100 episodes

Audible Bleeding is a resource for trainees and practicing vascular surgeons, focusing on interviews with leaders in the field, board preparation, and dissemination of best clinical practices and high impact innovations in vascular surgery.

Audible Bleeding Powered by the SVS

    • Health & Fitness

Audible Bleeding is a resource for trainees and practicing vascular surgeons, focusing on interviews with leaders in the field, board preparation, and dissemination of best clinical practices and high impact innovations in vascular surgery.

    • video
    Meet the SVS Vice President Candidates

    Meet the SVS Vice President Candidates

    In this episode, Sasank Kalipatnapu (@ksasank), John Culhane and Leana Dogbe (@ldogbe4) sit down along with Dr. Dalman (@RLDalmanMD) as chair of the SVS Nominating Committee for this year, along with the two vice presidential candidates Dr. Harris and Dr Shaw to learn more about them as part of the ongoing election process. 
     
    Show links:
    SVS 2024 Meet the VP Candidates—Home Page—provides a comprehensive overview of all the candidates. Their professional biographies and answers to questions about their plans for the future are available in both text and video formats.
     
    Show Guests:
    Dr. Linda Harris, Professor of Surgery at Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Buffalo, NY
    Dr. Palma Shaw, Professor of Surgery at State University of New York, Syracuse, NY
    Dr. Ronald L. Dalman, Elsa R. and Walter C. Chidester Professor and Division Chief Emeritus of Vascular Surgery at Stanford University, CA, Associate Dean for Market Development and Outreach for Stanford Medicine and Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs in the Department of Surgery
      
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    • 55 min
    JVS Author Spotlight - O'Donnell and Timaran

    JVS Author Spotlight - O'Donnell and Timaran

    Audible Bleeding contributor and 5th year general surgery resident Richa Kalsi (@KalsiMD) is joined by first-year vascular surgery fellow Zach Mattay (@ZMatthay), fifth-year general surgery resident Naveed Rahman (@naveedrahmanmd), JVS editor Dr. Thomas Forbes (@TL_Forbes), and JVS-CIT editor Dr. Matthew Smeds (@mattsmeds) to discuss two great articles in the JVS family of journals. The first article discusses national trends in surgeon-modified graft utilization for complex and thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms. The second article discusses a novel technique, transcatheter electrosurgical aortic septotomy, to treat chronic dissecting aortoiliac aneurysms.  This episode hosts Dr. Thomas O’Donnell (@tfxod) and Dr. Carlos Timaran (@ch_timaran), the authors of these two papers.
    Articles:
    Part 1:“National Trends in utilization of surgeon-modified grafts for complex and thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms” by Dr. O’Donnell and colleagues.
    Mentioned during the discussion:
     “Application of Investigational Device Exemptions regulations to endograft modification” by Abel and Farb. 
    Part 2: “Early results of transcatheter electrosurgical aortic septotomy for endovascular repair of chronic dissecting aortoiliac aneurysms” by Dr. Timaran and colleagues.
    Mentioned during discussion:
    “Transcatheter Electrosurgery: JACC State-of-the-Art Review” by Khan and colleagues.
    “A Novel Way to Fenestrate a Type B Dissection Flap Using Endovascular Electrocautery” by Dr. Kabbani and colleagues. 
    Show Guests 
    Dr. Thomas O’Donnell: Assistant professor of surgery in the aortic center at New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center.
    Dr. Carlos Timaran: Professor and Chief of Endovascular Surgery at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center’s Department of Surgery.
     
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    Learn more about us at https://www.audiblebleeding.com/about-1/ and provide us with your feedback with our listener survey.

    • 44 min
    ChatGPT/LLM in Vascular Surgery

    ChatGPT/LLM in Vascular Surgery

    This episode of Audible Bleeding features Drs. Adam Johnson and Jeniann Yi, members of the Society for Vascular Surgery Health Information Technology Committee, to discuss the application of large language models in vascular surgery with two experts in the field, Dr. Andrew Gonzalez and one of his collaborators, Shantanu Dev.  The episode promises a conversation exploring machine learning and large language models with insights from the guests' diverse expertise in vascular surgery, health informatics, and artificial intelligence.
     
