPN or RPN to treat kidney cancers that had not metastasized. Of the total, nearly 70 percent had open surgery, nearly 24 percent had robot-assisted surgery and a little more than 9 percent were treated laparoscopically. Researchers also noted that while all three forms of kidney surgery had increased in 2010, robot-assisted partial nephrectomy soared by more than 45 percent, far overshadowing the other two types.

Complications were tracked during and after each procedure. The Henry Ford team found: Patients undergoing RPN were least likely to receive a blood transfusion, while those who had open surgery were most likely to need one.
The same was true for developing complications after surgery or requiring a prolonged hospital stay.
Only those undergoing RPN were less likely to develop complications during surgery. ### Funding source: Henry Ford Hospital END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Genes show 1 big European family

2013-05-08
From Ireland to the Balkans, Europeans are basically one big family, closely related to one another for the past thousand years, according to a new study of the DNA of people from across the continent. The study, co-authored by Graham Coop, a professor of evolution and ecology at the University of California, Davis, will be published May 7 in the journal PLoS Biology. "What's remarkable about this is how closely everyone is related to each other. On a genealogical level, everyone in Europe traces back to nearly the same set of ancestors only a thousand years ago," Coop ...

Minimally invasive VATS-LCSD helps children with refractory ventricular arrhythmias

2013-05-08
Minneapolis, MN, May 7, 2013 - Inherited ventricular arrhythmias are an important cause of morbidity and sudden cardiac death in children who have structurally normal hearts. Despite conventional medical therapy, some of these children remain symptomatic with recurrent life-threatening arrhythmias, syncope, or frequent discharges from implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs). Video-assisted thoracoscopic left cardiac sympathetic denervation (VATS-LCSD) is a minimally invasive procedure that can help many of these children with refractory cardiac arrhythmias. The results ...

1 big European family

2013-05-08
From Ireland to the Balkans, Europeans are all closely related according to a new study of the DNA of people from across the continent. The study, conducted by Graham Coop at the University of California, Davis, and Peter Ralph of the University of Southern California, examined relatedness among Europeans up to about 3,000 years ago, comparing genetic sequences from over 2,000 individuals. Their results are published 7 May in the open access journal PLOS Biology. The researchers found that the extent to which two people are related tends to be smaller the farther apart ...

Older people in Africa have limited functional ability

2013-05-08
Many adults 45 years and older in Africa have limited functional ability The number of adults living into older age in sub-Saharan Africa is rapidly growing yet many older men and women will have an illness or disability that limits their ability to function, according to a study by researchers from the US and Malawi published in this week's PLOS Medicine. The researchers, led by Collin Payne from the University of Pennsylvania, also show that remaining life spent with severe limitations at age 45 in a sub Saharan African setting (Malawi) is comparable to that of 80-year-olds ...

Link between intimate partner violence and depression

2013-05-08
Not only are women who have experienced violence from their partner (intimate partner violence) at higher risk of becoming depressed, but women who are depressed may also be at increased risk of experiencing intimate partner violence, according to a study by international researchers published in this week's PLOS Medicine. Furthermore, there may also be a link between intimate partner violence and subsequent suicide among women, but little evidence to support a similar finding in men. The researchers led by Karen Devries from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical ...

Antimicrobial resistance in Vietnam

2013-05-08
Heiman Wertheim and Arjun Chandna from Oxford University and colleagues describe the launch and impact of VINARES, an initiative to strengthen antimicrobial stewardship in Viet Nam, which may be instructive for other countries struggling to address the threat of antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial resistance is increasingly recognised as a serious contemporary global health threat (with numerous calls for action from the international community), but while interventions to control antimicrobial resistance are available, implementation is developing countries (where ...

PLOS Collection assesses measurement of health interventions for women and children in LMICs

2013-05-08
New PLOS Collection assesses the measurement of whether much needed health interventions are reaching women and children across the developing world Measuring coverage of maternal, newborn and child health in low- and middle-income countries is critical to ensuring that health interventions are reaching the women and children who need them most, says a new Collection of articles published by PLOS this week. Accurate measurement of the effectiveness of those interventions for combatting diseases such as pneumonia and malaria, and preventing the transmission of HIV from ...

