Jiri Paral
University of Defence
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jiri Paral.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2011
Jiri Paral; Zdenek Subrt; Petr Lochman; Leo Klein; Dimitar Hadzi-Nikolov; Zdenek Turek; Martin Vejbera
BackgroundWe explored the potential of two cyanoacrylate tissue adhesives for constructing colonic anastomoses.MethodThe study involved 12 female domestic pigs. The animals were divided into two equal groups. In both groups, the sigmoid colon was transected. An intestinal anastomosis was constructed with a modified circular stapler (all staples were withdrawn) and cyanoacrylate tissue adhesives. Glubran 2® was used in group A and Dermabond® was applied in group B. Fourteen days after the first operation, a follow-up surgery was performed in both groups. The glued section of the colon was resected, processed with the standard paraffin technique and stained with haematoxylin–eosin. The finished specimens were examined under light microscopy. Assessments were made for the presence of fibroblasts, neutrophils, giant polynuclear cells, neovascularisation and collagen deposits. Adhesions, anastomotic dehiscence, peri-anastomotic inflammation and intestinal healing were assessed peri-operatively.ResultsAll anastomoses in group A healed with no signs of pathology. In group B, fibrotic adhesions and stenoses tended to occur in areas surrounding the anastomoses. Histological examinations confirmed increased fibrosis.ConclusionThe tissue adhesive Glubran 2 appears to be (under experimental conditions) a promising synthetic adhesive for colonic anastomosis construction; conversely, the tissue adhesive Dermabond was unsuitable for suture-free anastomosis construction.
European Surgical Research | 2007
Jiri Paral; Ferko A; J. Varga; F. Antos; Michal Plodr; P. Lochman; Zdeněk Šubrt
Purpose: The aim of this prospective randomized study was to investigate the necessity of suturing subcutaneous fat tissue in elective abdominal surgery. Methods: 415 patients undergoing elective abdominal surgery were admitted to the trial. The patients were divided into two basic groups according to wound contamination: clean operations (n = 201) and clean-contaminated operation (n = 214). Subcutaneous suturing of the subcutaneous fat tissue was performed in half of the patients in each group, determined using the envelope method (‘Suture Yes’ or ‘Suture No’). Wounds were checked on postoperative days 3, 7, 14, and 30. Infectious and non-infectious wound complications were charted in the records. Data were statistically analyzed. The percentages of complications in groups with and without subcutaneous suturing were statistically compared using Yates’ corrected χ2 two-tailed test. Results: There were no statistically significant group differences in infectious and non-infectious wound complications. Conclusion: These results suggest that omission of subcutaneous fat tissue suturing does not increase the occurrence of infectious or non-infectious wound complications.
Asian Journal of Surgery | 2014
Jiri Paral; Petr Lochman; Slavomir Blazej; Michal Pavlik
BACKGROUND This study compared the resistance of glued versus stapled anastomosis of the colon to intraluminal pressures at different times during healing. METHODS Forty seven female domestic pigs, mean weight of 30.7 kg, were used. Maximum physiological luminal pressures, i.e. the pressure resisted by a catheter inserted into the intestinal lumen via a puncture without it being released and without injury to the surrounding intestinal wall, was performed in 5 control animals. The remaining 42 animals were divided into 3 groups of 14 animals each based on time from anastomosis construction. Each group was divided into 2 subgroups with stapled or glued anastomoses. Intraluminal pressure was measured on the first, third, and fifth day post-surgery. RESULTS The maximum pressures resisted by anastomoses were significantly higher than the physiological pressures in all groups. At all time points, stapled anastomoses resisted higher intraluminal pressures than glued ones. However, glued anastomoses resisted pressures significantly higher than physiological pressure. As healing advanced, glued anastomoses neared the resistance to intraluminal pressures of stapled anastomoses. CONCLUSION Healing with absorbable synthetic glue was as good as with staples. Glued anastomoses resisted pressures that were statistically significantly higher than physiological intraluminal colon pressures but lower than stapled ones.