    Dr. Andrew Gonzalez, an assistant professor in vascular surgery at Indiana University School of Medicine and also an SVS HITC committee member, has clinical and research interests in peripheral arterial disease and artificial intelligence applications for amputation prevention.
     
    Shantanu Dev, a computer science PhD student at Ohio State, focusing on multimodal modeling for clinical applications in AI. Shantanu worked at PWC for eight years in their AI R&D division and co-owns Satsang.ai (www.satsang.ai) Digital Health, an AI company addressing healthcare inequities and quality of care.
     
    Relevant links:
    AI Revolution in Medince: GPT4 and Beyond by Peter Lee
    Artificial Intelligentce in Surgery: Understanding the Role of Ai in Surgical Practice by Dan Hashimoto
    Data Skeptic Podcast
    Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence can make Helathcare Human Again by Eric Topel
     
    Co-Hosts:
     
    Dr. Jennian Yi is an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of Colorado.
    Dr. Adam Johnson is an Assistant Professor of Surgery at Duke University, and editor at Audible Bleeding.
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    Learn more about us at https://www.audiblebleeding.com/about-1/ and provide us with your feedback with our listener survey.

    • 45 min
    JVS Author Spotlight - Pillado, Coleman, and Lal

    JVS Author Spotlight - Pillado, Coleman, and Lal

    Audible Bleeding editor Wen (@WenKawaji) is joined by 5th year general surgery resident Richa Kalsi (@KalsiMD) from University of Maryland Medical Center, 4th year general surgery resident Nitin Jethmalani from New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell, JVS (@JVascSurg) editor Dr. Forbes (@TL_Forbes) and JVS-VL (@jvsvl) editor Dr. Bush (@ruthlbush) to discuss two great articles in the JVS family of journals regarding chronic pain and resident burnout and SFJ reflux and its implication in C2 and C3 chronic venous insufficiency. This episode hosts Dr. Pillado (@drpillado), Dr. Coleman (@ColemanDM_vasc) and Dr. Lal. 
     
    Articles:
     
    Reported pain at work is a risk factor for vascular surgery trainee burnout by Dr. Pillado and colleagues.
    Effect of junctional reflux on the Venous Clinical Severity Score in Patients with Insufficiency of the great saphenous vein (JURY study) by Dr. Lal and colleagues.
     
     
    Show Guests:
    Dr. Coleman: Professor of Surgery at Duke University and Division Chief of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery at Duke University Medical Center.
    Dr. Pillado: vascular surgery resident at Northwestern Hospital in Chicago, IL 
    Dr. Lal: Professor of Surgery at the University of Maryland, Professor of neurology at Mayo clinic, and professor of biomedical engineering at George Mason University. and Director of Center for Vascular Research at University of Maryland Medical Center
     
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    Learn more about us at https://www.audiblebleeding.com/about-1/ and provide us with your feedback with our listener survey.
     

    • 37 min
    JVS CIT Editorials and Abstracts - April 2024

    JVS CIT Editorials and Abstracts - April 2024

    In this episode, we spotlight editorials and abstracts from the Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases, Innovations, and Techniques (JVS-CIT). Editorials and Abstracts are read by members of our SVS Social Media Ambassadors and Editor in Chief of JVS CIT, Dr. Matthew Smeds.
     
    Readers:
    Matthew Smeds (@mattsmeds)
    Christopher DeHaven (@ChrisDeHavenPSU)
    Ethan Vieira
    Litton Whittaker
    Nicholas Schaper
    Nishi Vootukuru (@Nishi_Vootukuru)
     
    Editorials:
    Accomplishments and goals: Review of 2023 and previous of 2024 for the Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases, Innovations, and Techniques.
     
    The enduring success of the DRIL technique and new advances in dialysis access.
     
