137 results on '"Howard Belzberg"'
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2. Corrigendum to 'A high-volume trauma intensive care unit can be successfully staffed by advanced practitioners at night' [J Crit Care 2016 Jun;33:4–7; doi: 10.1016/j.jcrc.2016.01.024. Epub 2016 Jan 27]
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Kazuhide Matsushima, Kenji Inaba, Dimitra Skiada, Michael Esparza, Jayun Cho, Tim Lee, Aaron Strumwasser, Gregory Magee, Daniel Grabo, Lydia Lam, Elizabeth Benjamin, Howard Belzberg, and Demetrios Demetriades
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Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 2022
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3. A high-volume trauma intensive care unit can be successfully staffed by advanced practitioners at night
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Daniel Grabo, Elizabeth Benjamin, Dimitra Skiada, Demetrios Demetriades, Kazuhide Matsushima, Tim H Lee, Gregory A. Magee, Jayun Cho, Lydia Lam, Kenji Inaba, Aaron Strumwasser, Howard Belzberg, and Michael Esparza
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Adult ,Male ,Night Care ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Critical Illness ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,law.invention ,Plasma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,After-Hours Care ,Blood product ,law ,Medical Staff, Hospital ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nurse Practitioners ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Trauma intensive care unit ,Intensive care medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Critically ill ,Internship and Residency ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Intensive care unit ,Massive transfusion ,Intensive Care Units ,Physician Assistants ,Workforce ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Fresh frozen plasma ,business ,Hospitals, High-Volume - Abstract
Purpose It remains unknown whether critically ill trauma patients can be successfully managed by advanced practitioners (APs). The purpose of this study was to examine the impact of night coverage by APs in a high-volume trauma intensive care unit (ICU) on patient outcomes and care processes. Materials and methods During the study period, our ICU was staffed by APs during the night shift (7 pm -7 am ) from Sunday to Wednesday and by resident physicians (RPs) from Thursday to Saturday. On-call trauma fellows and attending surgeons in house supervised both APs and RPs. Patient outcomes and care processes by APs was compared with those admitted by RPs. Results A total of 289 patients were identified between July 2013 and February 2014. Median lactate clearance rate within 24 hours of admission was similar between study groups (10.0% vs 9.1%; P = .39). Advanced practitioners and RPs transfused patients requiring massive transfusion with a similar blood product ratio (packed red blood cell:fresh frozen plasma) (2.1:1 vs 1.7:1; P = .32). In a multiple logistic regression analysis, AP coverage was not associated with any clinical outcome differences. Conclusions Our data suggest that, with adequate supervision, a high-volume trauma ICU can be safely staffed by APs overnight.
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- 2016
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4. Intracranial pressure monitoring in severe head injury: compliance with Brain Trauma Foundation guidelines and effect on outcomes: a prospective study
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Pedro G.R. Teixeira, Efstathios Karamanos, Howard Belzberg, Dimitra Skiada, Peep Talving, Kenji Inaba, Demetrios Demetriades, and Lydia Lam
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Abbreviated Injury Scale ,Traumatic brain injury ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Brain herniation ,nervous system diseases ,Anesthesia ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Intracranial pressure monitoring ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Intracranial pressure - Abstract
Object The Brain Trauma Foundation (BTF) has established guidelines for intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). This study assessed compliance with these guidelines and the effect on outcomes. Methods This is a prospective, observational study including patients with severe blunt TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤ 8, head Abbreviated Injury Scale score ≥ 3) between January 2010 and December 2011. Demographics, clinical characteristics, laboratory profile, head CT scans, injury severity indices, and interventions were collected. The study population was stratified into 2 study groups: ICP monitoring and no ICP monitoring. Primary outcomes included compliance with BTF guidelines, overall in-hospital mortality, and mortality due to brain herniation. Secondary outcomes were ICU and hospital lengths of stay. Multiple regression analyses were deployed to determine the effect of ICP monitoring on outcomes. Results A total of 216 patients met the BTF guideline criteria for ICP monitoring. Compliance with BTF guidelines was 46.8% (101 patients). Patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage and those who underwent craniectomy/craniotomy were significantly more likely to undergo ICP monitoring. Hypotension, coagulopathy, and increasing age were negatively associated with the placement of ICP monitoring devices. The overall in-hospital mortality was significantly higher in patients who did not undergo ICP monitoring (53.9% vs 32.7%, adjusted p = 0.019). Similarly, mortality due to brain herniation was significantly higher for the group not undergoing ICP monitoring (21.7% vs 12.9%, adjusted p = 0.046). The ICU and hospital lengths of stay were significantly longer in patients subjected to ICP monitoring. Conclusions Compliance with BTF ICP monitoring guidelines in our study sample was 46.8%. Patients managed according to the BTF ICP guidelines experienced significantly improved survival.
