5 results on '"Blake Schultz"'
Search Results
2. Effectiveness of melatonin treatment for sleep disturbance in orthopaedic trauma patients: A prospective, randomized control trial
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Natalie Tanner, Blake Schultz, Christian Calderon, Andrew Fithian, Nicole Segovia, Julius Bishop, and Michael Gardner
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Adult ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Orthopedics ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Pain ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Sleep ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Melatonin ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Explore sleep disturbance in postoperative orthopedic trauma patients and determine the impact of melatonin supplementation on postoperative sleep, pain, and quality of life.In this prospective, randomized controlled trial at a Level I trauma center, 84 adult orthopedic trauma patients with operative fracture management were randomized 2-weeks postoperatively to either the melatonin or placebo group. Patients randomized to the melatonin group (42 subjects, mean age 41.8 ± 15.5 years) received 5 mg melatonin supplements. Patients in the placebo group (42 subjects, mean age 41.3 ± 14.0 years) received identical glucose tablets. Both groups were instructed to take the tablets 30 minutes before bed for 4 weeks and received sleep hygiene education and access to the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) Coach app.Our primary outcome was sleep quality as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Secondary outcomes were pain measured by the Visual Analog Scale (VAS), quality of life measured by the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36), and opioid use.Patients in both groups had significant sleep disturbance (PSQI ≥ 5) at 2-weeks (83%) and 6-weeks (67%) postoperatively. PSQI improved by 3.3 points (p0.001) at follow-up, but there was no significant difference between groups (melatonin PSQI = 5.6, placebo PSQI = 6.1, P = 0.615). Compared to placebo, melatonin did not affect VAS, SF-36, or opioid use significantly.Sleep disturbance is prevalent in orthopedic trauma patients. Melatonin treatment did not significantly improve subjective sleep quality, pain, quality of life or opioid use.Therapeutic Level I.
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- 2022
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3. Motivations and impact of international rotations in low- and middle-income countries for orthopaedic surgery residents: Are we on the same page?
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Heather J. Roberts, Patrick D. Albright, David W. Shearer, Nae Won, Madeline C. MacKechnie, R. Richard Coughlin, Theodore Miclau, Saam Morshed, Sanjeev Sabharwal, John Dawson, Brian Davis, Alan Daniels, Milton Little, John Garlich, Chad Coles, Ross Leighton, Michael Maceroli, Sandra Hobson, Chris Bray, Duretti Fufa, Sariah Khormaee, Brian Mullis, Roman M. Natoli, Babar Shafiq, Jimmy Mackenzie, Danny Wongworawat, Lee Zuckerman, Joshua Speirs, Charles F. Carr, Michael Mackechnie, George Dyer, Melvin Makhni, Kiran Agarwal-Harding, Brandon Yuan, Matt Beal, Danielle Chun, Andrew Furey, Brad Petrisor, Yongjung Kim, Ken Egol, Christian Pean, Blake Schultz, Darin Friess, Zach Working, Grant Sun, Henry Boateng, Michael Gardner, Malcolm DeBaun, Saquib Rehman, Eric Gokcen, J. Milo Sewards, Nicholas Bernthal, Zachary Burke, Alex Upfill Brown, Melissa Esparza, Peter O'Brien, David Stockton, Kevin Neal, Nathan O'Hara, Arun Hariharan, Peter Cole, Ann Van Heest, Patrick Horst, Brandon Kelly, Mauricio Kfuri, Karl Lalonde, Jaimo Ahn, Samir Mehta, Matt Winterton, Luke Lopas, James Kellam, Thomas Higgins, Iain Elliot, Paul Whiting, Jordan T. Shaw, Nathaniel M. Wilson, William Obremskey, Cassandra A. Lee, Keith Kenter, Joseph Weistroffer, Josh Veenstra, David Knowles, Devin Conway, Aung Thein Htay, Myat Thu Wynn, Dr Peter Smitham, Dr Dino Aguilar, Amanda J. McCoy, Kiprono Koech, Ian Orwa, Marvin Wekesa, Francis Mbugua, Daniel D. Galat, John Mandela, David Jomo, James Kinyua, Mbonisi Malaba, Felix Kuguru, Fasto Yugusuk, Pierre Woolley, Marc-Alain Pean, Billy Haonga, Edmund Eliezer, Samuel Hailu, Fre Alemseged, Linda Chokotho, Allman Tinoco, Bibek Banskota, Scott Nelson, and Francisco Alberto Hernandez Vargas
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,International Cooperation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developing country ,Racism ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedic Procedures ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Developing Countries ,Reciprocity (cultural anthropology) ,media_common ,Surgeons ,Motivation ,business.industry ,Internship and Residency ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Orthopedics ,Low and middle income countries ,Family medicine ,General partnership ,North America ,Orthopedic surgery ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Despite interest among North American orthopaedic residents to pursue rotations in resource-limited settings, little is known regarding resident motivations and impact on host surgeons. Methods Surveys were distributed to North American orthopaedic surgeons and trainees who participated in international rotations during residency to assess motivations for participation and to orthopaedic surgeons at partnering low- and middle-income country (LMIC) institutions to assess impact of visiting trainees. Results Responses were received from 136 North American resident rotators and 51 LMIC host surgeons and trainees. North American respondents were motivated by a desire to increase surgical capacity at the LMIC while host surgeons reported a greater impact from learning from residents than on surgical capacity. Negative aspects reported by hosts included selfishness, lack of reciprocity, racial discrimination, competition for surgical experience, and resource burdens. Conclusions The motivations and impact of orthopaedic resident rotations in LMICs need to be aligned. Host perceptions and bidirectional educational exchange should be incorporated into partnership guidelines.
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- 2021
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4. Arthroscopic Technique for Treating Patella and Femoral Condyle Lesions With DeNovo Natural Tissue Allograft
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Jason L. Dragoo, Jeremy Truntzer, and Blake Schultz
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Orthopedic surgery ,030222 orthopedics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Cartilage ,medicine.medical_treatment ,FEMORAL CONDYLE ,030229 sport sciences ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,Accelerated rehabilitation ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Technical Note ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Patella ,business ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Use of juvenile particulate cartilage allograft has been previously described for the treatment of full-thickness chondral lesions of the knee. Although this procedure has traditionally been performed with an open approach, it can be performed using arthroscopic techniques with the potential for less morbidity and accelerated rehabilitation. This article describes an all-arthroscopic technique for treating patella and femoral condyle lesions with DeNovo Natural Tissue allograft, including clinical indications and a rehabilitation protocol.
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- 2019
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5. Particle-Tracking Proton Computed Tomography—Data Acquisition, Preprocessing, and Preconditioning
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Blake Schultze, Paniz Karbasi, Christina Sarosiek, George Coutrakon, Caesar E. Ordonez, Nicholas T. Karonis, Kirk L. Duffin, Vladimir A. Bashkirov, Robert P. Johnson, Keith E. Schubert, and Reinhard W. Schulte
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Proton computed tomography ,data acquisition ,preprocessing ,initial image formation ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Proton CT (pCT) is a promising new imaging technique that can reconstruct relative stopping power (RSP) more accurately than x-ray CT in each cubic millimeter voxel of the patient. This, in turn, will result in better proton range accuracy and, therefore, smaller planned tumor volumes (PTV). The hardware description and some reconstructed images have previously been reported. In a series of two contributions, we focus on presenting the software algorithms that convert pCT detector data to the final reconstructed pCT images for application in proton treatment planning. There were several options on how to accomplish this, and we will describe our solutions at each stage of the data processing chain. In the first paper of this series, we present the data acquisition with the pCT tracking and energy-range detectors and how the data are preprocessed, including the conversion to the well-formatted track information from tracking data and water-equivalent path length from the data of a calibrated multi-stage energy-range detector. These preprocessed data are then used for the initial image formation with an FDK cone-beam CT algorithm. The output of data acquisition, preprocessing, and FDK reconstruction is presented along with illustrative imaging results for two phantoms, including a pediatric head phantom. The second paper in this series will demonstrate the use of iterative solvers in conjunction with the superiorization methodology to further improve the images resulting from the upfront FDK image reconstruction and the implementation of these algorithms on a hybrid CPU/GPU computer cluster.
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- 2021
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