Robotic surgeons successfully complete liver transplant

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By Chad Van Alstin

Surgeons may have to start worrying about machines taking their jobs. A research hospital in Saudi Arabia has just achieved the world’s first fully robotic liver transplant—and the patient survived and is doing fine. 

The recipient of this pioneering procedure was a 66-year-old Saudi male who has since recovered and been discharged, according to a statement from the hospital. The transplant was conducted by the King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH&RC), which is becoming world famous for its robotic surgeons, who just last year successfully performed delicate brain surgery, albeit with the support of humans.
Read more in HealthExec.

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Exercise in morning or afternoon better than evening for lowering type 2 diabetes risk

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By Michael Monostra

Physical activity during the morning and afternoon, but not during the evening, is associated with a lower risk for developing type 2 diabetes, according to findings published in Diabetologia.

“It is possible for the relationship between total physical activity and prospective risk for type 2 diabetes to differ by the time of day of physical activity,” Chirag J. Patel, PhD, assistant professor in the department of biomedical informatics at Harvard Medical School, told Healio. Read more in Healio.

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Psychosocial stressors at work may double heart disease risk for men

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By Regina Schaffer

Data suggest psychosocial stressors at work, including job strain and effort-reward imbalance, independently raise CVD risk for men and could pose a risk for heart health in women, though that evidence remains inconclusive.

“Our study underscores the importance of addressing psychosocial factors in the workplace as potential contributors to coronary heart disease risk,” Mathilde Lavigne-Robichaud, RD, MSc, a doctoral candidate in epidemiology affiliated with the population health and optimal health practices research unit of CHU de Quebec-University Laval Research Center in Laval, Quebec, Canada, told Healio. Read the full story in Healio.

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Climbing more than five flights of stairs daily may lower heart disease risk by 20%

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By Regina Schaffer

Adults who reported climbing more than five flights of stairs daily were 20% less likely to develop atherosclerotic CVD over 12 years compared with those who reported never climbing stairs, according to data from a UK Biobank analysis.

“Short bursts of high-intensity stair climbing are a time-efficient way to improve cardiorespiratory fitness and lipid profile, especially among those unable to achieve the current physical activity recommendations,” Lu Qi, MD, PhD, FAHA, HCA Regents Distinguished Chair and professor in the department of epidemiology at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, and colleagues wrote in the study background. Read more in Healio.

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$2.8M NIH Grant to Support Development of Kidney Transplant AI

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University of Florida Health researchers will use the funding to evaluate how artificial intelligence may help clinicians better predict kidney transplant outcomes.

By Shania Kennedy

September 29, 2023 – Researchers at University of Florida (UF) Health have been awarded a $2.8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop an artificial intelligence (AI)-based clinical decision support system to help improve kidney transplant outcomes.

As part of the five-year project, the research team will examine how AI models could assist with diagnosis, prediction, and care management for kidney transplant patients. Read more in Health IT Analytics.

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More Data Support Heart Donation After Circulatory Death

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By Pauline Anderson

TOPLINE:

There are no significant differences in 1-year mortality, survival to hospital discharge, severe primary graft dysfunction (PGD), and other outcomes post heart transplant between patients who receive a heart obtained by donation after circulatory death (DCD) and patients who receive a heart by donation after brain death (DBD), a new study has shown. Read the full article in Medscape.

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A Day in the Life of a Transplant Manager

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By Katie Chen

Pediatric Nurses Week is a time to celebrate and reflect on the contributions nurses make to the pediatric community and their families.

Gerri James, RN, BSN, CCTC, manager of the Pediatric Kidney Transplant Program at Stanford Medicine Children’s Health, is often the first person parents hear from when their children are referred for a transplant. Read more from Stanford Medicine Children’s Health.

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