Publications by authors named "Zach Rollins"

Massive splenomegaly in children can complicate minimally invasive splenectomy. Splenic artery embolization (SAE) before splenectomy has been shown to decrease splenic volume, reduce intraoperative blood loss, and decrease conversion rates in laparoscopic surgery. Our objective was to review our recent experience with immediate preoperative SAE in massive splenomegaly for pediatric patients using both laparoscopic and robotic techniques.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Research suggests that narcotic pain medications are dramatically overprescribed. We hypothesize that narcotics are unnecessary for postoperative pain control in most infants undergoing robotic pyeloplasty. In this series, we report our experience combining caudal blocks with a non-narcotic postoperative pathway as a means of eliminating postoperative narcotics after infant robotic pyeloplasty.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background Occlusion myocardial infarctions (OMIs) of the posterolateral walls are commonly missed by ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) criteria, with >50% of patients with circumflex occlusion not receiving emergent reperfusion and experiencing increased mortality. ST-segment depression maximal in leads V1-V4 (STDmaxV1-4) has been suggested as an indicator of posterior OMI. Methods and Results We retrospectively reviewed a high-risk population with acute coronary syndrome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Many NSTEMI patients may actually have undiagnosed acute coronary occlusion (OMI), leading to worse outcomes than NSTEMI patients without occlusion, prompting a proposed shift in how we diagnose OMI versus non-occlusion MI (NOMI).
  • A study analyzed the accuracy of OMI-specific ECG findings compared to traditional STEMI criteria in a cohort of 808 patients suspected of having acute coronary syndrome.
  • Results showed that using OMI ECG findings significantly improved diagnostic sensitivity and accuracy for OMI compared to STEMI criteria, suggesting that these patients might benefit from faster, non-invasive identification for urgent treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF