M
Michael Patrick Achiam
Researcher at Copenhagen University Hospital
Publications - 133
Citations - 1365
Michael Patrick Achiam is an academic researcher from Copenhagen University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 105 publications receiving 925 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Patrick Achiam include University of Copenhagen & Hvidovre Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Inflammatory response in laparoscopic vs. open surgery for gastric cancer.
TL;DR: Laroscopy-assisted gastric surgery seems to attenuate the immune response compared to open surgery, and larger and prospective studies are needed to further evaluate if the immunological status is relatively preserved in minimal invasive surgery and if this may reduce the postoperative complications compared toopen surgery.
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Glepaglutide, a novel long-acting glucagon-like peptide-2 analogue, for patients with short bowel syndrome: a randomised phase 2 trial.
Rahim M. Naimi,Mark Hvistendahl,L. H. Enevoldsen,Jan L. Madsen,Stefan Fuglsang,Steen Seier Poulsen,Hannelouise Kissow,Jens Pedersen,Nikolaj Nerup,Rikard Ambrus,Michael Patrick Achiam,Lars Bo Svendsen,Jens J. Holst,Bolette Hartmann,Svend Høime Hansen,Lars O. Dragsted,A Steensberg,Ulrik Mouritzen,Mark Berner Hansen,Palle Jeppesen +19 more
TL;DR: Glepaglutide was well tolerated, and was associated with improved intestinal absorption in patients with short bowel syndrome with 1 mg and 10 mg glepag lutide, but not with 0·1 mg glePagLutide.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quantification of fluorescence angiography: Toward a reliable intraoperative assessment of tissue perfusion - A narrative review
Christian D. Lütken,Michael Patrick Achiam,Jens Osterkamp,Morten Bo Søndergaard Svendsen,Nikolaj Nerup +4 more
TL;DR: Future studies on Q-ICG in a post-operative setting could detect changes in perfusion following a range of interventions and reflect clinical endpoints, but only if based on inflow parameters, so future studies should include the methodology outlined in this review.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intrathoracic anastomotic leakage after gastroesophageal cancer resection is associated with increased risk of recurrence.
Steen C. Kofoed,Dan Calatayud,Lone Susanne Jensen,Frederik Helgstrand,Michael Patrick Achiam,Pieter de Heer,Lars Bo Svendsen +6 more
TL;DR: Intrathoracic anastomotic leakage increased the risk of recurrence in patients who underwent curative gastroesophageal cancer resection and 5-year disease-free survival in patients with leakage was 27%, versus 39% in those without leakage.
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Status and prognosis of lymph node metastasis in patients with cardia cancer - a systematic review.
TL;DR: The dissection of locoregional lymph nodes offers significantly therapeutic benefit, but larger and prospective studies are needed to evaluate the effect of dissecting distant and mediastinal lymph nodes.