Sherif Zaky
Cleveland Clinic
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Featured researches published by Sherif Zaky.
Anesthesiology | 2013
Ehab Farag; Michael Ghobrial; Daniel I. Sessler; Jarrod E. Dalton; Jinbo Liu; Jae H. Lee; Sherif Zaky; Edward C. Benzel; William Bingaman; Andrea Kurz
Background:The authors tested the primary hypothesis that perioperative IV lidocaine administration during spine surgery (and in the postanesthesia care unit for no more than 8 h) decreases pain and/or opioid requirements in the initial 48 postoperative hours. Secondary outcomes included major complications, postoperative nausea and vomiting, duration of hospitalization, and quality of life. Methods:One hundred sixteen adults having complex spine surgery were randomly assigned to perioperative IV lidocaine (2 mg·kg−1·h−1) or placebo during surgery and in the postanesthesia care unit. Pain was evaluated with a verbal response scale. Quality of life at 1 and 3 months was assessed using the Acute Short-form (SF) 12 health survey. The authors initially evaluated multivariable bidirectional noninferiority on both outcomes; superiority on either outcome was then evaluated only if noninferiority was established. Results:Lidocaine was significantly superior to placebo on mean verbal response scale pain scores (P < 0.001; adjusted mean [95% CI] of 4.4 [4.2-4.7] and 5.3 [5.0-5.5] points, respectively) and significantly noninferior on mean morphine equivalent dosage (P = 0.011; 55 [36-84] and 74 [49-111] mg, respectively). Postoperative nausea and vomiting and the duration of hospitalization did not differ significantly. Patients given lidocaine had slightly fewer 30-day complications than patients given placebo (odds ratio [95% CI] of 0.91 [0.84–1.00]; P = 0.049). Patients given lidocaine had significantly greater SF-12 physical composite scores than placebo at 1 (38 [31–47] vs. 33 [27–42]; P = 0.002) and 3 (39 [31–49] vs. 34 [28–44]; P = 0.04) months, postoperatively. Conclusion:IV lidocaine significantly improves postoperative pain after complex spine surgery.
Anesthesiology | 2014
Ehab Farag; Abdulkadir Atim; Raktim Ghosh; Maria Bauer; Thilak Sreenivasalu; Michael Kot; Andrea Kurz; Jarrod E. Dalton; Edward J. Mascha; Loran Mounir-Soliman; Sherif Zaky; Wael Ali Sakr Esa; Belinda L. Udeh; Wael K. Barsoum; Daniel I. Sessler
Background:Ultrasound guidance for continuous femoral perineural catheters may be supplemented by electrical stimulation through a needle or through a stimulating catheter. The authors tested the primary hypothesis that ultrasound guidance alone is noninferior on both postoperative pain scores and opioid requirement and superior on at least one of the two. Second, the authors compared all interventions on insertion time and incremental cost. Methods:Patients having knee arthroplasty with femoral nerve catheters were randomly assigned to catheter insertion guided by: (1) ultrasound alone (n = 147); (2) ultrasound and electrical stimulation through the needle (n = 152); or (3) ultrasound and electrical stimulation through both the needle and catheter (n = 138). Noninferiority between any two interventions was defined for pain as not more than 0.5 points worse on a 0 to 10 verbal response scale and for opioid consumption as not more than 25% greater than the mean. Results:The stimulating needle group was significantly noninferior to the stimulating catheter group (difference [95% CI] in mean verbal response scale pain score [stimulating needle vs. stimulating catheter] of −0.16 [−0.61 to 0.29], P < 0.001; percentage difference in mean IV morphine equivalent dose of −5% [−25 to 21%], P = 0.002) and to ultrasound-only group (difference in mean verbal response scale pain score of −0.28 [−0.72 to 0.16], P < 0.001; percentage difference in mean IV morphine equivalent dose of −2% [−22 to 25%], P = 0.006). In addition, the use of ultrasound alone for femoral nerve catheter insertion was faster and cheaper than the other two methods. Conclusion:Ultrasound guidance alone without adding either stimulating needle or needle/catheter combination thus seems to be the best approach to femoral perineural catheters.