Resuscitation | 2016
Michal Plodr; Anatolij Truhlar; Jaroslava Krencikova; Monika Praunova; Vladimir Svaba; Jiri Masek; Dana Bejrova; Jiri Paral
BACKGROUND The two most commonly used dispatch tools are medical priority dispatch (MPD) and criteria based dispatch (CBD), but there are countries still using non-standardized emergency call processing. We compared selected characteristics of DA-CPR before and after implementation of a standardized protocol in a non-MPD and non-CBD system. METHODS Observational study of DA-CPR recordings during 4-month periods before (PER1) and after (PER2) the standardized protocol had been implemented. Selected performance characteristics included times to event verification, identification of cardiac arrest, DA-CPR instructions, and first chest compression, which were compared between PER1 and PER2. The secondary goal was to compare survival to hospital discharge. RESULTS A total of 152 call recordings with DA-CPR were evaluated in PER1 and 174 in PER2. Median times to cardiac arrest recognition were 46s in PER1 and 37s in PER2 (p=0.002), to first compression 2min 35s in PER1 and 2min 25s in PER2 (p=0.549). Admission to hospital with return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was achieved in 39 patients (31.9%) in PER1 and 57 (45.6%) in PER2 (p<0.05), discharge from hospital (CPC 1-2) in 9.0% and 14.4% patients in PER1 and PER2, respectively. If ventricular fibrillation was the initial rhythm, survival rate (CPC 1-2) was 32.3% in PER1 and 38.7% in PER2 (p=0.523). CONCLUSION Implementation of a standardized DA-CPR protocol resulted in faster identification of cardiac arrest, response team dispatching and arrival at scene. These factors were associated with a trend to better survival.
Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology | 2017
Vlasta Dostálová; Jitka Schreiberová; Jiri Paral; Jaroslav Kraus; Alena Ticha; Vera Radochova; P Dostal
Background: Hyperosmolar solutions have been used in neurosurgery to modify brain bulk. The aim of this animal study was to compare the short-term effects of equivolemic, equiosmolar solutions of hypertonic saline (HTS) and sodium lactate (HTL) on cerebral cortical microcirculation and brain tissue oxygenation in a rabbit craniotomy model. Methods: Rabbits (weight, 1.5 to 2.0 kg) were anesthetized, ventilated mechanically, and subjected to a craniotomy. The animals were allocated randomly to receive a 3.75 mL/kg intravenous infusion of either 3.2% HTS (group HTS, n=9), half-molar sodium lactate (group HTL, n=10), or normal saline (group C, n=9). Brain tissue partial pressure of oxygen (PbtO2) and microcirculation in the cerebral cortex using sidestream dark-field imaging were evaluated before, 20 and 40 minutes after 15 minutes of hyperosmolar solution infusion. Global hemodynamic data were recorded, and blood samples for laboratory analysis were obtained at the time of sidestream dark-field image recording. Results: No differences in the microcirculatory parameters were observed between the groups before and after the use of osmotherapy. Brain tissue oxygen deteriorated over time in groups C and HTL, this deterioration was not significant in the group HTS. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that equivolemic, equiosmolar HTS and HTL solutions equally preserve perfusion of cortical brain microcirculation in a rabbit craniotomy model. The use of HTS was better in preventing the worsening of brain tissue oxygen tension.
BMC Anesthesiology | 2015
P Dostal; Jitka Schreiberová; Vlasta Dostálová; Tomas Tyll; Jiri Paral; Islam Abdo; Miroslav Cihlo; David Astapenko; Zdenek Turek
Journal of Neurosurgical Anesthesiology | 2018
Vlasta Dostálová; David Astapenko; Jaroslav Kraus; Vladimir Cerny; Alena Tichá; Radomír Hyšpler; Vera Radochova; Jiri Paral; P Dostal
Rozhledy v chirurgii | 2016
J. Hoch; Ferko A; Milan Blaha; Aleš Ryška; Ivan Čapov; Ladislav Dušek; Josef Feit; M. Grega; Markéta Hermanová; Eva Hovorková; R. Chmelová; Zdenek Kala; Klos D; Roman Kodet; Langer D; Hadži-Nikolov D; Július Örhalmi; Jiri Paral; Tichý M; Inna Tuckova; Vjaclovský M; Petr Vlček
Military Medical Science Letters | 2012
Petr Lochman; Jiri Paral; Dusan Simkovic; Jaromír Kočí
Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 2006
Michal Plodr; Jiri Paral; Ferko A