    Abstracts:
    Intraprocedural application of a peripheral blood flow monitoring system during endovascular treatment for femoropopliteal disease.
     
    Thoracic outlet syndrome: single-center experience on the transaxillary approach with the aid of the TRIMANO Arthrex arm.
     
    Inferior vena cava hemangioma resected using a novel Toumai robotic surgical platform.
     
    Surgical release of anterior tibial artery entrapment with associated popliteal artery entrapment.
     
    Revisiting Heinz-Lippman disease as a complication of chronic venous insufficiency.
     
    Utilization of coronary computed tomography angiography and computed tomography-derived fractional flow reserve in a critical limb-threatening ischemia cohort.
     
    A rare case of Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome with concurrent arteriovenous malformation.
     
    Autologous and synthetic pediatric iliofemoral reconstruction: A novel technique for pediatric iliofemoral artery reconstruction.
     
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    Learn more about us at https://www.audiblebleeding.com/about-1/ and provide us with your feedback with our listener survey.
     
     

    • 30 min
    Social Deprivation in Vascular Surgery

    Social Deprivation in Vascular Surgery

    In this episode Abena Appah-Sampong (@abenasamp) and Leana Dogbe (@leanadogbe) partner with Vaiva Dabravolskaite (vaivadabravolskaite@gmail.com) from ESVS to host an episode discussing social deprivation in vascular surgery. Dr. Tara Mastracci and Dr. Olamide Alabi join us to offer insights into how social deprivation drives disparities in outcomes and steps to how we can shift practice paradigms to better address our patient needs.
     
    Dr. Tara Mastracci (@aorticsurgeon) is a vascular surgeon with over 15 years of experience treating and managing complex aortic pathologies. She is currently working at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, UK, on the Cardiothoracic Team doing complex aortic surgery. On top of her clinical duties, Dr. Mastracci is dedicated to studying the social and non-clinical factors influencing vascular outcomes. 
     
    Dr. Olamide Alabi (@OAlabiMD) is an Associate Professor of Surgery in the Department of Surgery at Emory University School of Medicine. Her clinical effort focuses on the full scope of vascular disease for patients at Emory University Hospital and the Atlanta VA HealthCare System, however, her academic portfolio and funded research is focused primarily on the intersection of peripheral artery disease, quality, and health equity. 
     
    References:
    Social Deprivation and the Association With Survival Following Fenestrated Endovascular Aneurysm Repair/2021 https://www.annalsofvascularsurgery.com/article/S0890-5096(21)00872-4/fulltext
    Is social deprivation an independent predictor of outcomes following cardiac surgery? An analysis of 240,221 patients from a national registry. BMJ/2015 https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/5/6/e008287.long  
    Survival Disparity Following Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair Highlights Inequality in Ethnic and Socio-economic Status/ https://www.ejves.com/article/S1078-5884(17)30521-X/fulltext Nash, D., McClure, G., Mastracci, T. M., & Anand, S. S. (2022). Social deprivation and peripheral artery disease. Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 38(5), 612-622.
    Vart, P., Coresh, J., Kwak, L., Ballew, S. H., Heiss, G., & Matsushita, K. (2017). Socioeconomic status and incidence of hospitalization with lower‐extremity peripheral artery disease: atherosclerosis risk in communities study. Journal of the American Heart Association, 6(8), e004995.
    Henry, A. J., Hevelone, N. D., Belkin, M., & Nguyen, L. L. (2011). Socioeconomic and hospital-related predictors of amputation for critical limb ischemia. Journal of vascular surgery, 53(2), 330-339.
    Demsas, F., Joiner, M. M., Telma, K., Flores, A. M., Teklu, S., & Ross, E. G. (2022, June). Disparities in peripheral artery disease care: A review and call for action. In Seminars in vascular surgery (Vol. 35, No. 2, pp. 141-154). WB Saunders.
     
    Follow us @audiblebleeding
    Learn more about us at https://www.audiblebleeding.com/about-1/ and provide us with your feedback with our listener survey.

    • 1 hr 6 min

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