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I can't find any info. When was his surgery?
Anything that could have been done to prevent this or just a freak occurence?P.E.
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College Baseball's Sang Ho Baek Died After Complications From Tommy John Surgery
Sang Ho Baek -- a freshman on George Mason's 2021 baseball team -- died Saturday after his Tommy John surgery turned tragic ... his teammate, Scott Morgan, has confirmed.www.tmz.com
It's been reported Baek suffered a blood clot while trying to recover from the procedure.
Anything that could have been done to prevent this or just a freak occurence?
Besides sequential leg compression , what else would you do for na healthy 20 year old going for relatively low risk procedure.
Even with prolonged tourniquet times I can’t imagine a PE resulting from this.
Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.Sh1t happens.
Besides sequential leg compression , what else would you do for na healthy 20 year old going for relatively low risk procedure.
Even with prolonged tourniquet times I can’t imagine a PE resulting from this.
Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.
Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.
My brother in law is heterozygous for Factor V Leiden and he developed a blood clot after a 60 minute knee scope with tourniquet. I told him specifically to tell the surgeon “no tourniquet” but apparently surgeon went and did it anyway. My wife’s mother and brother are both only heterozygous but are for some reason very susceptible to provoked clots.Besides sequential leg compression , what else would you do for na healthy 20 year old going for relatively low risk procedure.
Even with prolonged tourniquet times I can’t imagine a PE resulting from this.
Agreed , just working out if something was amiss.That's how medicine is sometimes. Can't predict it. One guy will have a brain bleed and become a vegetable while another guy will have the same brain bleed but recover completely. That's life.
Maybe someone forgot to test ventilate before pushing roc? Or it could have been bubbles in the IV tubing. Ancef being given as a fast push, instead of over 10 minutes per manufacturer recommendations, also might have contributed. Massive internal hemorrhage from ketorolac also on the differential, of course. I assume the anesthesiologist wouldn’t do something floridly dangerous, like wearing their scrubs in from home (thus leading to overwhelming massive septicemia in the PACU).
Now that I think about it… Definitely the bubbles in the IV tubing.
Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.
Root cause analysis? Like an autopsy? Unlikely it hasn't been done.Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.
Hopefully they used SCDs. We use them on everyone over 12 for surgery expected to last more than 60 min. I’m not sure what the evidence for those guidelines is though, particularly in low risk patients.
While SCDs probably help prevent a DVT from forming during surgery, I cannot imagine they provide any benefit over the next few days in a hypercoagulable patient.
At one of our ASC’s we send patients home with battery operated SCD’s.
interesting. Any idea if they actually use them? How long are they instructed to use them for? I assume until ambulating normally?
Yes, instructed to wear them until ambulating normally, and whenever they are on the couch/in bed. No idea what the compliance rate actually is.
Do you say the same thing when a plane crashes? Do we not do a root cause analysis. Tell that to the parents of this young man. Sorry mom, **** happens.
Don't SCDs have no evidence they prevent anything?? Just used as kinda weak legal protection? Maybe my preceptors have an uncommon opinion with this.