Steve Leung
Cleveland Clinic
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Featured researches published by Steve Leung.
Journal of Clinical Anesthesia | 2017
Allan W. Belcher; Steve Leung; Barak Cohen; Dongsheng Yang; Edward J. Mascha; Alparslan Turan; Leif Saager; Kurt Ruetzler
STUDY OBJECTIVE The use of neuromuscular blockade agents (NMBA), had been associated with significant residual post-operative paralysis and morbidity. There is a lack of clinical evidence on incidence of postoperative complications within the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) in patients exposed to intraoperative NMBAs. This study aims to estimate the incidence of post-operative complications associated with use of NMBAs and assessing its association with healthcare resource utilization. DESIGN Retrospective cohort. SETTING Post-anesthesia care unit in tertiary care center. PATIENTS Adults having non-cardiac surgery and receiving NMBAs between April-2005 and December-2013 MEASUREMENTS: We assessed: 1) incidences of major and minor PACU complications, 2) incidence of any postoperative complication in patients receiving a NMBA reversal (neostigmine) vs. without. 3) We secondarily assessed the relationship between PACU complications and use of healthcare resources. MAIN RESULTS The incidence of any major complications was 2.1% and that of any minor complication was 35.2%. ICU admission rate was 1.3% in patients without any complications, versus 5.2% in patients with any minor and 30.6% in patients with any major complication. ICU length of stay was prolonged in patients with any major (52.1±203h), compared to patients with any minor (6.2±64h) and with no complications (1.7±28h). Patients who received a NMBA and neostigmine, compared to without neostigmine, had a lower incidence of any major complication (1.7% vs. 6.05%), rate of re-intubation (0.8% vs. 4.6%) and unplanned ICU admission (0.8% vs. 3.2%). CONCLUSIONS This study documents that incidence of major PACU complications after non-cardiac surgery was 2.1%, with the most frequent complications being re-intubation and ICU admission. Patients receiving NMBA reversal were at a lower risk of re-intubation and unplanned ICU admission, justifying routine use of reversals. Complete NMBA reversals are crucial in reducing preventable patient harm and healthcare utilization.
Journal of Clinical Anesthesia | 2017
Onur Koyuncu; Steve Leung; Jing You; Menekse Oksar; Selim Turhanoglu; Cagla Ozbakis Akkurt; Kenan Dolapcioglu; Hanifi Sahin; Daniel I. Sessler; Alparslan Turan
OBJECTIVES To determine that perioperative ondansetron reduces the analgesic efficacy of acetaminophen. DESIGN Randomized, double-blinded study. PATIENTS 120 patients ASA I-II who underwent abdominal hysterectomy. INTERVENTIONS All the patients were given 1g acetaminophen at skin closure. Patients were divided into two groups; ondansetron HCl (8mg, 2ml IV) (Group I, N=60) and saline (2ml IV) (Group II, N=60) at the skin closure. MEASUREMENT Postoperative pain scores (VAS) while resting in bed and sitting, total opioid consumption were noted. MAIN RESULTS Patients randomized to ondansetron had significantly worse pain scores upon arrival to the recovery unit [by 1.7 (99.7% CI: 0.75, 2.59) cm] and at 1h [by 1.3 (0.5, 2.1) cm] while resting in bed. Pain scores while sitting were also significantly greater in ondansetron group at arrival in PACU by 0.6 (99.7% CI: 0.1, 1.0) cm. Thereafter, pain scores did not differ significantly. Median total opioid (tramadol) consumption was 441 [Q1, Q3: 280, 578] mg in the ondansetron group and 412 [309, 574] mg in the placebo group, P=0.95. CONCLUSIONS Ondansetron significantly decreased the analgesic effect of acetaminophen during the initial postoperative period. Our results thus confirm that acetaminophen analgesia is partially mediated by serotonin receptors. However, the reduction was of marginal clinical importance and short-lived.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017
Jacek Smereka; Lukasz Szarpak; Antonio Rodríguez-Núñez; Jerzy Robert Ladny; Steve Leung; Kurt Ruetzler
