Publications by authors named "Rachel M Segal"

Background: Surgeons are at risk for musculoskeletal disorders from ergonomic strain in the operating room. These deficits may stem from neuromuscular control deficits. Neuromuscular activation exercises (NMEs) may strengthen the brain-muscle connection.

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Objective: Minority representation and promotion in medicine is lacking. Social media can facilitate change by raising awareness of biases, empowering others, and cultivating connections. The TimesUpPRS Instagram account was created in March 2020 to foster diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in plastic surgery by celebrating surgeons of diverse identities and emphasizing the need to create safe, fair, and equitable workplaces.

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Background: Historically, breast-conserving surgery may not be pursued when the oncologic deformity is too significant and/or not tolerant of radiotherapy. Reconstruction using recruitment of upper abdominal wall tissue based on the intercostal artery perforating vessels can expand breast conservation therapy indications for cases that would otherwise require mastectomy. This report aims to describe the expanded use of the intercostal artery perforator (ICAP) as well as detail its ease of adoption.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to find out what affects how doctors hold their necks and backs during ear, nose, and throat surgeries, and if a special posture-training device can help them stay in better positions.
  • Doctors recorded their posture over three months and used a device for feedback to improve it; results showed different surgeries had different postures, with rhinology being the best and head and neck the worst.
  • The study found that certain factors like being shorter or sitting down improved posture, while using magnifying glasses (loupes) made it worse; biofeedback helped some doctors improve but more solutions for better posture are needed.
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Background: Plastic surgeons have an increased risk for the development of musculoskeletal disorders because of frequent poor ergonomics of the operating room. This study characterizes selected plastic surgery procedures, with an attempt to identify high-risk procedures and procedural components as well as the impact of biofeedback on surgical ergonomics.

Methods: A commercially available posture training device was used to initially record neck and spine positioning and later to send biofeedback to prompt surgeons to correct posture.

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Background: Tissue expander-assisted component separation can be used to increase the amount of skin, muscle, and fascial components available for repair of congenital abdominal wall defects via a staged approach without the need for flap reconstruction. We present the largest case series to date using a tissue expander-assisted component separation technique for treatment of congenital abdominal wall defects in a pediatric patient population.

Methods: A retrospective chart review of 9 patients with large congenital abdominal wall defects not initially amenable to primary repair between 2009 and 2020 was performed.

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Background: Medical students receive limited exposure to the field of plastic surgery because most students will not rotate in plastic surgery, especially those at schools without dedicated plastic surgery residency programs. This study aimed to create and validate a plastic surgery learning module for medical students to dispel media-propagated myths and misrepresentation of the breadth of plastic surgery and equip students with referral-making capabilities.

Methods: The plastic surgery learning module was created using Articulate Storyline 360 (New York, N.

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This article serves as a practical guide for plastic surgeons focusing on repair of primary cleft lip and nasal deformity. We discuss the key anatomic disruption present in cleft lip and nasal deformity and the goals of primary repair. In addition, our preferred surgical technique for unilateral and bilateral cleft lip and nasal deformity is summarized along with technical pearls and pitfalls.

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Background: Unilateral coronal craniosynostosis (UCS) is the third most prevalent form of craniosynostosis. Traditional treatment of UCS has been achieved with fronto-orbital advancement and cranial vault remodeling (FOAR), but utilization of cranial distraction osteogenesis (DO) techniques has increased. This study aims to compare perioperative complications and reoperation trends in FOAR versus DO techniques at a single institution.

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Background: Alveolar bone grafting is utilized to manage alveolar clefts in patients with cleft lip and palate. However, the timing of bone grafting is variable with conflicting evidence supporting the use of primary alveolar bone grafting (PABG) in clinical practice.

Primary Aim: To provide a qualitative systematic review analysis of long-term outcomes after PABG.

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Introduction: The primary outcome metric in patients with craniosynostosis are changes in intracranial volumes (ICVs). In patients who undergo distraction osteogenesis (DO) to treat craniosynostosis, changes are also dependent on the length of distraction. Virtual surgical planning (VSP) has been used to predict anticipated changes in ICV during cranial vault reconstruction.

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Introduction: The craniofacial asymmetry seen in unilateral lambdoid craniosynostosis may not be effectively treated by posterior cranial vault remodeling, endoscopic suturectomy, and helmet therapy, or suturectomy and distraction osteogenesis alone due to limitations in soft-tissue envelope expansion and relapse of the deformity. The authors report a series of unilateral lambdoid craniosynostosis patients treated with a posterior rotational cranial-flap technique using internal distraction osteogenesis.

Methods: Posterior cranial vault reconstruction combined with internal distraction was used, aided by preoperative virtual surgical planning.

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