4 results on '"Sergio Fernández-Pello"'
Search Results
2. Intraoperative laparoscopic complications for urological cancer procedures
- Author
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Begoña Díaz Méndez, Sergio Fernández-Pello Montes, Patricio Suarez Gil, Rodrigo Gil Ugarteburu, Luis Rodríguez Villamil, Iván González Rodríguez, and Javier Mosquera Madera
- Subjects
Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Systematic Reviews ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adrenalectomy ,General Medicine ,Perioperative ,Nephrectomy ,Surgery ,Cystectomy ,medicine ,Urological cancer ,business ,Laparoscopy - Abstract
AIM: To structure the rate of intraoperative complications that requires an intraoperative or perioperative resolution. METHODS: We perform a literature review of Medline database. The research was focused on intraoperative laparoscopic procedures inside the field of urological oncology. General rate of perioperative complications in laparoscopic urologic surgery is described to be around 12.4%. Most of the manuscripts published do not make differences between pure intraoperative, intraoperative with postoperative consequences and postoperative complications. RESULTS: We expose a narrative statement of complications, possible solutions and possible preventions for most frequent retroperitoneal and pelvic laparoscopic surgery. We expose the results with the following order: retroperitoneal laparoscopic surgery (radical nephrectomy, partial nephrectomy, nephroureterectomy and adrenalectomy) and pelvic laparoscopic surgery (radical prostatectomy and radical cystectomy). CONCLUSION: Intraoperative complications vary from different series. More scheduled reports should be done in order to better understand the real rates of complications.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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3. Efficacy of different doses of sugammadex after continuous infusion of rocuronium
- Author
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Sergio Fernández-Pello Montes, Diego Soto Mesa, Manuel Amorín Díaz, Fernando Cosío Carreño, Mounir Fayad Fayad, Luis Arguelles Tamargo, Laura Pérez Arviza, and Verónica Del Valle Ruiz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Remifentanil ,Hemodynamics ,General Medicine ,Sugammadex ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Blood pressure ,Bolus (medicine) ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Prospective Study ,Rocuronium ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the effects of two different doses of sugammadex after maintenance anesthesia with sevofluorane and remifentanil and deep rocuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade (NMB). METHODS: Patients between 20 and 65 years of age, with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification I-II, undergoing gynecological surgery were included in a prospective, comparative and randomized study. NMB was induced with an injection of 0.6 mg/kg of rocuronium followed by continuous infusion of 0.3-0.6 mg/kg per hour to maintain a deep block. Anesthesia was maintained with sevofluorane and remifentanil. Finally, when surgery was finished, a bolus of 2 mg/kg (group A) or 4 mg/kg (group B) of sugammadex was applied when the NMB first response in the train-of-four was reached. The primary clinical endpoint was time to recovery to a train-of-four ratio of 0.9. Other variables recorded were the time until recovery of train-of-four ratio of 0.7, 0.8, hemodynamic variables (arterial blood pressure and heart rate at baseline, starting sugammadex, and minutes 2, 5 and 10) and adverse events were presented after one hour in the post-anesthesia care unit. RESULTS: Thirty-two patients were included in the study: 16 patients in group A and 16 patients in group B. Only 14 patients each group were recorded because arterial pressure values were lost in two patients from each group in minute 10. The two groups were comparable. Median recovery time from starting of sugammadex administration to a train-of-four ratio of 0.9 in group A and B was 129 and 110 s, respectively. The estimated difference in recovery time between groups was 24 s (95%CI: 0 to 45 s, Hodges-Lehmann estimator), entirely within the predefined equivalence interval. Times to recovery to train-of-four ratios of 0.8 (group A: 101 s; group B: 82.5 s) and 0.7 (group A: 90 s; group B: 65 s) from start of sugammadex administration were not equivalent between groups. There was not a significant variation in the arterial pressure and heart rate values between the two groups and none of the patients showed any clinical evidence of residual or recurrent NMB. CONCLUSION: A dose of 2 mg/kg of sugammadex after continuous rocuronium infusion is enough to reverse the NMB when first response in the Train-Of-Four is reached.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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4. Pyonephrosis as a sign of sarcomatoid carcinoma of the renal pelvis
- Author
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Sergio Fernández-Pello, Rodrigo Gil, Iván González, Carmen Menéndez, and Victoria Venta
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Septic shock ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Sarcomatoid Transitional Cell Carcinoma ,Case Report ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Nephrectomy ,Sepsis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Pyonephrosis ,Sarcomatoid carcinoma ,business ,Renal pelvis - Abstract
We report the case of an urgent nephrectomy because of a pyonephrosis and sepsis due to an unsuspected sarcomatoid transitional cell carcinoma, an infrequent subtype with a bad oncological prognosis. We present a 58-year-old man assessed by internal medicine for a general syndrome and weakness many months previously. A pyonephrotic kidney was observed at abdominal computed tomography in the context of septic shock, without suspecting the underlying cause. The pathology report described a sarcomatoid transitional cell carcinoma. Sarcomatoid transitional cell carcinoma is an invasive and infrequent subtype of urothelial tumors. The symptoms are often the same as other renal masses; however, in this case, sepsis and pyonephrosis were the rare initial symptoms.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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