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Persistent Critical Illness May Keep Patients From Leaving ICU

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A small group of patients uses one-third of intensive care unit resources, a new study contends.

Researchers analyzed data from more than one million ICU patients in Australia and New Zealand, and found that just 5 percent of them accounted for 33 percent of all days that ICU beds got used.

These are critically ill patients who go from one health crisis to another and may never get well enough to leave the ICU, according to the study authors.

The findings could lead to better care and efforts to find ways to prevent patients from slipping into this situation, which the researchers called persistent critical illness.

“We have found that this truly is a separate ‘thing’ — a state patients transition into where you’re there because you’re there, stuck in this cascade that we can’t get you out of,” said study leader Dr. Theodore Iwashyna. He is a University of Michigan Medical School ICU physician, who led the study while on sabbatical in Australia.

“The reason why these patients came in to the hospital in the first place doesn’t matter nearly as much anymore — what matters is that they’ve been there, and some aspects of how well their body worked before they came in, such as age,” Iwashyna explained in a university news release.

To reach their findings, the researchers used data from over one million critically ill patients treated in 182 ICUs across Australia and New Zealand between 2000 and 2014. Of these patients, about 51,500 were found to have persistent critical illness. This group collectively spent more than a million days in ICU beds, and more than 2.2 million days in the hospital overall, the findings showed.

In addition, almost one-quarter of the patients with persistent critical illness died in the ICU, the study found.

Just under half of ICU patients with persistent critical illness were able to go directly home from the hospital. This compared with three-quarters of ICU patients who were not deemed to have persistent critical illness, the researchers said.

Along with improved care, a better understanding of persistent critical illness could help discussions between medical teams and families about the long-term prospects for people who have been in the ICU for weeks, the study authors said.

The study’s senior author, Dr. Rinaldo Bellomo of Monash University in Australia, concluded that “we need to help the fraction who are inevitably going to die do so with dignity, and at the same time help those who are not fated to die to get better treatment.”

The study was published May 4 in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine.

More information

The American Association of Critical-Care Nurses has more on critical care.





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Some Teen Girls Coerced Into Pregnancy: Study

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Girls as young as 14 have boyfriends who’ve pressured them to become pregnant, sabotaged their birth control, or otherwise tried to control their reproductive health, a new study finds.

The study was small, surveying 77 sexually experienced high school girls in New York City. But researchers said the results show that “reproductive coercion” affects not only adult women, but girls, too.

And that means it’s a type of abuse that doctors, schools and parents need to be aware of, said lead researcher Dr. Jennifer Northridge, a postdoctoral fellow in adolescent medicine at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore, in New York City.

Reproductive coercion refers to a partner’s attempts to control a woman’s reproductive choices: He might pressure her to become pregnant or continue with an unintended pregnancy, for instance, or interfere with her birth control so she becomes pregnant against her will.

In studies, 10 percent to 20 percent of adult women say they’ve been victims of reproductive coercion.

But the scope of the problem among teenage girls is unknown, according to Northridge.

As a first step, she said, she and her colleagues surveyed girls who were likely to be at increased risk: 14- to 17-year-olds seen at health clinics in the Bronx, a borough of New York City with high rates of teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

And it turned out that reproductive coercion was surprisingly common — on par with what’s been seen among young adult women, Northridge said.

Of the 77 girls surveyed, 16 percent said they’d ever had a boyfriend try to control their reproductive health — usually by telling them not to use birth control or by removing his condom during sex. In some cases, the girls said a partner had forced them to have sex without a condom.

“This type of abuse definitely happens in the context of a controlling relationship,” said Northridge, who presented the findings May 3 at the Pediatric Academic Societies’ annual meeting, in Baltimore.

Often, she said, reproductive coercion seems to go hand-in-hand with physical abuse: Half of the girls in her study who reported reproductive coercion said they’d been hit, slapped or otherwise physically abused by a boyfriend. That compared with 16 percent of other girls.

They were also more likely to have had chlamydia, an STD that can cause infertility if left untreated.

According to Northridge, the findings suggest that doctors who care for teenage girls should be screening for reproductive coercion.

