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  1. Article ; Online: ACTION-1

    Arno M. Wiersema / Liliane C. Roosendaal / Mark J. W. Koelemaij / Jan G. P. Tijssen / Susan van Dieren / Jan D. Blankensteijn / E. Sebastian Debus / Saskia Middeldorp / Jan M. M. Heyligers / Ymke S. Fokma / Michel M. P. J. Reijnen / Vincent Jongkind

    Trials, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-

    study protocol for a randomised controlled trial on ACT-guided heparinization during open abdominal aortic aneurysm repair

    2021  Volume 16

    Abstract: Abstract Background Heparin is used worldwide for 70 years during all non-cardiac arterial procedures (NCAP) to reduce thrombo-embolic complications (TEC). But heparin also increases blood loss causing possible harm for the patient. Heparin has an ... ...

    Abstract Abstract Background Heparin is used worldwide for 70 years during all non-cardiac arterial procedures (NCAP) to reduce thrombo-embolic complications (TEC). But heparin also increases blood loss causing possible harm for the patient. Heparin has an unpredictable effect in the individual patient. The activated clotting time (ACT) can measure the effect of heparin. Currently, this ACT is not measured during NCAP as the standard of care, contrary to during cardiac interventions, open and endovascular. A RCT will evaluate if ACT-guided heparinization results in less TEC than the current standard: a single bolus of 5000 IU of heparin and no measurements at all. A goal ACT of 200–220 s should be reached during ACT-guided heparinization and this should decrease (mortality caused by) TEC, while not increasing major bleeding complications. This RCT will be executed during open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) surgery, as this is a standardized procedure throughout Europe. Methods Seven hundred fifty patients, who will undergo open AAA repair of an aneurysm originating below the superior mesenteric artery, will be randomised in 2 treatment arms: 5000 IU of heparin and no ACT measurements and no additional doses of heparin, or a protocol of 100 IU/kg bolus of heparin and ACT measurements after 5 min, and then every 30 min. The goal ACT is 200–220 s. If the ACT after 5 min is < 180 s, 60 IU/kg will be administered; if the ACT is between 180 and 200 s, 30 IU/kg. If the ACT is > 220 s, no extra heparin is given, and the ACT is measured after 30 min and then the same protocol is applied. The expected incidence for the combined endpoint of TEC and mortality is 19% for the 5000 IU group and 11% for the ACT-guided group. Discussion The ACTION-1 trial is an international RCT during open AAA surgery, designed to show superiority of ACT-guided heparinization compared to the current standard of a single bolus of 5000 IU of heparin. A significant reduction in TEC and mortality, without more major bleeding complications, must be ...
    Keywords Abdominal aortic aneurysm ; Open repair ; Activated clotting time ; Heparin ; Vascular surgery ; Anticoagulation ; Medicine (General) ; R5-920
    Subject code 610
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-09-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMC
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: Vascular e-Learning in the MENA Region during the COVID-19 Pandemic

    Nikolaos Patelis / Sean Matheiken / Theodosios Bisdas / Zaiping Jing / Jiaxuan Feng / Matthias Trenner / Paulo Eduardo Ocke Reis / Stephane Elkouri / Alexandre Lecis / Dirk Le Roux / Mihai Ionac / Marton Berczeli / Vincent Jongkind / Kak Khee Yeung / Athanasios Katsargyris / Efthymios Avgerinos / Dimitrios Moris / Andrew Choong / Jun Jie Ng /
    Ivan Cvjetko / George A. Antoniou / Phillipe Ghibu / Alexei Svetlikov / Harm P. Ebben / Hubert Stepak / Sviatoslav Kostiv / Stefano Ancetti / Niki Tadayon / Liliana Fidalgo-Domingos / Eduardo Sebastian Sarutte Rosello / Arda Isik / Kyriaki Kakavia / Sotirios Georgopoulos