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- 2013
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5. Discrepancies between capillary glucose measurements and traditional laboratory assessments in both shock and non-shock states after trauma
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Lydia Lam, Galinos Barmparas, Joseph J. DuBose, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, Demetrios Demetriades, Bernardino C. Branco, Howard Belzberg, and Kenji Inaba
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Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypoglycemia ,Internal medicine ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood glucose monitoring ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Insulin ,Glucose Measurement ,Shock ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Intensive Care Units ,Blood pressure ,Endocrinology ,Blunt trauma ,Anesthesia ,Shock (circulatory) ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,Hypotension ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to analyze the accuracy of capillary blood glucose (CBG) against laboratory blood glucose (LBG) in critically ill trauma patients during the shock state.All critically ill trauma patients admitted to the Surgical Intensive Care Unit at the Los Angeles County + University of Southern California Medical Center requiring blood glucose monitoring from January 2007 to December 2008 were included. Accuracy of CBG was compared against LBG during shock and non-shock states. Shock was defined as either systolic blood pressure90 mm Hg or mean arterial pressure70 mm Hg and the need for vasopressor therapy. The Bland-Altman method was used to determine the agreement between CBG and LBG during shock and non-shock states. CBG values were considered to disagree significantly with LBG values when the difference exceeded 15%.During the 2-y study period, a total of 1215 patients were admitted to the Surgical Intensive Care Unit. Overall, the mean age was 38.4 ± 20.9 y, 79.6% (967) were male, and 75.0% (911) sustained blunt trauma. A total of 1935 paired samples of CBG and LBG were included in this analysis (367 during shock and 1568 during non-shock). During shock, the mean difference between CBG and LBG levels was 13.4 mg/dL (95% CI, -15.4 to 42.2 mg/dL), and the limits of agreement were -27.1 and 53.9 mg/dL. A total of 136 CBG values (37.1%) differed from the LBG values by more than 15%. During non-shock, the mean difference between CBG and LBG levels was 12.6 mg/dL (95% CI, -19.9 to 32.5 mg/dL), and the limits of agreement were -20.6 and 45.8 mg/dL. A total of 639 CGB values (40.8%) differed from the LBG values by more than 15%. Agreement was lowest among hypoglycemic readings in both shock and non-shock states.There is poor correlation between the capillary and laboratory glucose values in both shock and non-shock states.
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- 2012
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6. [Untitled]
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Nicholas A. Nash, Howard Belzberg, Obi Okoye, and Kelly Vogt
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business.industry ,Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business ,Law and economics - Published
- 2012
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7. Crystalloids After Primary Colon Resection and Anastomosis at Initial Trauma Laparotomy: Excessive Volumes Are Associated With Anastomotic Leakage
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Kenji Inaba, Demetrios Demetriades, Barbara M. Eberle, Beat Schnüriger, Tiffany Wu, and Howard Belzberg
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colon ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anastomotic Leak ,Blood Component Transfusion ,Anastomosis ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Colon resection ,Injury Severity Score ,Risk Factors ,Colon surgery ,Laparotomy ,medicine ,Humans ,APACHE ,Retrospective Studies ,Colectomy ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Sutures ,business.industry ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Retrospective cohort study ,Crystalloid Solutions ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,ROC Curve ,Anastomotic leakage ,Female ,Isotonic Solutions ,business - Abstract
Recognition of preventable risk factors for suture line failure after colon anastomosis is important for optimizing anastomotic healing. The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of crystalloids on the occurrence of anastomotic leakage after traumatic colonic injuries.Retrospective review from January 2005 to August 2009 of severely injured patients who underwent primary colocolonic anastomosis and intensive care unit (ICU) admission for ≥72 hours. Demographics on hospital and ICU admission, amount of crystalloids, and blood component transfusions within the first 72 hours were assessed by multivariate analysis to explore independent associations with anastomotic leakage.Of a total of 123 patients with primary colocolonic anastomosis, 7 died within 72 hour and 24 were discharged before 72 hour from the ICU. The remaining 92 patients required ICU admission for ≥72 hour. Their mean Injury Severity Score was 20.8 ± 10.7, and they were 29.9 years ± 13.0 years old. Twelve patients (13.0%) developed an anastomotic leak. Demographics on hospital and ICU admission, intraoperative blood loss, and the volume of intraoperative fluids given did not differ statistically between patients with or without anastomotic leakage. However, the cumulative amount of crystalloids given over the first 72 hours significantly predicted anastomotic leakage (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve: 0.758 [95% confidence interval 0.592-0.924], p=0.009). By multivariate analysis, ≥10.5 L of crystalloids given over the first 72 hours was independently associated with anastomotic breakdown (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]: 5.26 [1.14-24.39], p=0.033). In addition, increasing age, hemorrhagic shock on admission, and a concomitant stomach injury were independent risk factors for an anastomotic leak (R=0.396).Increased use of crystalloids after primary colocolonic anastomosis at initial trauma laparotomy is associated with anastomotic leakage. A threshold of 10.5 L of crystalloid fluid infused over the first 72 hours is associated with a 5-fold increased risk for colocolonic suture line failure. The impact of crystalloid restriction on anastomotic failure in trauma patients warrants prospective investigation.