Study evaluates effect of increasing detection intervals in implantable cardioverter-defibrillators

2013-05-08
Programming an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) with a long-detection interval compared with a standard-detection interval resulted in a reduction in anti-tachycardia pacing episodes, ICD shocks delivered, and inappropriate shocks, according to a study in the May 8 issue of JAMA. "Therapy with ICDs is now the standard of care in primary and secondary prevention. As indications for implants have expanded, concern about possible adverse effects of ICD therapies on prognosis and quality of life has arisen. Several authors have reported that ICD therapies, both ...

Genetic variations associated with susceptibility to bacteria linked to stomach disorders

2013-05-08
Two genome-wide association studies and a subsequent meta-analysis have found that certain genetic variations are associated with susceptibility to Helicobacter pylori, a bacteria that is a major cause of gastritis and stomach ulcers and is linked to stomach cancer, findings that may help explain some of the observed variation in individual risk for H pylori infection, according to a study in the May 8 issue of JAMA. "[H pylori] is the major cause of gastritis (80 percent) and gastroduodenal ulcer disease (15 percent-20 percent) and the only bacterial pathogen believed ...

Study finds increase in fall-related traumatic brain injuries among elderly men and women

2013-05-08
"Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of hospitalization, disability, and death-worldwide, and among older adults, falling is the most common cause of TBI," writes Niina Korhonen, B.M., of the Injury and Osteoporosis Research Center, Tampere, Finland, and colleagues in a Research Letter. The authors previously reported that the number and incidence of adults 80 years of age or older admitted to the hospital due to fall-induced TBI in Finland increased from 1970 through 1999. This analysis is a follow-up of this population through 2011. The study included data ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Discovery of a new superfluid phase in non-Hermitian quantum systems

Codes in the cilia: New study maps how Cilk1 and Hedgehog levels sculpt tooth architecture

Chonnam National University researchers develop novel virtual sensor grid method for low-cost, yet robust, infrastructure monitoring

Expanded school-based program linked to lower youth tobacco use rates in California

TV depictions of Hands-Only CPR are often misleading

What TV gets wrong about CPR—and why it matters for saving lives

New study: How weight loss benefits the health of your fat tissue

Astronomers surprised by mysterious shock wave around dead star

‘Death by a thousand cuts’: Young galaxy ran out of fuel as black hole choked off supplies

Glow with the flow: Implanted 'living skin' lights up to signal health changes

Compressed data technique enables pangenomics at scale

How brain waves shape our sense of self

Whole-genome sequencing may optimize PARP inhibitor use

Like alcohol units, but for cannabis – experts define safer limits

DNA testing of colorectal polyps improves insight into hereditary risks

Researchers uncover axonal protein synthesis defect in ALS

Why are men more likely to develop multiple myeloma than women?

Smartphone-based interventions show promise for reducing alcohol and cannabis use: New research

How do health care professionals determine eligibility for MAiD?

Microplastics detected in rural woodland 

JULAC and Taylor & Francis sign open access agreement to boost the impact of Hong Kong research

Protecting older male athletes’ heart health 

KAIST proposes AI-driven strategy to solve long-standing mystery of gene function

Eye for trouble: Automated counting for chromosome issues under the microscope

The vast majority of US rivers lack any protections from human activities, new research finds

Ultrasound-responsive in situ antigen "nanocatchers" open a new paradigm for personalized tumor immunotherapy

Environmental “superbugs” in our rivers and soils: new one health review warns of growing antimicrobial resistance crisis

Triple threat in greenhouse farming: how heavy metals, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes unite to challenge sustainable food production

Earthworms turn manure into a powerful tool against antibiotic resistance

AI turns water into an early warning network for hidden biological pollutants

[Press-News.org] Robot-assisted kidney cancer surgery offers many benefits, but at a cost