Dr. Elizabeth Miller, chief of adolescent and young adult medicine at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, agreed.

“Health care providers need to be considering the possibility of reproductive coercion with adolescent and young adult patients — especially when they have patients coming in for STD or pregnancy testing, STD treatment, or emergency contraception,” said Miller, who was not involved in the study.

It’s not clear how often that is happening, however.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists does recommend that ob-gyns screen women and teenage girls for reproductive coercion and other types of intimate partner violence.

“So it is certainly on some health care providers’ radar,” Miller said. But, she added, reproductive coercion is a relatively new term, and no one knows how often pediatricians, for example, ask teenage patients about it.

Because the study focused on girls from one urban area, the prevalence of reproductive coercion may not reflect what’s going on among teenage girls in general, according to Northridge.

Still, she said, the findings underscore the importance of teaching all kids how to have healthy relationships.

Many teenagers do not even recognize “controlling behavior” as a form of abuse, Northridge pointed out. “We need to focus on education, for both girls and boys,” she said.

Miller agreed. “Parents, teachers, school staff, after-school programs, other adults — we all have an obligation to talk to young people often and consistently about healthy and unhealthy relationships.”

Findings presented at meetings are generally viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has more on reproductive coercion.





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Seniors: Pump Iron, Live Longer

By Don Rauf
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — You probably already know that strength training, such as lifting weights or doing pushups, is good for you, but now new research suggests it may help you live longer, too.

When people 65 and older did strength training twice a week, they lowered their odds of dying from any cause by almost half during a 15-year study.

“The secret to a longer and healthier life may not be available in pill form, but it may look like a barbell,” said lead study author Dr. Jennifer Kraschnewski. She’s an assistant professor of medicine and public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine, in Hershey, Pa.

“Strength training can substantially decrease mortality risk, and more importantly, some of our other work demonstrates the impact of strength training on improving functional limitations [in older people],” she added.

The study included data on more than 30,000 adults, all 65 and older. Information was collected from 1997 through 2001 through the U.S. National Health Interview Survey.

Nearly 10 percent of the adults in the study reported strength training at least twice a week. That’s consistent with guidelines from the American College of Sports Medicine/American Heart Association (ACSM/AHA). Kraschnewski said this training included muscle-strengthening activities for the legs, hips, back, abdomen, chest, shoulders and arms.

While the study didn’t prove cause-and-effect, it found that people who did strength training at least two days a week were 46 percent less likely to die from any cause. And they were 41 percent less likely to die from heart disease, Kraschnewski said. She added that seniors who did at least two days of strength training were also 19 percent less likely to die from cancer compared to those who didn’t do the training.

Responding to the study findings, orthopedic surgeon Dr. Brad Thomas said, “Strength training has been well identified as a means to strengthen our bones and joints, but with this study we have a new benefit of longevity.” Thomas, who was not involved with the study, is an associate professor at UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine.

Previous studies have shown that strength training may improve muscle mass and chronic conditions such as diabetes, osteoporosis, lower back pain and obesity. Stronger muscles may also result in better stamina, physical function, and balance, according to background information in the study.

ACSM/AHA guidelines also recommend that adults participate in moderate-intensity (such as brisk walking) aerobic activity for 150 minutes each week. That’s 30 minutes a day, five days a week. If you are performing vigorous-intensity aerobic activity (such as jogging or running), the guidelines suggest 75 minutes each week.

Kraschnewski urged older adults who have not been active to talk with a doctor before starting an exercise program.

“In general, there are safe exercises for everyone, but it may require tailoring for your specific conditions,” she said. “Strength training can be done at home and many exercises don’t actually require equipment.”

A few of her suggestions include doing pushups, abdominal crunches and leg squats, all of which use one’s own body weight.

Kraschnewski said resistance bands are another great option for home-based programs. These inexpensive bands or tubes provide resistance when stretched and can be used for strength training exercises in all major muscle groups, she said.

If you feel that you could benefit from additional help, consider joining a gym that offers coaches to help create an exercise regimen, she suggested.

“Typically, two to three exercise sessions a week for 20 to 30 minutes are enough for most people to develop results,” said Kraschnewski. “Our studies have demonstrated older adults can double their strength in just 12 weeks.”