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- 2011
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8. Prevalence of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depression After Trauma Center Hospitalization
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Regina A. Shih, Grant N. Marshall, Terry L. Schell, Howard Belzberg, and Katrin Hambarsoomian
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Prevalence ,Poison control ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Suicide prevention ,Injury prevention ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Surgery ,business ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Anxiety disorder - Abstract
Background:Individuals hospitalized after physical trauma are at heightened risk for mental disorders. We examined prevalence rates of both posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depression at 6 and 12 months in a sample of 677 individuals experiencing different types of trauma who were repr
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- 2010
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9. Measurable Outcomes of Quality Improvement Using a Daily Quality Rounds Checklist: One-Year Analysis in a Trauma Intensive Care Unit With Sustained Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Reduction
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Howard Belzberg, Kenji Inaba, Brad Putty, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, David Plurad, Donald J. Green, Lydia Lam, Demetrios Demetriades, Joseph J. DuBose, and Peep Talving
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,Adolescent ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,California ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,law ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Quality Indicators, Health Care ,Academic Medical Centers ,Cross Infection ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,business.industry ,Ventilator-associated pneumonia ,Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated ,Evidence-based medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Checklist ,Intensive Care Units ,Pneumonia ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,Guideline Adherence ,business ,Quality assurance - Abstract
We have previously demonstrated that the use of a daily "Quality Rounds Checklist" (QRC) can increase compliance with evidence-based prophylactic measures and decrease complications in a busy trauma intensive care unit (ICU) over a 3-month period. This study was designed to determine the sustainability of QRC use over 1 year and examine the relationship between compliance and outcome improvement.A prospective before-after design was used to examine the effectiveness of the QRC tool in documenting compliance with 16 prophylactic measures for ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, catheter-related bloodstream infection, and other ICU complications. The QRC was implemented on a daily basis for a 1-year period by the ICU fellow on duty. Monthly compliance rates were assessed by a multidisciplinary team for development of strategies for real-time improvement. Compliance and outcomes were captured over 1 year of QRC use.QRC use was associated with a sustained improvement of VAP bundle and other compliance measures over a year of use. After multivariable analysis adjusting for age (55), injury mechanism, Glasgow Coma Scale score (≤ 8), and Injury Severity Score (20), the rate of VAP was significantly lower after QRC use, with an adjusted mean difference of -6.65 (per 1,000 device days; 95% confidence interval, -9.27 to -4.04; p = 0.008). During the year of QRC use, 3% of patients developed a VAP if all four daily bundle measures were met for the duration of ICU stay versus 14% in those with partial compliance (p = 0.04). The overall VAP rate with full compliance was 5.29 versus 9.23 (per 1,000 device days) with partial compliance. Compared with the previous year, a 24% decrease in the number of pneumonias was recorded for the year of QRC use, representing an estimated cost savings of approximately $400,000.The use of a QRC facilitates sustainable improvement in compliance rates for clinically significant prophylactic measures in a busy Level I trauma ICU. The daily use of the QRC, requiring just a few minutes per patient to complete, equates to cost-effective improvement in patient outcomes.
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- 2010
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10. Decompressive craniectomy: Surgical control of traumatic intracranial hypertension may improve outcome
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Howard Belzberg, Kenji Inaba, J. Peter Gruen, Beat Schnüriger, Demetrios Demetriades, and Barbara M. Eberle
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Adult ,Male ,Decompressive Craniectomy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Central nervous system disease ,Injury Severity Score ,Humans ,Medicine ,Survival rate ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,General Environmental Science ,Intracranial pressure ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,Brain Injuries ,Anesthesia ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,Decompressive craniectomy ,Intracranial Hypertension ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Introduction The purpose of this study was to assess the role of decompressive craniectomy (DC) in patients with post-traumatic intractable intracranial hypertension (ICH) in the absence of an evacuable intracerebral haemorrhage. Methods Retrospective study at LAC+USC Medical Centre including patients who underwent DC for post-traumatic malignant brain swelling or ICH without space occupying haemorrhage, during the period 01/2004 to 12/2008. The analysis included the effect of DC on intracranial pressure (ICP) and timing of DC on functional outcomes and survival. Results Of 106 patients who underwent DC, 43 patients met inclusion criteria. Of those, 34 were operated within the first 24 h from admission. DC decreased the ICP significantly from 37.8 ± 12.1 mmHg to 12.7 ± 8.2 mmHg in survivors and from 52.8 ± 13.0 to 32.0 ± 17.3 mmHg in non-survivors. Overall 25.6% died (11 of 43), and 32.5% (14 of 43) remained in vegetative state or were severely disabled. Favourable outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale 4 and 5) was observed in 41.9% (18 of 43). No tendency towards either increased or decreased incidence in favourable outcome was found relative to the time from admission to DC. Six of the 18 patients (33.3%) with favourable outcome were operated on within the first 6 h. Conclusions DC lowers ICP and raises CPP to high normal levels in survivors compared to non-survivors. The timing of DC showed no clear trend, for either good neurological outcome or death. Overall, the survival rate of 74.4% is promising and 41.9% had favourable neurological outcome.
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- 2010
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11. The Association of Race and Survival from Sepsis after Injury
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Kenji Inaba, David Plurad, Jay Zhu, Howard Belzberg, Peep Talving, Patrick Kilday, Demetrios Demetriades, Donald J. Green, and Thomas Lustenberger
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,White People ,law.invention ,Sepsis ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Survival rate ,Asian ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Hispanic or Latino ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Intensive care unit ,Surgery ,Black or African American ,Survival Rate ,Logistic Models ,Blunt trauma ,Bacteremia ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,business - Abstract
Genetic variation is associated with outcome disparity in critical illness. We sought to determine if race is independently associated with the development of posttraumatic sepsis and subsequent related mortality. Our Intensive Care Unit database was queried for admissions from January 1, 2000 to June 30, 2007. Patients were prospectively followed for sepsis (Any four of the following symptoms: temperature ≥ 38° C, heart rate (HR) ≥ 90 b/m, RR ≥ 20 b/m (or PaCO2 ≤ 32 mm Hg), white blood cell count (WBC) ≥ 12, or vasopressor requirement all with an infectious source). White, Black, Hispanic, and Asian groups were defined. “Other” race was excluded. Most of the 3998 study patients were male (3157, 79.0%). Blunt trauma (2661, 66.6%) predominated. Six-hundred-seventy-seven (16.9%) met sepsis criteria. Mortality was 14.0 per cent (560). Sepsis was increased in Asians versus all others combined (23.7% vs 16.1%). Race was independently associated with sepsis (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1.12 (1.01-1.24), P value = 0.03). Sepsis associated mortality was 36.9 per cent (250/677). Black race demonstrated an increased survival versus all others after sepsis (25.4% vs 37.7%) but this was not statistically significant (adjusted OR 0.96 (0.73-1.18), P value = 0.71). Race is independently associated with posttraumatic sepsis and possibly subsequent sepsis associated mortality. Further related study is needed with the ultimate goal of genetically based treatments for the prevention and treatment of sepsis after injury.
