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Featured researches published by Eric J. Finnesgard.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2015

Do You See What I See? How We Use Video as an Adjunct to General Surgery Resident Education

Jad M. Abdelsattar; T.K. Pandian; Eric J. Finnesgard; Moustafa M. El Khatib; Phillip G. Rowse; EeeLN H. Buckarma; Becca L. Gas; Stephanie F. Heller; David R. Farley

OBJECTIVE Preparation of learners for surgical operations varies by institution, surgeon staff, and the trainees themselves. Often the operative environment is overwhelming for surgical trainees and the educational experience is substandard due to inadequate preparation. We sought to develop a simple, quick, and interactive tool that might assess each individual trainees knowledge baseline before participating in minimally invasive surgery (MIS). DESIGN A 4-minute video with 5 separate muted clips from laparoscopic procedures (splenectomy, gastric band removal, cholecystectomy, adrenalectomy, and inguinal hernia repair) was created and shown to medical students (MS), general surgery residents, and staff surgeons. Participants were asked to watch the video and commentate (provide facts) on the operation, body region, instruments, anatomy, pathology, and surgical technique. Comments were scored using a 100-point grading scale (100 facts agreed upon by 8 surgical staff and trainees) with points deducted for incorrect answers. All participants were video recorded. Performance was scored by 2 separate raters. SETTING An academic medical center. PARTICIPANTS MS = 10, interns (n = 8), postgraduate year 2 residents (PGY)2s (n = 11), PGY3s (n = 10), PGY4s (n = 9), PGY5s (n = 7), and general surgery staff surgeons (n = 5). RESULTS Scores ranged from -5 to 76 total facts offered during the 4-minute video examination. MS scored the lowest (mean, range; 5, -5 to 8); interns were better (17, 4-29), followed by PGY2s (31, 21-34), PGY3s (33, 10-44), PGY4s (44, 19-47), PGY5s (48, 28-49), and staff (48, 17-76), p < 0.001. Rater concordance was 0.98-measured using a concordance correlation coefficient (95% CI: 0.96-0.99). Only 2 of 8 interns acknowledged the critical view during the laparoscopic cholecystectomy video clip vs 10 of 11 PGY2 residents (p < 0.003). Of 8 interns, 7 misperceived the spleen as the liver in the splenectomy clip vs 2 of 7 chief residents (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Not surprisingly, more experienced surgeons were able to relay a larger number of laparoscopic facts during a 4-minute video clip of 5 MIS operations than inexperienced trainees. However, even tenured staff surgeons relayed very few facts on procedures they were unfamiliar with. The potential differentiating capabilities of such a quick and inexpensive effort has pushed us to generate better online learning tools (operative modules) and hands-on simulation resources for our learners. We aim to repeat this and other studies to see if our learners are better prepared for video assessment and ultimately, MIS operations.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2017

Association of Post-operative Organ Space Infection After Intraoperative Irrigation in Appendicitis

Matthew C. Hernandez; Eric J. Finnesgard; Johnathon M. Aho; Donald H. Jenkins; Martin D. Zielinski

BACKGROUND The benefit of intraoperative irrigation on postoperative abscess rates compared to suction alone is unclear. The American Association for the Surgery of Trauma grading system provides distinct disease severity stratification to determine if prior analyses were biased by anatomic severity. We hypothesized that for increasing appendicitis severity, patients receiving (high, ≥2 L) intraoperative irrigation would have increased postoperative organ space infection (OSI) rate compared to (low, <2 L) irrigation. METHODS Single-institution review of adults (>18 years) undergoing appendectomy for appendicitis during 2010-2016. Demographics, operative details, irrigation volumes, duration of stay, and complications (Clavien-Dindo classification) were collected. American Association for the Surgery of Trauma grades were assigned by two independent reviewers based on operative findings. Summary, univariate, and area under the receiver operating curve analyses were performed. RESULTS Patients (n = 1187) were identified with a mean (SD) age of 41.6 (18.4) years (45% female). Operative approach included laparoscopy (n = 1122 [94.5%]), McBurney incision (n = 10 [0.8%]), midline laparotomy (n = 16 [1.3 %]), and laparoscopy converted to laparotomy (n = 39 [3.4%)]. The mean (SD) volume of intraoperative irrigation was 410 (1200) mL. Complication rate was 26.1%. Median volume of intraoperative irrigation in patients who developed postoperative OSI was 3 [0–4] compared to 0 [0–0] in those without infection (p < 0.0001). Area under the receiver operating curve analysis determined that 2 or more liters of irrigation was associated with postoperative OSI (c statistic: 0.83, 95% confidence interval, 0.76–0.89; p < 0.001). CONCLUSION Irrigation is used for increasingly severe appendicitis with wide variation. Irrigation volumes of 2 L or greater are associated with postoperative OSI. Improving standardization of irrigation volume (<2 L) may prevent morbidity associated with this high-volume disease. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic, level IV.


