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surgery

Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Personalised external aortic root support: the Oxford experience

Miss Renata Greco talks about personalised external aortic root support and in particular the Oxford experience with this technique.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Cricket to clinic via the lab

Professor Giles Toogood talks about his background which combined sport and surgery, and discusses the advances in hepatobiliary.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Machine perfusion – a new dawn or optimistic hyperbole?

Professor Peter Friend, Dr David Nasralla and Dr Carlo Ceresa discuss liver transplantation and why they are replacing conventional cold storage in an ice box with normothermic automated, transportable liver preservation.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
Captioned

Genes, Hands, Nerves, and Brains

Professor Dominic Furniss and Dr Akira Wiberg discuss the tremendous connection we have between the hand and the brain, focusing their talk on Dupuytren's Disease and Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Achieving the Holy-Grail: The Humanising Healthcare Methodology

Mr Hamish Dibley, a senior management consultant, explores a new and refreshing approach to how we understand and improve healthcare systems.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Effect of metformin on breast cancer metabolism

Dr Simon Lord presents a clinical study to understand the effect of metformin - one of the most commonly prescribed treatments worldwide for diabetes - on breast cancer metabolism.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Global Surgery: Paediatric Surgery Team

Medical student Ms Shannon Gunawardana talks about Oxplore, an outreach portal for schools and young people.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Medicine and Art

Professor David Cranston takes us on a little trip through art and medicine using illustrations of works that portray the changing role of medicine in society.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Prostate cancer genomic surgery: A shifting paradigm

In the first half, Dr Alastair Lamb discusses the problem with prostate cancer and what it is that needs to be addressed, his previous research and future plans for research.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Oesophageal Cancer: Past, Present and the Future

Professor Tim Underwood takes us through the history of oesophageal cancer, where we are now, and some of the science that is done to ask questions about where we might go with the treatment of oesophageal cancer.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Médecins Sans Frontières: The Role of Humanitarian Aid in Global Surgery

Professor Kathryn Chu gives an introduction to Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF); what it is and who they are, and talks about MSF surgery and the role of MSF in global surgery.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

How do you mend a broken heart?

In this episode of the Oxford Sparks Big Questions podcast we visited Cardiovascular Biologist, Nicola Smart, from the department of physiology, anatomy and genetics to ask: How do you mend a broken heart?
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Safe surgery in Africa: Exploring barriers and trialling interventions

Professor Peter McCulloch and Dr Tinashe Chandauka talk about improving surgery in Africa and designing a surgical safety education programme.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

How to ask the right questions: Lessons learned in 30 years of research

Professor Wytske Fokkens (Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam) talks about how to ask yourself the right questions, which is the most important thing that she has learned in her 30-year research career.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Upper GI Surgery

Dr John Findlay (Oxford University) presents 'Heavy Petting in Oesophago-gastric Cancer’ and Mr Nick Maynard (Oxford University) presents ‘How Much Should we Tell the Public About Outcomes from Oesophagectomy?’
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Side Effects to Some, Therapies to Others: Autonomic Neuromodulation

Professor Alex Green (Oxford University) talks about the autonomic side-effects of neuromodulation including deep brain stimulation and dorsal root ganglion stimulation for pain. It may be possible to harness such effects for new therapies.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Challenges of being an academic surgeon and journal editor

Professor Prokar Dasgupta from King's College London talks about the challenges of being an academic surgeon and an Editor-in-Chief for the journal BJUI.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Laparoscopic aortic surgery: Credible or just plain crazy?

Mr Dominic PJ Howard talks about the current management and Oxford research on aortic disease, and the endovascular revolution. Mr Adam Howard discusses the exciting area of laparoscopic aortic surgery and where that is placed in this field.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

It's no longer OK to say I practise differently than everyone else

Professor James Wright asks what is the next fundamental change to orthopaedic surgical practice and wonders if it is using best evidence to direct us to do the same for the same condition.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures

Should surgical innovation be taught and encouraged?

Mr Henk Giele asks should surgical innovation be taught and encouraged. We are all creative and we are all innovative, and we don’t have to be a genius or a special type of person to invent something.

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