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- 2010
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12. Mental Health Service Utilization After Physical Trauma
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Eunice C. Wong, Katrin Hambarsoomians, Howard Belzberg, Lisa H. Jaycox, Grant N. Marshall, and Terry L. Schell
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Adult ,Male ,Mental Health Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcohol Drinking ,Psychological intervention ,Collaborative Care ,Article ,Interviews as Topic ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Injury Severity Score ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Referral and Consultation ,Demography ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Mental health law ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Health services research ,Los Angeles ,Mental health ,Logistic Models ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Health education ,Health Services Research ,business - Abstract
Each year approximately 1.5 million individuals in the US experience a physical injury serious enough to require hospitalization.1 Survivors of traumatic physical injuries are at increased risk for a variety of mental health problems including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depression, and substance abuse problems.2–7 The mental health consequences of traumatic physical injuries can be burdensome and costly. PTSD, depression, and substance abuse have been associated with significant impairments in quality of life, functioning, and physical health.8–16 Despite the availability of effective treatments for the posttraumatic stress reactions that can follow injury,17,18 several studies suggest that the majority of those who could benefit from treatment fail to use mental health services.5,19 In a longitudinal study of trauma injury survivors, over a third perceived a need for treatment but did not seek help.19 In another longitudinal study with men who had been injured through community violence, only 23% of those who had met criteria for possible PTSD had obtained mental health care in the year after the injury.5 Similarly, cross-sectional studies conducted with nationally representative US samples demonstrate that a substantial proportion of individuals with PTSD do not obtain mental health services.20,21 Attempts to understand the factors that facilitate mental health service use have met with limited success.22 Some have posited that this may be partly due to the substantial emphasis placed on patient-related factors.22,23 Most studies on mental health service utilization have focused on patient factors that can be classified within the behavioral model of health service use.22,23 The behavioral model includes individual need, predisposing characteristics, and enabling resources that have been posited as important influences on treatment seeking.24 Need factors include objective (eg, symptoms of PTSD) and subjective (eg, distress) indicators of need. Predisposing characteristics consist of stable factors existing before the illness (eg, age, gender). Enabling resources involve factors that may facilitate or hinder service utilization (eg, health insurance coverage). Studies on mental health service use among trauma survivors have placed a similar, almost exclusive, focus on patient factors as determinants of treatment utilization (for recent reviews see25,26). However, mental health service utilization may be influenced by other factors, above and beyond those of patient characteristics, such as the behavior and actions of providers. In fact, collaborative care perspectives of health care underscore the influential role of providers, in particular physicians, in facilitating access to mental health services.22,27,28 In the President’s New Freedom Commission report,28 physician mental health screening and referral were identified as key components to a transformed mental health system. Physicians can provide an important entryway into the mental health system given that they are often the first point of contact for people with mental health problems.29–33 Yet, limited studies have examined provider influences, such as physician referral, on mental health service use. Moreover, no study has investigated the relative contribution of provider versus patient factors on mental health treatment utilization. Understanding the differential influences of provider and patient factors on mental health service use seems vital to guiding policy and programming. Using longitudinal data on a representative sample of Los Angeles County (LAC) trauma center patients, the purposes of the present study were: (1) to assess rates of mental health service utilization for emotional problems after traumatic injury; and (2) to investigate the relative influence of physician referral and patient-related (ie, need, predisposing, and enabling) factors on mental health service utilization.
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- 2009
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13. ACS trauma centre designation and outcomes of post-traumatic ARDS: NTDB analysis and implications for trauma quality improvement
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Kenji Inaba, Donald J. Green, Demetrios Demetriades, Galinos Barmparas, Howard Belzberg, David Plurad, Gustavo Recinos, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, and Joseph J. DuBose
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Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,ARDS ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Logistic regression ,Injury Severity Score ,Trauma Centers ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Societies, Medical ,Retrospective Studies ,General Environmental Science ,Mechanical ventilation ,Univariate analysis ,business.industry ,Univariate ,Retrospective cohort study ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Orthopedic surgery ,Emergency medicine ,Wounds and Injuries ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background Several authors have examined the relationship between outcomes following severe trauma and American College of Surgeons (ACS) trauma centre designation. Little is known, however, about the association between ACS level and outcomes following complications of trauma. Methods The National Trauma Databank (NTDB, v. 5.0) was queried to identify adult (Age ≥18) trauma patients developing post-traumatic ARDS, who were admitted to either ACS level 1 or level 2 trauma centres from 2000 to 2004. Patients transferred between institutions and injuries following burns were excluded. Univariate analysis was used to assess differences between those patients admitted to ACS level 1 and level 2 facilities. Adjusted mortality was derived using logistic regression analysis. Results A total of 902 adult trauma patients with ARDS after 48 h of mechanical ventilation were identified from the NTDB. Five hundred and thirty six patients were admitted to a level 1 ACS verified centre and 366 to a level 2 facility. Univariate analysis revealed no statistical differences in clinical and demographic characteristics between the two groups. On univariate comparison, patients admitted to level 1 facilities had longer mean hospital and ICU length of stay and higher hospital related charges than level 2 counterparts. Patients admitted to a level 1 centre were, however, significantly more likely to achieve discharge to home. Using multivariate logistic regression, ACS level designation was shown to have no statistical effect on mortality. Hypotension on admission and age greater than 55 were the only independent predictors of mortality. Conclusion ACS trauma centre designation level is not an independent predictor of mortality following post-traumatic ARDS.