Introduction: Pediatric cardiac arrest is an uncommon but critical life‐threatening event requiring effective cardiopulmonary resuscitation. High‐quality cardio‐pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is essential, but is poorly performed, even by highly skilled healthcare providers. The recently described two‐thumb chest compression technique (nTTT) consists of the two thumbs directed at the angle of 90° to the chest while having the fingers fist‐clenched. This technique might facilitate adequate chest‐compression depth, chest‐compression rate and rate of full chest‐pressure relief. Methods: 42 paramedics from the national Emergency Medical Service of Poland performed three single‐rescuer CPR sessions for 10 minutes each. Each session was randomly assigned to the conventional two‐thumb (TTHT), the conventional two‐finger (TFT) or the nTTT. The manikin used for this study was connected with an arterial blood pressure measurement device and blood measurements were documented on a 10‐seconds cycle. Results: The nTTT provided significant higher systolic (82 vs. 30 vs. 41 mmHg). A statistically significant difference was noticed between nTTT and TFT (p<.001), nTTT and TTHT (p < 0.001), TFT and TTHT (p = 0.003). The median diastolic preassure using nTTT was 16 mmHg compared with 9 mmHg for TFT (p < 0.001), and 9.5 mmHg for TTHT (p < 0.001). Mean arterial pressure using distinct methods varied and amounted to 40 vs. 22. vs. 26 mmHg (nTTT vs. TFT vs. TTHT, respectively). A statistically significant difference was noticed between nTTT and TFT (p < 0.001), nTTT and TTEHT (p < 0.001), and TFT and TTHT (p < 0.001). The highest median pulse pressure was obtained by the nTTT 67.5 mmHg. Pulse pressure was 31.5 mmHg in the TTHT and 24 mmHg in the TFT. The difference between TFT and TTHT (p = 0.025), TFT and nTTT (p < 0.001), as well as between TTHT and nTTT (p < 0.001) were statistically significant. Conclusions: The new nTTT technique generated higher arterial blood pressures compared to established chest compression techniques using an infant manikin model, suggesting a more effective chest compression. Our results have important clinical implications as nTTT was simple to perform and could be widely taught to both healthcare professionals and bystanders. Whether this technique translates to improved outcomes over existing techniques needs further animal studies and subsequent human trials.
Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2016
Allan W. Belcher; Ashish Khanna; Steve Leung; Amanda J. Naylor; Matthew T. Hutcherson; Bianka M. Nguyen; Natalya Makarova; Daniel I. Sessler; P. J. Devereaux; Leif Saager
BACKGROUND:Opioids can contribute to postoperative desaturation. Short-acting opioids, titrated to need, may cause less desaturation than longer-acting opioids. We thus tested the primary hypothesis that long-acting patient-controlled intravenous opioids are associated with more hypoxemia (defined as an integrated area under a postoperative oxyhemoglobin saturation of 95%) than short-acting opioids. METHODS:This analysis was a substudy of VISION, a prospective cohort study focused on perioperative cardiovascular events (NCT00512109). After excluding for predefined criteria, 191 patients were included in our final analysis, with 75 (39%) patients being given fentanyl (short-acting opioid group) and 116 (61%) patients being given morphine and/or hydromorphone (long-acting opioid group). The difference in the median areas under a postoperative oxyhemoglobin saturation of 95% between short-acting and long-acting opioids was compared using multivariable median quantile regression. RESULTS:The short-acting opioid median area under a postoperative oxyhemoglobin saturation of 95% per hour was 1.08 (q1, q3: 0.62, 2.26) %-h, whereas the long-acting opioid median was 1.28 (0.50, 2.23) %-h. No significant association was detected between long-acting and short-acting opioids and median area under a postoperative oxyhemoglobin saturation of 95% per hour (P = .66) with estimated change in the medians of −0.14 (95% CI, −0.75, 0.47) %-h for the patients given long-acting versus short-acting IV patient-controlled analgesia opioids. CONCLUSIONS:Long-acting patient-controlled opioids were not associated with the increased hypoxemia during the first 2 postoperative days.