Both Kraschnewski and Thomas said there’s no age cutoff when it comes to getting benefits from aerobic exercise and strength training.

“Older adults have the ability to achieve strength similar to those decades younger by engaging in simple strength training routines,” Kraschnewski said.

The study findings were published recently in the journal Preventive Medicine.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Aging has more on exercise and older adults.





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No Statins Before Heart Surgery, Study Suggests

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Taking cholesterol-lowering statins right before heart surgery, once touted as a way to prevent common postoperative complications, has no benefit and may even cause harm, a new study suggests.

In that setting, Crestor (rosuvastatin) did not prevent either the abnormal heart rhythm known as atrial fibrillation or heart damage, and it was linked to a slightly increased risk of kidney damage, researchers said.

“There are many valid reasons why one may want to take statins, but prevention of postoperative complications in cardiac surgery is not one of them,” said lead researcher Dr. Barbara Casadei. She is a professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Oxford in England.

“Our study is consistent with the idea that well-established beneficial effects of statin therapy, such as the reduction in heart attacks and strokes, are only achieved by long-term treatment with these drugs,” she added.

For the study, Casadei and her colleagues randomly assigned more than 1,900 patients who were having elective heart surgery to take Crestor or a placebo before surgery.

The researchers found that patients given Crestor had lower levels of cholesterol and C-reactive protein (another marker for heart trouble) after surgery, compared with patients given a placebo.

However, the percentages of those who developed atrial fibrillation were essentially the same in patients given Crestor (21.1 percent) and those given a placebo (20.5 percent), the investigators found.

And further analyses showed that Crestor was associated with a 5.4 percent greater chance of mild kidney damage, when compared with a placebo.

The cause of the kidney damage isn’t known, said Casadei, since the study was not designed to show cause-and-effect. However, her team plans to study that issue further, she added.

“The risk of kidney injury is relatively small, but considering that the benefit of statin treatment before a heart operation is zero, one may well consider stopping statins for a few days before surgery,” Casadei said.

The report was published May 5 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a professor of cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the study findings should not deter patients from taking statins to prevent heart attacks and strokes.

“Current guidelines recommend that all patients with cardiovascular disease, including patients after coronary artery bypass surgery, receive statins to lower the risk of fatal and nonfatal heart attacks and strokes,” he said.

Beyond the intermediate and long-term benefits of statins, a number of small clinical trials have suggested an additional short-term benefit of starting or continuing statin therapy before heart surgery. However, many of these studies may have had problems that clouded the findings, Fonarow noted.

“This new trial suggests that there is no compelling reason to initiate statin therapy just before cardiac surgery,” he said.

“However, long-term treatment with statins is essential to lower the intermediate and long-term risk of fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular events in patients with cardiovascular disease,” Fonarow added.

More information

Visit the American Heart Association for more on statins.





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Move of the Week: Attitude Leg Lifts

Sculpt your booty and improve your balance with these so-called attitude leg lifts. Here, Sarah Wingo from Pure Barre demonstrates the best way to do this classic ballet strengthening move.

RELATED: Get Sweating in This 10-Minute Barre Workout

Here’s how to do it: Place your right hand on the back of a chair that’s about hip height. Bring your left hand to your hip. Step your heels together with your toes apart. Extend your left leg behind you on a diagonal and turn it out. You knee is straight, toes pointed. With your supporting leg slightly bent, pulse your left leg toward the midline for 30 seconds. Then add a small lift (about an inch) to each pulse for another 30 seconds. (Imagine you are drawing a capital L in the air with your big toe.) Next extend your left arm in front of you, bring your left heel to your seat, flex your foot, and pulse your leg back in that position for 30 seconds more.

Trainer tip: Be sure to keep your abs engaged and hips tucked under.




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Hepatitis C Now Leading Infectious Disease Killer in U.S.

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — The number of hepatitis C-linked deaths in the United States reached a record high in 2014, and the virus now kills more Americans than any other infectious disease, health officials report.

There were 19,659 hepatitis C-related deaths in 2014, according to preliminary data from U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Those tragically high numbers aren’t necessary, one CDC expert said.