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- 2009
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14. Alcohol Abuse and Illegal Drug Use Among Los Angeles County Trauma Patients: Prevalence and Evaluation of Single Item Screener
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H. Gill Cryer, Lisa H. Jaycox, Howard Belzberg, Katrin Hambarsoomians, Peter Meade, Gudata S. Hinika, Rajeev Ramchand, Grant N. Marshall, Terry L. Schell, and Vivek Shetty
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Alcohol abuse ,Poison control ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Risk Assessment ,California ,Article ,Young Adult ,Age Distribution ,Trauma Centers ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Intervention (counseling) ,Injury prevention ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Sex Distribution ,Psychiatry ,Mass screening ,Probability ,Illicit Drugs ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Survival Analysis ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Substance abuse ,Alcoholism ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Multivariate Analysis ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
The misuse of alcohol and illicit drugs is implicated with injury and repeat injury. Admission to a trauma center provides an opportunity to identify patients with substance use problems and initiate intervention and prevention strategies. To facilitate the identification of trauma patients with substance use problems, we studied alcohol abuse and illegal substance use patterns in a large cohort of urban trauma patients, identified correlates of alcohol abuse, and assessed the utility of a single item binge-drinking screener for identifying patients with past 12-month substance use problems.Between February 2004 and August 2006, 677 patients from four large trauma centers in Los Angeles County were interviewed. The sample was broadly representative of the entire Los Angeles County trauma center patient population.Twenty-four percent of patients met criteria for alcohol abuse and 15% reported using an illegal drug other than marijuana in the past 12 months. Male gender, assaultive injury, peritrauma substance use, and history of binge drinking were prominent risk factors. A single item binge drinking screen correctly identified alcohol abuse status in 76% of all patients; the screen also performed moderately well in discriminating between those who had or had not used illegal drugs in the past 12 months, with sensitivity estimates reaching 0.79 and specificity estimates reaching 0.74.A large proportion of urban trauma patients abuse alcohol and use illegal drugs. Distinct sociodemographic and substance use history may indicate underlying risky behaviors. Interventions and injury prevention programs need to address these causal behaviors to reduce injury morbidity and recidivism. In the busy trauma care setting, a one-item screener could be helpful in identifying patients who would benefit from more thorough assessment and possible brief intervention.
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- 2009
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15. Nursing involvement improves compliance with tight blood glucose control in the trauma ICU: A prospective observational study
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Liliana Higa, Ramona Paolim, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, Shirley Nomoto, Demetrios Demetriades, Joseph J. DuBose, Howard Belzberg, and Kenji Inaba
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Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Staffing ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Critical Care Nursing ,Nurse's Role ,law.invention ,Education, Nursing, Continuing ,Clinical Protocols ,Nursing ,law ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Professional Autonomy ,Single-Blind Method ,Prospective Studies ,Nurse education ,Intensive care medicine ,Decision Making, Organizational ,Protocol (science) ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Nursing Audit ,Institutional review board ,Intensive care unit ,Nursing Education Research ,Nursing Evaluation Research ,Hyperglycemia ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Observational study ,Guideline Adherence ,business - Abstract
The importance of tight glycaemic control has gained acceptance over the last 5 years as a critical component of routine intensive care unit (ICU) measures. In an environment already strained for resources and staffing, however, effective strategies providing for increased input and responsibility of bedside nursing personnel are paramount to successful implementation.Increasing input and responsibilities of ICU nursing staff in tight glycaemic control policies improves glucose control in the trauma ICU.After Institutional Review Board approval, we conducted a prospective "before-after" trial examining the effect of nursing education and input on outcome of a tight (goal 80-120 mg/dL) glycaemic control protocol. After a three month assessment of compliance with a previously physician-developed protocol, an educational in-service was conducted for all trauma ICU nursing staff. Nursing staff were then asked to provide input on the development of a new protocol using multiple-choice ballots to define 7 components of protocol criteria. Using nursing input, we developed and implemented a new glycaemic protocol that shifted much of the responsibility for initiation and subsequent adjustment of insulin infusion to the bedside nurse, allowing them to more liberally utilise their bedside clinical judgment and knowledge of the specific patient.Nursing input on seven factors of protocol criteria did not differ significantly from the previously existing protocol, except with reference to nursing desire for increased responsibility in the implementation and maintenance of tight glycaemic control. After three months implementation of a new protocol developed utilising nursing input, both mean blood glucose levels achieved (137.8 mg/dL vs. 128.2mg/dL, p=0.028) and time to first hourly blood glucose within goal range (120 mg/dL) was improved (36 h vs. 9h). The number of hypoglycaemic (BS60) episodes increased slightly after revision (1 event vs. 5 event), with no hypoglycaemic seizures or coma occurring during either period.Nursing input and increased responsibility improved the results of a tight glycaemic control in our trauma ICU. Increasing nursing input in the development and implementation of a tight glycaemic policies can result in safe and effective improved glucose control in the trauma ICU.