European Journal of Pediatrics | 2017
Marcin Madziala; Jacek Smereka; Marek Dabrowski; Steve Leung; Kurt Ruetzler; Lukasz Szarpak
AbstractEmergency airway management in children is generally considered to be challenging, and endotracheal intubation requires a high level of personal skills and experience. Immobilization of the cervical spine is indicated in all patients with the risk of any cervical spine injury but significantly aggravates endotracheal intubation. The best airway device in this setting has not been established yet, although the use of videolaryngoscopes is generally promising. Seventy-five moderately experienced paramedics of the Emergency Medical Service of Poland performed endotracheal intubations in a pediatric manikin in three airway scenarios: (A) normal airway, (B) manual in-line cervical immobilization, and (C) cervical immobilization using a Patriot cervical extrication collar and using two airway techniques: (1) McGrath videolaryngoscope and (2) Macintosh blade in a randomized sequence. First-attempt intubation success rate, time to intubation, glottis visualization, and subjective ease of intubation were investigated in this study. Intubation of difficult airways, including manual in-line and cervical collar immobilization, using the McGrath was significantly faster, with a higher first-attempt intubation success rate, better glottic visualization, and ease of intubation, compared to Macintosh-guided intubation. In the normal airway, both airway techniques performed equal. Conclusion: Our manikin study indicates that the McGrath may be a reasonable first intubation technique option for endotracheal intubation in difficult pediatric emergencies. Further clinical studies are therefore indicated.What is known: • Airway management in pediatrics is challenging and requires a high level of skills and experience. Cervical immobilization is indicated in all patients with any risk of cervical spine injury, but it significantly aggravates endotracheal intubation in these patients. Videolaryngoscopes have been reported to ease intubation and provide better airway visualization in the regular clinical setting.What is new: • The McGrath is an easy-to-use and clinically often used videolaryngoscope, but it has never been investigated in pediatrics with an immobilized cervical spine. In the normal airway, the McGrath provided better airway visualization compared to Macintosh laryngoscopy. However, better visualization did not lead to decreased time to intubation and a higher success rate of the first intubation attempt. In difficult airways, the McGrath provided better airway visualization and this led to faster intubation, a higher first-attempt intubation success rate, and better ease of intubation compared to Macintosh-guided intubation.
BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia | 2017
Wael Saasouh; Steve Leung; H.O. Yilmaz; O. Koyuncu; Jing You; Nicole M. Zimmerman; Kurt Ruetzler; Alparslan Turan
Background The anti-inflammatory effects of statins have been suggested to relieve postoperative pain. This retrospective study tested the association between the perioperative routine use of statins in therapeutic doses, and opioid requirements and pain scores, after hip replacement surgery. Methods With IRB approval, data was obtained for adult patients who had elective hip replacement surgery under spinal anaesthesia at Cleveland Clinic between 2005 and 2015. Patients were compared using a joint hypothesis framework. We used the inverse probability of treatment weighting method to control for observed confounding factors (a total of 26). Results We included 611 statin users and 780 non-statin users. Pain score during the initial 72 h after surgery was 0.07 higher (95% CI: -0.02, 0.17) in statin users (noninferiority test in both directions P<0.001). The estimated ratio of geometric means in the cumulative i.v. morphine equivalent opioid consumption was 1.01 (95% CI: 0.93, 1.10) for statin vs non-statin users (noninferiority test P=0.001 in the hypothesized direction and<0.001 in the other direction) during the initial 72 h after surgery. The statin and non-statin patients were deemed equivalent on postoperative opioid consumption and pain score. Conclusions This is the first large retrospective clinical study that investigates the effects of statin use on postoperative pain and opioid consumption. We observed no difference between statin users and non-users during the initial 72 h after hip surgery. Our findings do not support the routine use of statins as part of an analgesic regimen.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017
Jacek Smereka; Lukasz Szarpak; Adam Smereka; Steve Leung; Kurt Ruetzler
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2016
Jacek Smereka; Lukasz Szarpak; Adam Smereka; Steve Leung; Kurt Ruetzler
Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2017
Rovnat Babazade; Hüseyin Oğuz Yılmaz; Steve Leung; Nicole M. Zimmerman; Alparslan Turan
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017
Jacek Smereka; Lukasz Szarpak; Adam Smereka; Steve Leung; Kurt Ruetzler