6 results on '"Muller-Stich B. P."'
Search Results
2. EAES Recommendations for Recovery Plan in Minimally Invasive Surgery Amid COVID-19 Pandemic
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Arezzo A., Francis N., Mintz Y., Adamina M., Antoniou S. A., Bouvy N., Copaescu C., de Manzini N., Di Lorenzo N., Morales-Conde S., Muller-Stich B. P., Nickel F., Popa D., Tait D., Thomas C., Nimmo S., Paraskevis D., Pietrabissa A., Eck M., Letic E., Preda S. D., Tsai A., Malanowska E., Lesko D., Majewski W., Baldari L., Morelli L., Shamiyeh A., Faria G., Carrano F. M., Mysliwiec P., Ahlberg G., Cassinotti E., Delibegovic S., Martinek L., Yiannakopoulou E., Gorter-Stam M., Hanna G., Fuchs H., Bjelovic M., Markar S., Yan P. W., Chiu, Ecom B. W., Kim Y. -W., Ponz C. B., Schijven M., Boni L., Carus T., Theodoropoulos G., Forgione A., Milone M., Petz W. L. R., Andrejevic P., Ignjatovic D., Arulampalam T., Campbell K., Chand M., Coleman M., Kontovounisios C., Sagiv C., Ficuciello F., Marconi S., Mascagni P., Nakajima K., Margallo F. M. S., Horeman T., Mylonas G., Valdastri P., RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, RS: NUTRIM - R2 - Liver and digestive health, MUMC+: MA Heelkunde (9), Surgery, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, APH - Amsterdam Public Health, APH - Digital Health, APH - Quality of Care, Arezzo, A., Francis, N., Mintz, Y., Adamina, M., Antoniou, S. A., Bouvy, N., Copaescu, C., de Manzini, N., Di Lorenzo, N., Morales-Conde, S., Muller-Stich, B. P., Nickel, F., Popa, D., Tait, D., Thomas, C., Nimmo, S., Paraskevis, D., Pietrabissa, A., Eck, M., Letic, E., Preda, S. D., Tsai, A., Malanowska, E., Lesko, D., Majewski, W., Baldari, L., Morelli, L., Shamiyeh, A., Faria, G., Carrano, F. M., Mysliwiec, P., Ahlberg, G., Cassinotti, E., Delibegovic, S., Martinek, L., Yiannakopoulou, E., Gorter-Stam, M., Hanna, G., Fuchs, H., Bjelovic, M., Markar, S., Yan, P. W., Chiu, Ecom, B. W., Kim, Y. -W., Ponz, C. B., Schijven, M., Boni, L., Carus, T., Theodoropoulos, G., Forgione, A., Milone, M., Petz, W. L. R., Andrejevic, P., Ignjatovic, D., Arulampalam, T., Campbell, K., Chand, M., Coleman, M., Kontovounisios, C., Sagiv, C., Ficuciello, F., Marconi, S., Mascagni, P., Nakajima, K., Margallo, F. M. S., Horeman, T., Mylonas, G., and Valdastri, P.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Bariatrics ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,COVID-19 ,Delphi consensus ,EAES guidance ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Priority ,Delphi Technique ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Emergencies ,Global Health ,Health Care Rationing ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Infection Control ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Delphi method ,Plan (drawing) ,Voting ,Pandemic ,Global health ,Medicine ,computer.programming_language ,media_common ,Emergencie ,Medical education ,Science & Technology ,Delphi consensu ,Elective Surgical Procedure ,business.industry ,EAES Recommendations ,1103 Clinical Sciences ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedure ,Settore MED/18 ,Surgery ,EAES Group of Experts for Recovery Amid COVID-19 Pandemic ,business ,computer ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Delphi ,Human - Abstract
Background COVID-19 pandemic presented an unexpected challenge for the surgical community in general and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) specialists in particular. This document aims to summarize recent evidence and experts’ opinion and formulate recommendations to guide the surgical community on how to best organize the recovery plan for surgical activity across different sub-specialities after the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods Recommendations were developed through a Delphi process for establishment of expert consensus. Domain topics were formulated and subsequently subdivided into questions pertinent to different surgical specialities following the COVID-19 crisis. Sixty-five experts from 24 countries, representing the entire EAES board, were invited. Fifty clinicians and six engineers accepted the invitation and drafted statements based on specific key questions. Anonymous voting on the statements was performed until consensus was achieved, defined by at least 70% agreement. Results A total of 92 consensus statements were formulated with regard to safe resumption of surgery across eight domains, addressing general surgery, upper GI, lower GI, bariatrics, endocrine, HPB, abdominal wall and technology/research. The statements addressed elective and emergency services across all subspecialties with specific attention to the role of MIS during the recovery plan. Eighty-four of the statements were approved during the first round of Delphi voting (91.3%) and another 8 during the following round after substantial modification, resulting in a 100% consensus. Conclusion The recommendations formulated by the EAES board establish a framework for resumption of surgery following COVID-19 pandemic with particular focus on the role of MIS across surgical specialities. The statements have the potential for wide application in the clinical setting, education activities and research work across different healthcare systems.
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- 2020
3. Knowledge-based planning of port positions for minimally invasive surgery
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Weede, O., primary, Wunscher, J., additional, Kenngott, H., additional, Muller-Stich, B-P., additional, and Worn, H., additional
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- 2013
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4. From stereo image sequences to smooth and robust surface models using temporal information and Bilateral postprocessing
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Rohl, S., primary, Speidel, S., additional, Gonzalez-Aguirre, D., additional, Suwelack, S., additional, Kenngott, H., additional, Asfour, T., additional, Muller-Stich, B. P., additional, and Dillmann, R., additional
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- 2011
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5. Experimental Study of Cardiorespiratory and Stress Factors in Esophageal Surgery Using Robot-Assisted Thoracoscopic or Open Thoracic Approach
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Eisold, S., primary, Mehrabi, A., additional, Konstantinidis, L., additional, Mieth, M., additional, Hinz, U., additional, Kashfi, A., additional, Fonouni, H., additional, Muller-Stich, B. P., additional, Gebhard, M. M., additional, Schmidt, J., additional, Buchler, M. W., additional, and Gutt, C. N., additional
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- 2008
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6. Surgical challenges and research priorities in the era of the COVID-19 pandemic: EAES membership survey
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Emina Letic, Dejan Ignjatovic, Daniel Preda, Luca Morelli, Elisa Cassinotti, Eugenia Yiannakopoulou, Thanjakumar Arulampalam, Antonello Forgione, Bang Wool Eom, Marguerite A.W. Gorter-Stam, Stavros A. Antoniou, Francesco Maria Carrano, Andreas Shamiyeh, Gil Faria, Nader K. Francis, Christos Kontovounisios, Beat P. Müller-Stich, Sheraz R. Markar, George Theodoropoulos, Marco Milone, Carmen Balague Ponz, Therese Velthoven, Milone, M., Carrano, F. M., Letic, E., Shamiyeh, A., Forgione, A., Eom, B. W., Muller-Stich, B. P., Ponz, C. B., Kontovounisios, C., Preda, D., Ignjatovic, D., Cassinotti, E., Yiannakopoulou, E., Theodoropoulos, G., Faria, G., Morelli, L., Gorter-Stam, M., Markar, S., Arulampalam, T., Velthoven, T., Antoniou, S. A., Francis, N. K., and Surgery
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Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,Demographics ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pneumonia, Viral ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,Surgeon ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Surgical challenge ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,SAGES/EAES Official Publication ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Pandemics ,Societies, Medical ,Research evidence ,Surgeons ,Infection Control ,Health Care Rationing ,Descriptive statistics ,Betacoronaviru ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Coronavirus Infection ,COVID-19 ,Endoscopy ,Surgical challenges ,Europe ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Acute appendicitis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,Laparoscopy ,business ,Coronavirus Infections ,Abdominal surgery ,Human - Abstract
Background Healthcare systems and general surgeons are being challenged by the current pandemic. The European Association for Endoscopic Surgery (EAES) aimed to evaluate surgeons’ experiences and perspectives, to identify gaps in knowledge, to record shortcomings in resources and to register research priorities. Methods An ad hoc web-based survey of EAES members and affiliates was developed by the EAES Research Committee. The questionnaire consisted of 69 items divided into the following sections: (Ι) demographics, (II) institutional burdens and management strategies, and (III) analysis of resource, knowledge, and evidence gaps. Descriptive statistics were summarized as frequencies, medians, ranges,, and interquartile ranges, as appropriate. Results The survey took place between March 25th and April 16th with a total of 550 surgeons from 79 countries. Eighty-one percent had to postpone elective cases or suspend their practice and 35% assumed roles not related to their primary expertise. One-fourth of respondents reported having encountered abdominal pathologies in COVID-19-positive patients, most frequently acute appendicitis (47% of respondents). The effect of protective measures in surgical or endoscopic procedures on infected patients, the effect of endoscopic surgery on infected patients, and the infectivity of positive patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery were prioritized as knowledge gaps and research priorities. Conclusions Perspectives and priorities of EAES members in the era of the pandemic are hereto summarized. Research evidence is urgently needed to effectively respond to challenges arisen from the pandemic. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00464-020-07835-7) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2020
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