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- 2009
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16. Noninvasive Monitoring of the Autonomic Nervous System and Hemodynamics of Patients With Blunt and Penetrating Trauma
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Demetrios Demetriades, William C. Shoemaker, Joseph Colombo, Howard Belzberg, Payman Fathizadeh, and George Hatzakis
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Adult ,Male ,Brain Death ,Adolescent ,Thoracic Injuries ,Respiratory rate ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Wounds, Penetrating ,Abdominal Injuries ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Cardiography, Impedance ,Young Adult ,Parasympathetic nervous system ,Blunt ,Heart Rate ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Heart rate variability ,Hospital Mortality ,Oximetry ,Cardiac Output ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Fourier Analysis ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Vagus Nerve ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Autonomic nervous system ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,Penetrating trauma - Abstract
To describe early effects of sympathetic (SNS) and parasympathetic nervous system (PSNS) activities measured by heart rate (HR) and respiratory rate variabilities simultaneously with noninvasive hemodynamic patterns in patients with blunt and penetrating trauma.Descriptive study of 168 monitored trauma patients in a level I university-run trauma service. We studied HR and respiratory rate variability by spectral analysis as a measure of autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity in severe blunt and penetrating injuries beginning shortly after their admission to the emergency department. The low frequency area is the area under the HR spectral analysis curve within the frequency range of 0.04 Hz to 0.10 Hz. This area primarily reflects the tone of the SNS as mediated by the vagus nerve. The respiratory frequency area, sometimes referred to as the high frequency area, is a 0.12 Hz-wide frequency range centered around the fundamental respiratory frequency defined by the peak mode of the respiratory activity power spectrum. It is indicative of vagal outflow reflecting PSNS activity. The low frequency area/respiratory frequency area, or L/R ratio, reflects the balance of the SNS and the PSNS. ANS was studied simultaneously with noninvasive hemodynamic patterns after blunt and penetrating thoracic or abdominal injury beginning shortly after admission. We measured cardiac index by bioimpedance, HR, and mean arterial pressure (MAP) to evaluate cardiac function, pulse oximetry (SapO2) to reflect changes in respiratory function, and transcutaneous oxygen indexed to fractional inspired oxygen (PtcO2/FIO2) to reflect tissue perfusion.ANS activity markedly increased especially in the nonsurvivors at 12 hours to 24 hours after admission. Compared with survivors, the nonsurvivors had lower MAP, CI, and PtcO2/FIO2 values associated with increased ANS activity.In the nonsurvivors, low flow, low MAP, and reduced tissue perfusion were associated with pronounced increases in PSNS and lesser increases in SNS activity. In the survivors, higher CI, MAP, and PtcO2/FIO2 values were associated with lesser increases in both PSNS and SNS activities.
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- 2008
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17. Leukoreduction is Associated with a Decreased Incidence of Late Onset Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome after Injury
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Ali Salim, David Plurad, Howard Belzberg, Kenji Inaba, Demetrios Demetriades, Ira Schulman, Peter Rhee, and Donald J. Green
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Adult ,Male ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,ARDS ,Time Factors ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Respiratory disease ,Late onset ,General Medicine ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,medicine.disease ,Leukoreduction ,Anesthesia ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Female ,Leukocyte Reduction Procedures ,Age of onset ,business - Abstract
Transfusions are known to be associated with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS). Transfusion of leukoreduced products may be associated with a decreased incidence of late posttraumatic ARDS (late ARDS). Data from ventilated and transfused trauma patients were analyzed. Key variables in the first 48 hours of admission were studied for their associations with late ARDS and examined for changes over the 6 year study period. Late ARDS developed in 244 of the 1488 patients studied (16.4%). The incidence in patients given nonleukoreduced (NLR) product was 30.4 per cent (75/247) versus 13.6 per cent (169/1241) for patients not exposed [2.77 (2.02–3.73), P < 0.001]. Exposure to NLR products (50.9% in 2000 vs 1.9% in 2005) and incidence of ARDS (26.3% in 2000 vs 6.3% in 2005) significantly decreased. Treatment variables independently associated with late ARDS were NLR product exposure, Total Parenteral Nutrition exposure, Peak Inspiratory Pressure ≥ 30 mm Hg, fluid balance ≥ 2 liters at 48 hours, and transfusion of ≥ 10 units of any product. NLR product exposure has an association with an increased incidence of late onset posttraumatic ARDS which is independent of large volume transfusions. Leukoreduction should be routinely included in an overall treatment strategy to furthermore mitigate this complication in critically ill trauma patients.
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- 2008
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18. Measurable Outcomes of Quality Improvement in the Trauma Intensive Care Unit: The Impact of a Daily Quality Rounding Checklist
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Demetrios Demetriades, Peter Rhee, Joseph J. DuBose, Ali Salim, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, Howard Belzberg, Kenji Inaba, Christine Trankiem, and Anthony Shiflett
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Catheterization, Central Venous ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,Sedation ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,law.invention ,Trauma Centers ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Intensive care medicine ,Cross Infection ,Central line ,business.industry ,Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Checklist ,Pulmonary embolism ,Intensive Care Units ,Venous thrombosis ,Organizational Case Studies ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Total Quality Management - Abstract
Objective: The use of "care bundles" in the prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and other intensive care unit (ICU) complications have been increasingly used in critical care practice. However, the effective implementation of these strategies represents a challenge in a busy Level I trauma ICU. We devised a daily "Quality Rounds Checklist" (QRC) tool for use in the ICU to increase compliance with these prophylactic measures and identify areas for improvement in quality of care. Methods: A prospective before-after design was used to examine the effectiveness of the QRC tool in promoting compliance with 16 prophylactic measures for VAP, deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism, central line infection and other ICU complications. Compliance was assessed for 1 month before institution of the QRC. On daily analysis, the QRC was then applied by the ICU fellow to assess compliance. Any deficiencies were actively corrected in real time. Compliance was assessed by a multidisciplinary team for the next 3 months and compared with the pre-QRC compliance rates. Results: Implementation of the QRC tool facilitated improvement of all measures not already at >95% compliance. Compliance with VAP prevention measures of head of bed elevation >30 degrees (35.2% vs. 84.5%), sedation holiday (78.0% vs. 86.0%), and prophylaxis for both peptic ulcer disease (76.2% vs. 92.3%) and deep venous thrombosis (91.4% vs. 92.8%) were all increased. A decrease in central line duration >72 hours (62.4% vs. 52.8%) and ventilator duration >72 hours (74.0% vs. 61.7%) was also noted. Additionally, a decrease in mean monthly rates per 1,000 device days of VAP (16.3 vs. 8.9), central line infection (11.3 vs. 5.8) and self-extubation (7.8 vs. 2.2) was demonstrated. Conclusion: Introducing a daily QRC tool facilitated improved compliance rates for 16 clinically significant prophylactic measures in a busy Level I trauma ICU. The daily use of this tool, requiring just a few minutes per patient to complete, results in a sustainable improvement in patient outcomes.