Journal of Clinical Medicine Research | 2011
Alaa Abd-Elsayed; John Seif; Maged Guirguis; Sherif Zaky; Loran Mounir-Soliman
Peripheral nerve catheter placement is used to control surgical pain. Performing bilateral brachial plexus block with catheters is not frequently performed; and in our case sending patient home with bilateral brachial plexus catheters has not been reported up to our knowledge. Our patient is a 57 years old male patient presented with bilateral upper extremity digital gangrene on digits 2 through 4 on both sides with no thumb involvement. The plan was to do the surgery under sequential axillary blocks. On the day of surgery a right axillary brachial plexus block was performed under ultrasound guidance using 20 ml of 0.75% ropivacaine. Patient was taken to the OR and the right fingers amputation was carried out under mild sedation without problems. Left axillary brachial plexus block was then done as the surgeon was closing the right side, two hours after the first block was performed. The left axillary block was done also under ultrasound using 20 ml of 2% mepivacaine. The brachial plexus blocks were performed in a sequential manner. Surgery was unremarkable, and patient was transferred to post anesthetic care unit in stable condition. Over that first postoperative night, the patient complained of severe pain at the surgical sites with minimal pain relief with parentral opioids. We placed bilateral brachial plexus catheters (right axillary and left infra-clavicular brachial plexus catheters). Ropivacaine 0.2% infusion was started at 7 ml per hour basal rate only with no boluses on each side. The patient was discharged home with the catheters in place after receiving the appropriate education. On discharge both catheters were connected to a single ON-Q (I-flow Corporation, Lake Forest, CA) ball pump with a 750 ml reservoir using a Y connection and were set to deliver a fixed rate of 7 ml for each catheter. The brachial plexus catheters were removed by the patient on day 5 after surgery without any difficulty. Patients postoperative course was otherwise unremarkable. We concluded that home going catheters are very effective in pain control postoperatively and they shorten the period of hospital stay. Keywords Brachial plexus; Home going catheters; Post-operative pain
Analgesia & Resuscitation : Current Research | 2014
Maged Guirguis; Armin F. Deroee; Sree Kolli; Alaa Abd-Elsayed; Sherif Zaky
Continuous Anterior Sciatic Nerve Block: A Case Series Sciatic nerve block is classically performed through posterior or lateral approaches. With the increased use of ultrasound, the anterior approach has gained popularity. An anterior approach should be considered in patients after trauma and severe postoperative pain where patient positioning can be challenging. The anatomical landmark techniques can be difficult for anterior approach and cannot always be relied on due to inconsistency in extremely obese population. The presence of large blood vessels in the needle path and increasing use of anticoagulants, call for the use of ultrasound guidance for anterior approach to sciatic nerve
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2010
John Seif; Sherif Zaky; Anupa Deogaonkar; Alaa A. Abd-Elsayed; M. Phil Liang Li; Marv Leventhal; C. Allen Bashour
OBJECTIVE The primary aim of this investigation was to compare the incidence of new-onset postoperative atrial arrhythmias (POAAs) in cardiac versus noncardiac thoracic surgery patients. A subgroup analysis also was performed in the cardiac surgery patients comparing POAAs in patients who underwent cardiac surgery on and off cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). DESIGN This was a retrospective study using the Department of Cardiothoracic Anesthesia patient registry. All patients (n = 33,500) undergoing cardiac (n = 29,057) and noncardiac thoracic (n = 4,443) surgeries between 1993 and 2004 were identified from the patient registry. Two propensity-matched comparisons for the incidence of POAAs were made: (1) in cardiac surgery patients versus noncardiac thoracic surgery patients and (2) in patients undergoing cardiac surgery with versus without CPB. SETTING A large metropolitan multidisciplinary clinic. PARTICIPANTS Patients. INTERVENTION No interventions were done because this was a retrospective study. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The cardiac patients had a significantly higher incidence of POAAs when compared with noncardiac thoracic surgery patients (11.6% v 7.5%, p < 0.001). There was no significant difference in the incidence of POAAs between patients undergoing CPB versus off-pump CPB (13.3% v 12.3%, p = 0.3). CONCLUSION The incidence of new-onset POAAs was higher in patients undergoing cardiac surgery than in patients undergoing noncardiac thoracic surgery in propensity-matched patient groups. CPB was not associated with new-onset POAAs.
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2009
Sherif Zaky; Amgad H. Hanna; Wael Ali Sakr Esa; Meng Xu; Cheryl Lober; Daniel I. Sessler; Gonzalo V. Gonzalez-Stawinski; Robert M. Savage; C. Allen Bashour
Archive | 2017
Maria Bauer; Lu Wang; Olusegun K. Onibonoje; Chad Parrett; Daniel I. Sessler; Loran Mounir-Soliman; Sherif Zaky; Viktor E. Krebs; Leonard T. Buller; Michael Donohue; Jennifer E. Stevens-Lapsley; Brian M. Ilfeld
The Ochsner journal | 2015
Alaa Abd-Elsayed; Maged Guirguis; Mark S. DeWood; Sherif Zaky
Survey of Anesthesiology | 2015
Ehab Farag; Abdulkadir Atim; Raktim Ghosh; Maria Bauer; Thilak Sreenivasalu; Michael Kot; Andrea Kurz; Jarrod E. Dalton; Edward J. Mascha; Loran Mounir-Soliman; Sherif Zaky; Wael Ali Sakr Esa; Belinda Udeh; Wael K. Barsoum; Daniel I. Sessler
Archive | 2014
Maged Guirguis; Armin F. Deroee; Sree Kolli; Alaa A. Abd; Sherif Zaky