The Federal Bureau of Prisons clinical skills training development (CSTD) team accomplished the planning, creation, and execution of a first-ever national clinical skills assessment program (CSAP) for nurses and advanced practice providers (APPs). Clinical skills assessment is a part of nurse and APP credentialing and privileging and must be completed for new hires along with continued biennial recredentialing accreditation standards. A training resource manual, discipline-specific skills checklist, pre-/postprogram written examination, and standard operating procedures were created.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrently, the diagnosis of esophageal motility disorders is in part based upon a hierarchical algorithm in which abnormalities of the esophagogastric junction (EGJ) is prioritized. An important metric in evaluating the EGJ is the integrated relaxation pressure (IRP). Patients who do not have achalasia but are found to have an elevated IRP are diagnosed with EGJ outflow obstruction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEsophageal manometry is a specialized procedure used to evaluate lower and upper esophageal sphincter pressure, esophageal body contraction amplitude, and peristaltic sequence. The procedure is clinically useful in evaluation of a patient with nonstructural dysphagia, unexplained or noncardiac chest pain, a compendium of symptoms suggested because of gastroesophageal reflux disease, and in the preoperative evaluation for antireflux surgery. Manometric findings in 95 normal subjects evenly distributed across age groups were reported in 1987, and are the values still used in our and most laboratories today.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Combined multichannel intraluminal impedance and esophageal manometry (MII-EM) is a clinically available tool that assesses the functional defect of various manometric abnormalities. The aim of our study was to evaluate esophageal bolus transit in patients with manometrically defined distal esophageal spasm (DES).
Methods: Patients referred for esophageal function testing underwent combined MII-EM studies including 10 liquid and 10 viscous swallows.
Manometry involves many technical issues, and a complete understanding of all aspects of the esophageal testing process is required to study the human esophagus in a way that yields accurate, technically sound qualitative and quantitative studies that include the measure of esophageal length and positional plotting of transducers within the esophagus. Topics discussed are catheter measurement and memory; checking the system; performing manometry; patient history; intubation technique; marking, mapping, and measuring the esophagus, and analysis of results.
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