14 results match your criteria: "St. Luke's Hospital Health Network[Affiliation]"

Objectives: The spinopelvic relationship (including pelvic incidence) has been shown to influence pelvic orientation, but its potential association with femoroacetabular impingement has not been thoroughly explored. The purpose of this study was to prove the hypothesis that decreasing pelvic incidence is associated with increased risk of cam morphology.

Methods: Two matching cohorts were created from a collection of cadaveric specimens with known pelvic incidences: 50 subjects with the highest pelvic incidence (all subjects > 60°) and 50 subjects with the lowest pelvic incidence (all subjects < 35°).

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Over the last 4 years, various drugs have been approved for the treatment of metastatic cutaneous melanoma. Ipilimumab, an anti-CTLA-4 inhibitor that stimulates antitumor immunity, was the first agent to improve overall survival both in first line and in previously treated patients. Ipilimumab results in long term disease control in approximately 20% of the patients.

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Systemic treatment of cutaneous and mucosal melanoma.

Chin Clin Oncol

September 2014

Chairman, Centro Oncológico Antonio Ermírio de Moraes, São Paulo, Brazil.

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Vaginal prolapse repair: suture repair versus mesh augmentation: a urogynecology perspective.

Urol Clin North Am

August 2012

Department of OB/GYN, St Luke's Hospital & Health Network, Allentown, PA 18103, USA.

Based on the growing evidence within our literature, mesh is clearly needed for long-term success for the repair of anterior/apical defects. Clear credentialing and clinical privilege criteria policies are long overdue. Current data are rapidly growing, with level I studies completed that demonstrate that when transvaginal mesh-augmented repair is used in appropriately selected patients for the repair of pelvic organ prolapse, the procedure has a favorable risk/benefit ratio when compared with suture repair.

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Objectives: Physicians at sporting events must rarely manage the airway of a helmeted athlete. This poses challenges for providers who do not regularly engage in airway management. In a manikin model, our purpose was to determine (1) if standard endotracheal intubation (ETI) of a simulated helmeted athlete is adversely affected by bright-light conditions and (2) if the use of laryngeal mask airway (LMA) or Airtraq improves airway management success.

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Bladder diverticulitis: a case report.

Case Rep Emerg Med

January 2013

St. Luke's Hospital & Health Network, 801 Ostrum St, Bethlehem, PA 18055, USA.

Bladder diverticulum, an outpouching of the mucosa through the muscular wall of the bladder, is a multifactorial disease process that can be either acquired or congenital. Although small diverticuli are usually asymptomatic, a large diverticulum may result in hematuria, urinary tract infection, acute abdomen due to its rupture, acute urinary retention, or neoplasm formation. We describe the case of an elderly gentleman who presented to the emergency department with abdominal pain and was ultimately diagnosed with bladder diverticulitis, a disease not previously described in the literature.

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Multidisciplinary approach to esophageal and gastric cancer.

Surg Clin North Am

February 2009

Surgical Oncology, Cancer Care Associates, St. Luke's Hospital & Health Network, 801 Ostrum Street, Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA.

The incidence of esophageal and gastric malignancies has increased over the last decade. Historically, surgery has been considered the best treatment for these cancers. However, long-term survival after surgery is fair at best, because of the tendency of disease to recur locally and distantly.

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Pityriasis rubra pilaris (PRP) is a rare skin disease that can cause severe physical and psychological manifestations. A short case study of an adult with PRP who was denied access to medications and his journey towards improved health is discussed. Through advocacy and support, health care providers can make a difference in the care of patients with PRP and improve their quality of life.

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Background: This study was designed to assess the results of the standard Delorme procedure versus an anterior modification of the Delorme procedure in the treatment of patients with rectal outlet obstruction secondary to internal intussusception with or without rectocele.

Study Design: A descriptive retrospective study from October 1997 to May 2001 was undertaken. Twenty-seven patients with symptoms of rectal outlet obstruction assumed to be caused by internal rectal prolapse or a combination of internal rectal prolapse and rectocele underwent surgical repair.

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Chronic interphalangeal ulcerations of the great toe are a frequent complication in neuropathic diabetic feet. While total contact casting is usually effective as a first-line treatment, some ulcers continue and present substantial management challenges. The objective of this study was to examine the National Hospital Discharge Survey in order to identify links between preexisting medical conditions and lower extremity pathology in patients undergoing a Keller arthroplasty.

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Podiatric pathology is common in the elderly patient population per se. Whether the presence of diabetes mellitus in the elderly imposes an additional risk for podiatric problems is questionable. The purpose of this study was to determine if the prevalence of podiatric problems in octogenarian diabetic patients differed from that found in a similarly aged group of nondiabetic patients.

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Background: Quality improvement in health care, which relies on appropriate strategies to evaluate and compare provider performance, has spawned the propagation of many public report cards or provider profiles for cardiac surgery. These risk-adjusted prediction models allow for the computation of a provider's expected outcome event rate compared with observed outcome events. The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy and reliability of 5 risk-adjusted predictive models for mortality in an independent population of patients in a community hospital who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

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Off the shelf or recalibrate? customizing a risk index for assessing mortality.

Heart Surg Forum

December 2003

Research Institute, Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, St. Luke's Hospital Health Network, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA.

Background: Public "report cards" for cardiac surgery have been freely available from a variety of sources. These risk-adjusted indices serve as a means of benchmarking outcomes performances, allowing comparisons of outcomes between surgical programs, and quantifying quality improvement programs. We examined two alternative strategies for using previously developed risk-adjusted mortality models in a community hospital: (1) using the model "off the shelf" (OTS) and (2) recalibrating the existing model (RM) to fit the institution-specific population.

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A qualitative review of population health assessment models used throughout the United States and Canada indicate both individual and community-level domains of health. Individual-level domains of health include health habits, education, public safety, environment, social, government, culture, and mobility. Community-level domains include the same general health domains but aggregated to the community level Aggregate Health Status (AHS).

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