Scope and feasibility of operating on the neonatal intensive care unit: 312 cases in 10 years
Scope and feasibility of operating on the neonatal intensive care unit: 312 cases in 10 years
Purpose
To report the scope, feasibility and learning experience of operating on neonates on the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
Methods
(1) Review of all NICU operations performed by general neonatal surgeons over 10 years; (2) 6-month prospective comparison of procedures performed in NICU or operating room; (3) structured interviews with five surgeons with 1–13 years experience of operating on NICU.
Results
312 operations were performed in 249 infants. Median birth weight was 1,494 g (range 415–4,365), gestational age 29 weeks (22–42), and age at operation 25 days (0–163). Nearly half (147) were laparotomy for acute abdominal pathology in preterm, very low birth-weight infants There were no surgical adverse events related to location of surgery. Surgeon satisfaction with operating on NICU for this population was high (5/5). Several factors contribute to making this process a success.
Conclusions
This is the largest reported series of general neonatal surgical procedures performed on NICU. Operating on NICU is feasible and safe, and a full range of neonatal operations can be performed. It removes risks associated with neonatal transfer and is likely to reduce physiological instability. We recommend this approach for all ventilated neonates and urge neonatal surgeons to operate at the cotside of unstable infants.
neonate, neonatal surgery, laparotomy, neonatal intensive care
1001-1005
Hall, N.J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Stanton, M.P.
cfe512d4-f8ea-4cff-9ccc-4003032b7a0b
Kitteringham, L.J.
305f7588-f713-4e72-a5ab-595d5af52246
Wheeler, R.A.
5ffea06b-c518-4038-b6b7-fd03eb18777c
Griffiths, D.M.
eb78d30d-4889-49a0-9cec-45cf1abd0cef
Drewett, M.
cac80fbf-dfb5-4613-8988-cb090ff36144
Burge, D.M.
383bf4be-bbb3-427e-998e-95888bfebbc3
October 2012
Hall, N.J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Stanton, M.P.
cfe512d4-f8ea-4cff-9ccc-4003032b7a0b
Kitteringham, L.J.
305f7588-f713-4e72-a5ab-595d5af52246
Wheeler, R.A.
5ffea06b-c518-4038-b6b7-fd03eb18777c
Griffiths, D.M.
eb78d30d-4889-49a0-9cec-45cf1abd0cef
Drewett, M.
cac80fbf-dfb5-4613-8988-cb090ff36144
Burge, D.M.
383bf4be-bbb3-427e-998e-95888bfebbc3
Hall, N.J., Stanton, M.P., Kitteringham, L.J., Wheeler, R.A., Griffiths, D.M., Drewett, M. and Burge, D.M.
(2012)
Scope and feasibility of operating on the neonatal intensive care unit: 312 cases in 10 years.
Pediatric Surgery International, 28 (10), .
(doi:10.1007/s00383-012-3161-z).
(PMID:22907723)
Abstract
Purpose
To report the scope, feasibility and learning experience of operating on neonates on the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
Methods
(1) Review of all NICU operations performed by general neonatal surgeons over 10 years; (2) 6-month prospective comparison of procedures performed in NICU or operating room; (3) structured interviews with five surgeons with 1–13 years experience of operating on NICU.
Results
312 operations were performed in 249 infants. Median birth weight was 1,494 g (range 415–4,365), gestational age 29 weeks (22–42), and age at operation 25 days (0–163). Nearly half (147) were laparotomy for acute abdominal pathology in preterm, very low birth-weight infants There were no surgical adverse events related to location of surgery. Surgeon satisfaction with operating on NICU for this population was high (5/5). Several factors contribute to making this process a success.
Conclusions
This is the largest reported series of general neonatal surgical procedures performed on NICU. Operating on NICU is feasible and safe, and a full range of neonatal operations can be performed. It removes risks associated with neonatal transfer and is likely to reduce physiological instability. We recommend this approach for all ventilated neonates and urge neonatal surgeons to operate at the cotside of unstable infants.
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 August 2012
Published date: October 2012
Keywords:
neonate, neonatal surgery, laparotomy, neonatal intensive care
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 378452
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378452
ISSN: 0179-0358
PURE UUID: bb584f56-d3cc-47be-9f82-95e5589dfa08
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2015 16:08
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38
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Contributors
Author:
M.P. Stanton
Author:
L.J. Kitteringham
Author:
R.A. Wheeler
Author:
D.M. Griffiths
Author:
M. Drewett
Author:
D.M. Burge
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