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- 2008
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19. Hemodynamic and Oxygen Transport Patterns After Head Trauma and Brain Death: Implications for Management of the Organ Donor
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Timothy P. Nicholls, Thomas V. Berne, Charles C.J. Wo, Demetrios Demetriades, J. Peter Gruen, Alexis Dang, Vladimir Zelman, William C. Shoemaker, and Howard Belzberg
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Adult ,Male ,Brain Death ,Mean arterial pressure ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Medicine ,Oximetry ,Organ donation ,Cardiac Output ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Oxygen transport ,Oxygenation ,Middle Aged ,Tissue Donors ,Oxygen ,Pulse oximetry ,Blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Surgery ,Blood Gas Analysis ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
Objectives: The aims of the present study were to describe the temporal hemodynamic and oxygen transport patterns of patients with head injuries as well as the patterns of those who became brain dead to better understand the role of underlying central regulatory hemodynamic mechanisms and ultimately to improve rates of organ donation. Methods: We studied 388 consecutive noninvasively monitored patients with severe head trauma; 79 of these became brain dead. Monitoring was started shortly after admission to the emergency department and was designed to describe the sequence of cardiac, pulmonary, and tissue perfusion functions by cardiac index (CI), mean arterial pressure, heart rate, arterial saturation by pulse oximetry (Sapo 2 ), and transcutaneous oxygen and carbon dioxide (Ptco 2 /FIo 2 and Ptcco 2 ) patterns. The latter were used as markers of tissue perfusion or oxygenation. Results: Patients with head injuries who subsequently became brain dead initially had low CI with poor tissue perfusion beginning shortly after emergency department admission. This was followed by a prolonged period characterized by high CI (4.43 ± 1.3 L min -1 . m -2 ) and enhanced tissue oxygenation (Ptco 2 /FIo 2 238 ± 186). In the late or end stage of brain death, hemodynamic deterioration and collapse led rapidly to arrest. In attempts to maintain hemodynamic stability for organ donation, the effects of various therapies on the hemodynamic patterns were preliminarily described. Conclusions: The hyperdynamic state with exaggerated peripheral tissue perfusion or oxygenation in brain-dead patients associated with loss of central vasoconstrictive mechanisms of the stress response resulted in unopposed peripheral metabolic vasodilatation producing high CI and tissue perfusion.
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- 2007
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20. Retained Foreign Bodies after Emergent Trauma Surgery: Incidence after 2526 Cavitary Explorations
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Demetrios Demetriades, Pedro G.R. Teixeira, Timothy Browder, Carlos V.R. Brown, Peter Rhee, Ali Salim, Howard Belzberg, and Kenji Inaba
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Adult ,Surgical Sponges ,Damage control ,Sternum ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pleural effusion ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Laparotomy ,medicine ,Humans ,Thoracotomy ,Intraoperative Complications ,Abscess ,Emergency Treatment ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,General Medicine ,Foreign Bodies ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Foreign body ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Trauma surgery - Abstract
Trauma patients are thought to be at high risk for iatrogenic retained foreign bodies (RFBs). The objective of this study was to evaluate this incidence. All cases of RFB after cavitary trauma surgery were identified by review of Morbidity and Mortality reports at a Level 1 trauma center from January 1998 to December 2005 and confirmed by the Octagon Risk Management System. Over 8 years, 10,053 trauma operations were performed (2075 laparotomies, 377 thoracotomies, and 74 sternotomies). Three cases (0.1%) of RFB (all sponges) occurred during one single-stage and two damage control laparotomies. The counts were correct before definitive closure in two of three cases. No postoperative x-rays were obtained in any of the cases. RFB diagnosis occurred between days 3 and 9, one on a routine chest x-ray and the other two on abdominal computed tomography scans during a septic workup. Four-month to 8-year follow up documented one pleural effusion and one abscess resulting from the RFB. Iatrogenic RFBs after emergent cavitary trauma surgery occur at a rate of 0.12 per cent and are associated with significant morbidity. In addition to standard preventive strategies, in emergent cases with risk factors such as requiring damage control, before final cavity closure, even with a correct sponge count, radiographic evaluation is warranted.
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- 2007
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21. Improving Consent Rates for Organ Donation: The Effect of an Inhouse Coordinator Program
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Kenji Inaba, Ali Salim, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Peter Rhee, Angela Mascarenhas, Pantelis Hadjizacharia, and Carlos V.R. Brown
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tissue and Organ Procurement ,Demographics ,Referral ,Family support ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Organ donation ,Donor management ,Retrospective Studies ,Informed Consent ,business.industry ,Organ Transplantation ,Middle Aged ,Tissue Donors ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,Organ procurement ,Donation ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background: The inability to obtain consent remains one of the major obstacles to organ donation. The presence of in-house coordinators (IHCs) from organ procurement organizations (OPOs) might substantially improve donation rates. Objective: To review the preliminary results of the effect of the presence of an IHC on organ donation rates at our center. Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of patients referred to the regional OPO for possible organ donation. An IHC program was started at our hospital in late 2001. Data regarding organ donation demographics and family consent rates were compared before (Pre-IHC, 1998-2001) and after (Post-IHC, 2002-2005) the institution of an IHC program. The conversion rate was calculated as the number of actual donors divided by the number of potential donors and is represented as a percentage. The function of the IHC was to assist in donor surveillance, ensure timely referral, provide hospital staff education, assist with family consent and donor management, and provide family support. Results: There were a total of 495 potential donors and 195 actual donors during the 8-year time period. Post-IHC was associated with a significantly higher consent rate (52% vs. 35%, p < 0.01), a significantly higher conversion rate (50% vs. 34%,p < 0.01), and a 17% increase in organs donated compared with Pre-IHC. Conclusion: The presence of an IHC program significantly improves consent and conversion rates for organ donation. An IHC program should be considered as a viable option to bridge the gap between organ supply and organ demand.