“Why are so many Americans dying of this preventable, curable disease? Once hepatitis C testing and treatment are as routine as they are for high cholesterol and colon cancer, we will see people living the long, healthy lives they deserve,” said Dr. Jonathan Mermin said in an agency news release.

He directs the CDC’s National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention.

If not diagnosed and treated, people with hepatitis C are at increased risk for liver cancer and other life-threatening diseases. They may also unknowingly infect others.

The new CDC study found that the number of hepatitis C-related deaths in 2013 exceeded the combined number of deaths from 60 other infectious diseases, including HIV and tuberculosis.

The numbers might even be higher, the agency said. That’s because the new statistics are based on data from death certificates, which often underreport hepatitis C.

Most cases of hepatitis C are among baby boomers — those born between 1945 and 1965. According to the CDC, many were infected during medical procedures such as injections and blood transfusions when these procedures were not as safe as they are now. Many hepatitis C-infected “boomers” may even have lived with the disease for many years without knowing it, the CDC said.

The preliminary data also suggests a new wave of hepatitis C infections among injection drug users. These “acute” cases of hepatitis C infection more than doubled since 2010, increasing to 2,194 reported cases in 2014, the CDC found.

The new cases were mainly among young whites with a history of injection drug use who are living in rural and suburban areas of the Midwest and Eastern United States.

“Because hepatitis C often has few noticeable symptoms, the number of new cases is likely much higher than what is reported. Due to limited screening and underreporting, we estimate the number of new infections is closer to 30,000 per year,” said Dr. John Ward, director of CDC’s Division of Viral Hepatitis.

“We must act now to diagnose and treat hidden infections before they become deadly and to prevent new infections,” he added.

About 3.5 million Americans have hepatitis C and about half are unaware of their infection. One-time hepatitis C testing is recommended for everyone born from 1945 to 1965 and regular testing is suggested for others at high risk, according to the CDC and the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Luckily, curative drugs have advanced the treatment of hepatitis C infection over recent years. For people diagnosed with the virus, these new and highly effective treatments can cure the vast majority of infections in two to three months, the CDC said.

The new report was published online May 4 in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on hepatitis C.





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New Guidelines Recommend Inpatient Rehab After Stroke

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — If possible, people who’ve had a stroke should be sent directly to inpatient rehabilitation after their hospital discharge. This would be instead of a skilled nursing facility or nursing home, according to new guidelines by the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA).

Inpatient rehabilitation may be part of the hospital. Or, it may be a freestanding facility.

Ideally, stroke patients should begin their rehabilitation before they even leave the hospital. For example, they should start to learn how to prevent falls while still in the hospital, the groups recommend. This includes tips on how to make their home safer such as by removing throw rugs and improving lighting.

Patients should also learn about the side effects of their medication and how to use devices such as wheelchairs, walkers and canes before they leave the hospital, the AHA/ASA advises.

“This recommendation will probably change medical practice. Even the top stroke centers may not have a formal falls-prevention program, but it is very important because a high percentage of patients end up falling after a stroke,” the lead author of the new guidelines, Carolee Winstein, said in an AHA/ASA news release.

Once discharged from the hospital, stroke patients should be sent to an inpatient rehab facility where they can continue their recover and receive more intensive therapy, the guidelines say.

“Previous guidelines have focused on the medical issues involved in the initial management of stroke, but many people survive a stroke with some level of disability. There is increasing evidence that rehabilitation can have a big impact on the survivors’ quality of life, so the time is right to review the evidence in this complex field and highlight effective and important aspects of rehabilitation,” said Winstein.

Winstein is a professor of biokinesiology and physical therapy at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

Unlike a nursing home, an inpatient rehabilitation facility provides patients with at least three hours of rehab on daily basis. Patients work with a range of health care providers. They may include physical therapists, occupational therapists and speech therapists, the AHA/ASA explained.

“If the hospital suggests sending your loved one to a skilled nursing facility after a stroke, advocate for the patient to go to an inpatient rehabilitation facility instead — unless there is a good reason not to, such as being medically unable to participate in rehab,” said Winstein.