59th International Annual Meeting of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, HFES 2014 | 2015

Mental and physical workloads in a competitive laparoscopic skills training environment: A pilot study

Denny Yu; Amro M. Abdelrahman; EeeLN H. Buckarma; Bethany R. Lowndes; Becca L. Gas; Eric J. Finnesgard; Jad M. Abdelsattar; T.K. Pandian; Moustafa M. El Khatib; David R. Farley; Susan Hallbeck

Surgical trainees undergo demanding training to achieve high surgical task proficiency. Abounding clinical and educational responsibilities mandate efficient and effective training. This research measured resident workload during laparoscopic skills training to identify excessive workload and how workload impacted task performance. Twenty-eight surgical trainees performed a standardized surgical training task and completed a workload questionnaire while observers measured physiological stress, posture risk assessment, and task performance. Participants self-reported mental demands, physical demands, temporal demands, performance, effort, and frustration. Effort (12±4) and frustration (12±5) were the highest subscales while physical demand (8±4) was the lowest. All participants were observed performing the task in at-risk postures, with 21% exhibiting risk levels requiring immediate intervention. Physical demand was associated with posture risk assessment scores (p<0.05). Mental demand was positively (R2=0.20, p<0.05) and frustration was negatively (R2=0.18, p<0.05) associated with skin conductance range. A point increase in physical demand was associated with a six second increase in performance time (β=6.0, p=0.01). These results support the fact that human factors and ergonomic tools can be used to relate surgical skills performance with workload, stress, and posture risks.


Surgery | 2018

Transversus abdominis plane blocks with liposomal bupivacaine after open major hepatectomy is associated with reduced early patient-reported pain scores and opioid administration

Matthew C. Hernandez; Jason Panchamia; Eric J. Finnesgard; Jennifer Leiting; Bernardo Franssen; Humza Saleem; Michael L. Kendrick; David M. Nagorney; Mark J. Truty; Rory L. Smoot

Background: Opioid overprescription can contribute to suboptimal patient outcomes. Surgeon‐performed transversus abdominis plane blocks appear to be associated with pain reduction. We compared the analgesic efficacy of surgeon‐performed transversus abdominis plane blocks for major hepatectomy with or without concurrent neuraxial analgesia. Methods: We performed a single‐institution review, assessing surgeon‐performed transversus abdominis plane blocks for major hepatectomy during 2013–2016. The primary outcome was patient‐reported pain (11‐point numeric pain‐rating scale) and the secondary outcome was opioid consumption. Independent factors predictive of pain control were identified using logistic regression and reported as odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals. Results: A total of 232 patients with a mean (± SD) age of 56.5 (±13.9) years; 51.7% were female. Operative duration, incision type, and American Society of Anesthesiologists score were similar between groups. The 24‐hour pain score was decreased substantially in patients who received a transversus abdominis plane block compared with those who did not (3 [2–4] versus 5 [4–6], P = .001) and this decrease in pain sscore persisted at 48 hours (2 [1–2] versus 4 [4–5], P = .001). In patients who received a transversus abdominis plane block, there were decreasess in consumption of oral morphine equivalents at 24 hours (322 [± 18] versus 183 [± 15], P = .0001) and 48 hours (100 [± 11] versus 33 [± 9.4], P = .03) compared with those without transversus abdominis plane block respectively. Conclusion: In patients receiving a transversus abdominis plane block, early patient opioid consumption was decreased and utilization was predictive for improved pain control. Routine transversus abdominis plane block administration should be considered during major hepatectomy as a step toward curbing systematic reliance on opioids for pain management. A prospective study on the utility of transversus abdominis plane block in hepatectomy is warranted.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018

Injury patterns and mechanisms related to refrigerator and freezer utilization in the United States

Matthew C. Hernandez; Eric J. Finnesgard; Joel R. Anderson; Nicholas P. McKenna; Martin D. Zielinski; Johnathon M. Aho

Introduction: Refrigerators and freezers (R/F) are a common household item and injury patterns associated with these appliances are not well characterized. We aimed to characterize the injury patterns, mechanisms, and affected body parts in patients treated in the emergency departments nationally, hypothesizing that injury patterns would differ by age group. Methods: A retrospective review of the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System for all patients injured using R/F during 2010–2016 was performed. Patient narrative was reviewed for injury mechanism. Comparative and multivariable analyses were performed with effects reported as odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: During the study period (January 1, 2010‐December 31, 2016) there were 6913 R/F related injuries. The study cohort was predominantly male 3734 (55%) and the median [IQR] age was 38 [22–56] years. The annual frequency of R/F related injuries was stable between years. The most common injury mechanism was falling while using R/F (31%) followed up injuries sustained while moving the appliance (25%). Teenaged patients more frequently struck the appliance compared to adults (39% vs 14%, p < 0.001). On regression, pediatric and elderly patients, mechanical fall mechanism, and cranial injury were risk factors independently associated with the need for hospitalization. Conclusions: Falls in proximity to R/F were the most common injuries sustained and teenagers were more likely to strike/punch the appliance. Injury prevention efforts should support ongoing efforts of fall risk reduction for elderly populations. Level of evidence: IV. Study type: Retrospective.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2016

Effect of Rehearsal Modality on Knowledge Retention in Surgical Trainees: A Pilot Study

Eric J. Finnesgard; Johnathon M. Aho; T.K. Pandian; David R. Farley


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2018

The American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Emergency General Surgery Anatomic Severity Scoring System as a predictor of cost in appendicitis

Eric J. Finnesgard; Matthew C. Hernandez; Johnathon M. Aho; Martin D. Zielinski


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2018

Transversus Abdominis Plane Blocks in Emergency General Surgery: Toward Improving Opioid Prescription Practices and Reducing Duration of Stay

Matthew C. Hernandez; Kristine T. Hanson; Eric J. Finnesgard; Johnathon M. Aho; Henry J. Schiller; Martin D. Zielinski


Surgery | 2017

A 21-year-old woman with right lower quadrant abdominal pain.

Eric J. Finnesgard; Benjamin Zendejas; Stephanie F. Heller


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2017

Increasing Anatomic Injury is Associated with Increasing Cost in Acute Appendicitis

Eric J. Finnesgard; Matthew C. Hernandez; Johnathon M. Aho; Martin D. Zielinski

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