    Dubai Medical Journal, Pp 1-

    2023  Volume 4

    Abstract: Introduction: With the steady rise in interest in e-learning and the sudden boost provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic, it becomes necessary to explore the e-learning experience within the medical community in the MENA region. Methods: An online survey was ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: With the steady rise in interest in e-learning and the sudden boost provoked by the COVID-19 pandemic, it becomes necessary to explore the e-learning experience within the medical community in the MENA region. Methods: An online survey was conducted during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic (June 15 – October 15, 2020). Results: Seventy-eight vascular surgeons and trainees from 16 countries participated. 88% of the participants were male. 55% attended more than 4 activities. More than half of the activities did not lead to any official certification. Topic was the primary determinant for attending an activity. National societies and social media played a major role in disseminating activity-related information. Lack of time, increased workload, differences in time zone, and technical issues were the main obstacles cited. 84.7% of the participants had a positive impression. Conclusion: As the COVID-19 pandemic boosted e-learning activities in vascular surgery, a shift was observed in the learning mode and new leadership skills were called upon. Novel ways of quality control are required.
    Keywords vascular e-learning ; mena region ; covid-19 pandemic ; modes of learning ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 370
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Karger Publishers
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: Dataset of the vascular e-Learning during the COVID-19 pandemic (EL-COVID) survey

    Nikolaos Patelis / Theodosios Bisdas / Zaiping Jing / Jiaxuan Feng / Matthias Trenner / Nyityasmono Tri Nugroho / Paulo Eduardo Ocke Reis / Stephane Elkouri / Alexandre Lecis / Lamisse Karam / Dirk Le Roux / Mihai Ionac / Marton Berczeli / Vincent Jongkind / Kak Khee Yeung / Athanasios Katsargyris / Efthymios Avgerinos / Demetrios Moris / Andrew Choong /
    Jun Jie Ng / Ivan Cvjetko / George A. Antoniou / Phillipe Ghibu / Alexei Svetlikov / Fernando Gallardo Pedrajas / Harm P. Ebben / Hubert Stepak / Andrii Chornuy / Sviatoslav Kostiv / Stefano Ancetti / Niki Tadayon / Akli Mekkar / Leonid Magnitskiy / Liliana Fidalgo-Domingos / Sean Matheiken / Eduardo Sebastian Sarutte Rosello / Arda Isik / Georgios Kirkilesis / Kyriaki Kakavia / Sotirios Georgopoulos

    Data in Brief, Vol 38, Iss , Pp 107442- (2021)

    2021  

    Abstract: This dataset supports the findings of the vascular e-Learning during the COVID-19 pandemic survey (the EL-COVID survey). The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of the European Union was taken into consideration in all steps of data handling. The ... ...

    Abstract This dataset supports the findings of the vascular e-Learning during the COVID-19 pandemic survey (the EL-COVID survey). The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) of the European Union was taken into consideration in all steps of data handling. The survey was approved by the institutional ethics committee of the Primary Investigator and an online English survey consisting of 18 questions was developed ad-hoc. A bilingual English-Mandarin version of the questionnaire was developed according to the instructions of the Chinese Medical Association in order to be used in mainland People's Republic of China. Differences between the two questionnaires were minor and did affect the process of data collection. Both questionnaires were hosted online.The EL-COVID survey was advertised through major social media. All national and regional contributors contacted their respective colleagues through direct messaging on social media or by email. Eight national societies or groups supported the dissemination of the EL-COVID survey.The data provided demographics information of the EL-COVID participants and an insight on the level of difficulty in accessing or citing previously attended online activities and whether participants were keen on citing these activities in their Curricula Vitae. A categorization of additional comments made by the participants are also based on the data.The survey responses were filtered, anonymized and submitted to descriptive analysis of percentage.
    Keywords e-learning ; Training ; Education ; Distance learning ; Vascular surgery ; Surgery ; Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ; R858-859.7 ; Science (General) ; Q1-390
    Subject code 028
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-10-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Elsevier
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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