“There is considerable evidence that patients benefit from the team approach in a facility that understands the importance of rehabilitation during the early period after a stroke,” she said.

Other recommendations issued by the AHA/ASA include:

  • Stroke patients who have trouble walking should undergo intense mobility-task training to help relearn how to perform daily activities, such as climbing stairs.
  • The use of a computer, books, music and virtual reality games could help enhance rehabilitation for stroke patients, making it more engaging and mentally stimulating.
  • Stroke patients who have trouble speaking should undergo speech therapy.
  • Patients who have vision problems and have trouble focusing should perform eye exercises.
  • Balance training should be offered to stroke survivors at risk for falls.
  • Exercise regimens tailored to individual stroke patients can help them continue to improve their fitness level once their rehabilitation is complete.

“For a person to fulfill their full potential after stroke, there needs to be a coordinated effort and ongoing communication between a team of professionals as well as the patient, family and caregivers,” said Winstein.

The new guidelines were published May 4 in the journal Stroke.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health provides more information on rehabilitation after stroke.





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Why Humans Have Bigger Brains

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Scientists say they’ve uncovered why humans have such big brains.

It turns out that metabolism — the rate at which a body burns calories — runs faster in humans than it does in other primates. And humans have more body fat, which provides the energy reserves needed to fuel that faster metabolism, the researchers said.

What does all of this mean? Greater growth and development of the brain, the researchers said.

In their study, the scientists compared 141 humans to 27 chimpanzees, 11 orangutans, 10 gorillas and eight bonobos — pygmy chimpanzees. When adjusted for body size, people consume 400 more calories a day than chimpanzees and bonobos, 635 more calories than gorillas and 820 more calories than orangutans.

“Humans exhibit an evolved predisposition to deposit fat whereas other hominoids remain relatively lean, even in captivity where activity levels are modest,” researchers from Loyola University in Chicago, said in a university news release.

The team, led by Amy Luke, Lara Dugas and Ramon Durazo-Arvizu, believes the findings could one day help fight obesity.

“Untangling the evolutionary pressures and physiological mechanisms shaping the diversity of metabolic strategies among living hominoids may aid efforts to promote and repair metabolic health for humans in industrialized populations and apes in captivity,” the study authors wrote.

The study was published May 4 in the journal Nature.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health has more about minding your metabolism.





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Ebola May Leave Some Survivors Blind

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — About one-fifth of Ebola survivors in Sierra Leone developed severe or total vision loss within weeks of being declared free of the virus, a new study finds.

Many survivors develop uveitis, a general term describing illnesses that trigger swelling and can destroy optical tissues, the researchers said.

“Uveitis patients developed ocular symptoms a median of three weeks after discharge from Ebola treatment centers” in Sierra Leone, said a team led by Dr. John Mattia of the Lowell and Ruth Gess Eye Hospital in Decatur, Ga.

The researchers were to present the findings Wednesday in Seattle at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology.

In the West African study, Mattia’s team examined the eyes of 50 Ebola survivors with uveitis out of a group of about 270 survivors. A total of 62 eyes were given visual acuity tests.

“Severe vision impairment and blindness were observed in at least one eye in 19 of 62 eyes [screened],” the team reported. Men and women had similar risk of vision loss, and the duration of Ebola symptoms did not seem to affect the odds that a patient might suffer eye damage, the study found.

Mattia’s team said that while further study is essential, resources are urgently needed to diagnose and treat this sight-threatening post-Ebola complication across West Africa.

The recent West African outbreak of Ebola, the largest in history, killed more than 11,000 people and infected more than 28,000, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Findings presented at medical meetings are typically considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

For more on Ebola, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.





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Robots Stake Their Claim in the Operating Room

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 4, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A surgical robot outperformed human surgeons in stitching the small intestines of pigs back together, researchers report.

Without any direct human interaction, the Smart Tissue Autonomous Robot (STAR) reconnected the intestines with sutures that proved more accurate, evenly spaced and durable than those created by human hands, the machine’s developers said.

