Surgical News - volume 23, issue 2

Page 31

Surgical News | Volume 23 | Issue 2

New device could help ileostomy patient outcomes Dr Chen Liu is a research fellow and PhD candidate at the University of Auckland recycling device to reduce the length of post-operative stay in patients undergoing reversal of loop ileostomy. “People living with a stoma are at risk of dehydration and kidney impairment due to fluid loss and there is a high rate of delayed bowel recovery. The bowel, if you don’t use it for a while, gets weaker and doesn’t work as well,” Dr Liu says.

In 2020 Dr Chen Liu was a recipient of the Aotearoa New Zealand Research Scholarship. The prestigious scholarship is valued at $66,000 and supports Aotearoa New Zealand-based surgeons and Trainees to undertake a research project within a higher degree. Before pursuing full-time research, Dr Liu worked as a Trainee surgeon in General Surgery at Rotorua Hospital in Aotearoa New Zealand. “I was very grateful for the scholarship. It solidified my interest and passion for research and motivated me even more to incorporate research into my future career.

In the study, a possible way of fixing this issue was to use a device, which takes the liquid from the stoma and pumps it back into the downstream bowel to stimulate it before the surgery to aid faster recovery and shorter hospital stays. “The randomised control trial is trying to prove that using this device makes a difference by randomly allocating recruits who have a loop ileostomy into either getting the device or just carrying on as usual. We then see what their outcomes are in terms of the rates of hospital re-admission, the rates of dehydration, and look at how fast they recover after surgery.”

Another limitation was that the study didn’t include all possible stoma patients in order to keep the participants as similar as possible. Most of the recruited patients had colorectal or rectal cancer. “Unfortunately, a large group of patients had inflammatory bowel disease, and we couldn’t include them in the study, meaning the pool of patients was limited. “In the future, a possible area of further research would be to focus on patients with inflammatory bowel disease,” he says. Dr Liu is halfway through his current research and expects to complete it next year. Outside of study and medicine, Dr Liu enjoys music and exercise and is an avid runner.

Dr Liu is expecting his first child with his wife later this year.

Dr Liu’s PhD was focused on the morbidity of ileostomies and colorectal surgery, and a potential strategy to mitigate those morbidity risks. The COVID-19 pandemic meant Dr Liu recruited patients locally in Aotearoa New Zealand with the study conducted in Auckland and Dunedin hospitals.

The study included a randomised controlled trial of a novel stoma-output

“We know from a similar study done in Spain (2014) that the two-week time frame yields good outcomes for patients, like significantly shorter stays in hospital, and much lower rates of delayed bowel recovery,” he says.

“I enjoy spending time outdoors and my wife and I play squash regularly.”

“I decided quite early on in my training that I would take some time to complete a post graduate qualification,” he says.

“A big chunk of the year was spent working from home, and I was fortunate there was still enough research work, and I could still work on writing manuscripts and conference presentations,” he said.

get their stoma reversed.

Because of funding and logistic limitations, the study focused on people who were two weeks out from surgery to

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Articles inside

The Aotearoa New Zealand Rural Health Equity Strategy

6min
pages 54-55

Beneficial partnership yielding value

2min
page 53

Innovations in trainee-led surgical training

7min
pages 46-49

Congratulations to our learning and development grant recipients

3min
pages 50-51

Advocacy at RACS

3min
pages 44-45

New South Wales surgeons scrub up for Surgeons’ Month

3min
pages 42-43

ASOHNS ASM 2022

3min
page 41

The Educator of Merit Award

3min
page 40

From the archives

3min
pages 32-33

When surgeons are severed from their records

5min
pages 38-39

Out and about in Brisbane

3min
page 37

RACS name change - your opinions

9min
pages 34-36

New device could help ileostomy patient outcomes

2min
page 31

Global health online learning continues

2min
page 30

End gender inequality

2min
page 29

The East Timor Eye Program

2min
page 28

Trainees prioritise learning outcomes when choosing placements

4min
pages 26-27

Why more girls should become surgeons

3min
page 21

Dr Philippa Mercer - an inspirational leader

3min
page 20

College raise key issues ahead of the Australian federal elections

6min
pages 18-19

Revolutionising trauma surgery in Adelaide

5min
pages 24-25

COVIDSurg-3 unites surgical community

6min
pages 22-23

Change for Indigenous health

3min
page 17

Building a better profession

3min
page 16

Standard online training management platform launched

3min
page 7

Melbourne office renovations

2min
page 8

President’s perspective

5min
pages 4-5

Australian federal government funding supports rural initiatives

3min
pages 14-15

News in brief

2min
page 9

Women leading the way

7min
pages 12-13

Celebrating International Women’s Day

5min
pages 10-11
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Surgical News - volume 23, issue 2 by RACSCommunications - Issuu