The test shows it’s possible to create a smart robot that will be able to perform an entire surgical procedure on its own, much as robot technology is now used to assemble complex machinery or safely steer airplanes and automobiles, said senior researcher Dr. Peter C.W. Kim.

“Our hypothesis is you should be able to eventually program the entire surgical procedure beginning-to-end, intelligently and autonomously,” said Kim, who is a pediatric surgeon and vice president of the Sheikh Zayed Institute for Pediatric Surgical Innovation at Children’s National Health System, in Washington, D.C.

Robots currently are used in many surgical procedures, including heart bypass surgery, kidney transplants, prostate removal, hysterectomy and hip replacement, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

However, these robots are directly guided by a surgeon sitting at a computer station, with their movements matching those of their human operator.

“When you look at the current robot, it simply is a motorized tool at the end of surgeons’ fingertips,” Kim explained. “It has no intelligence whatsoever.”

Kim and his colleagues set out to create a robot that could perform a challenging surgical procedure without any human guidance.

They settled on reconnecting two ends of a small intestine as their test case, since the procedure involves soft tissue that moves around during surgery.

“The procedure is like trying to put together a garden hose which has been cut. It’s a tube structure which has some type of liquid flowing through it,” said study co-author Ryan Decker, a senior engineer with the Sheikh Zayed Institute.

“You want the spacing between sutures to be very consistent, and you want them to be tensioned very well and consistently,” Decker said. “You also want them to be strong enough that when the pressure increases inside the garden hose, in this example, the garden hose will not leak.”

Surgeons use sharp vision, deft hands and a deep reservoir of knowledge and experience to perform their procedures, Kim said. He and his colleagues set out to recreate all three of these features in their experimental robot:

  • They equipped STAR with infrared vision and a 3-D camera, so the robot would have better vision than humans and be able to locate structures in a three-dimensional space.
  • The STAR robot also was built with the best minimally invasive surgical tools, and researchers added a force sensor so the robot would know how tight its sutures are. “When it pulls the suture, it knows how hard it is pulling,” Kim said.
  • Finally, the researchers programmed the robot with the best-practice surgical techniques for reconnecting two ends of a small intestine, “so the machine independently chooses how the task might best be accomplished,” Kim said.

For the study, the researchers opened up the bellies of pigs and divided their small intestines in two. They then had either the STAR or a human surgeon reconnect the two ends.

The STAR outperformed humans in reconnecting small intestines whether the humans used their own hands, a robot assistant or laparoscopic techniques, the researchers found.

The sutures reconnecting the small intestines were better spaced, more accurate and better withstood “leak” testing when performed by STAR, the researchers found. These postsurgical intestinal leaks can cause dire complications in humans who have undergone open bowel surgery.

About 60 percent of the time, the STAR robot performed the surgery without even minor adjustments from researchers prior to the procedure, Kim said.

“At the end of the day, when this machine puts two ends together, it does it consistently,” he said. “It does it perfectly, all the time.”

This technology could be easily adapted to perform procedures like gall bladder removal or appendectomy, Kim said.

“The goal is not to replace surgeons, but by having a tool like this and by making the procedures more intelligent, we can ensure better outcomes for patients,” he said, noting that surgeons would oversee the robot’s operations and step in when needed.

The study was published May 4 in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Dr. Rasa Zarnegar, an associate professor of surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, said that automated robotic surgery is “where it’s eventually going to go anyway.”

“There are certain steps in surgery like suturing that could probably become automated using a robotic system,” Zarnegar said. “I don’t think it’s far-fetched, and I don’t think people will be concerned about it as long as the data support there are better outcomes.”

Zarnegar did note that STAR only performed surgery on four pigs in the study. Research on animals doesn’t always produce similar results in humans.

“Robotics has potentially a very bright future as far as automation goes, but you have to see how it pans out in larger studies,” he said.

Megan Frisk, a senior editor with the journal, said the elusive “promise of going hands-free in surgery and allowing the robot to do all of the work” appears nearer to reality with this research.

“This achievement represents a new era of robotic surgery that could reduce error and complications for patients undergoing everything from tumor removal to airway reconstruction,” Frisk said.

More information

For more on robot-assisted surgery, visit the U.S. National Institutes of Health.





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