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- 2007
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22. Head
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Howard Belzberg and Matthew D. Tadlock
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Atlas (anatomy) ,business.industry ,medicine ,Intracranial pressure monitoring ,Patient positioning ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2015
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23. Clinical Research in the Lay Press: Irresponsible Journalism Raises a Huge Dose of Doubt
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Mindy G. Schuster, Nicholas Daoura, Peter G. Pappas, Katherine M. Knapp, Irene G. Sia, Dimitrios P. Kontoyiannis, John H. Greene, Randall C. Walker, Ben E. dePauw, John R. Wingard, Michel Laverdière, Raoul Herbrecht, Coleman Rotstein, Markus Ruhnke, Theoklis E. Zaoutis, Durane R. Hospenthal, Claudio Viscoli, Vladimir Krcmery, John R. Perfect, Daniel H. Kett, Shahid Husain, Susan Hadley, Gerald R. Donowitz, Jack Sobel, Victor L. Yu, Brahm H. Segal, Mitchell Goldman, Deborah Marriott, John D. Cleary, Michael R. McGinnis, Shmuel Shoham, John W. Hiemenz, Jay A. Fishman, Anna Maria Tortorano, Tania C. Sorrell, David R. Andes, Barbara D. Alexander, Hamdi Akan, Michele I. Morris, Mahmoud A. Ghannoum, James I. Ito, Joseph Wheat, David W. Denning, Carola A.S. Arndt, P. H. Chandrasekar, Joseph S. Solomkin, Felice C. Adler-Shohet, Robert H. Rubin, Johan Maertens, Helen W. Boucher, Robert A. Larsen, Michael Ellis, Thomas L. Patterson, William J. Steinbach, Nita Siebel, Frank C. Odds, Joseph Wiley, Shahe Vartivarian, Paul E. Verweij, Judith A. Aberg, Bertrand Dupont, William W. Hope, Maria Anna Viviani, Howard Belzberg, Glenn D. Roberts, George L. Drusano, Zelalem Temesgen, Michelle A. Barron, Ana Espinel-Ingroff, Paul O. Gubbins, Michael Kleinberg, Rhonda V. Fleming, Gloria Mattiuzzi, Juan Luis Rodríguez Tudela, Michael R. Keating, Per Ljungman, Richard N. Greenberg, Jennifer S. Daly, J. Peter Donnelly, Antonio Arrieta, Annette C. Reboli, Thomas G. Boyce, Daniel K. Benjamin, Graeme N. Forrest, Monica Grazziutti, Catherine Cordonnier, Melissa D. Johnson, Robert M. Jacobson, Olivier Lortholary, Fernanda P. Silviera, Elias Anaissie, Elisabeth E. Adderson, Arturo Casadevall, Oliver A. Cornely, Manuel Cuenca-Estrella, Michael G. Rinaldi, Mike Pfaller, William E. Dismukes, Marcio Nucci, Nina Singh, George A. Pankey, M. C. Dignani, Murat Akova, John W. Baddley, John R. Graybill, Raymond R. Razonable, Peter R. Williamson, Louis de Repentigny, and Nikolaos G. Almyroudis
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Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifungal Agents ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale e Applicata ,Alternative medicine ,Peptides, Cyclic ,Ethics, Research ,Newspaper ,Invasive mycoses and compromised host [N4i 2] ,Echinocandins ,Lipopeptides ,Patient safety ,Caspofungin ,Interventional oncology [UMCN 1.5] ,medicine ,Drug approval ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Drug Approval ,Drug industry ,Research ethics ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Research ,Newspapers as Topic ,Los Angeles ,United States ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical research ,Family medicine ,Immunology ,Journalism ,Microbial pathogenesis and host defense [UMCN 4.1] ,Professional Misconduct ,business ,Ethics Committees, Research ,Immunity, infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1] - Abstract
Received 6 September 2006; accepted 6 September 2006;electronically published 13 September 2006.Author affiliations are listed at the end of the text.Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Elias J. Anaissie, MyelomaInstitute for Research and Therapy, University of Arkansasfor Medical Sciences, 4301 W. Markham, Slot 816, LittleRock, AR 72205 (anaissieeliasj@uams.edu).
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- 2006
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24. The Effect of a Protocol of Aggressive Donor Management: Implications for the National Organ Donor Shortage
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Ali Salim, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Matthew J. Martin, Peter Rhee, and Carlos V.R. Brown
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Adult ,Male ,Brain Death ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tissue and Organ Procurement ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,California ,Organ transplantation ,Clinical Protocols ,Trauma Centers ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Organ donation ,Donor shortage ,Intensive care medicine ,Donor management ,Health policy ,Retrospective Studies ,Analysis of Variance ,business.industry ,Public health ,Tissue Donors ,Surgery ,Transplantation ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Female ,business - Abstract
The disparity between the number of people awaiting organ transplantation and the number of organs available has become a public health crisis. As many as 25% of potential donors are lost as a result of cardiovascular collapse (CVC) before organ harvest. A policy of aggressive donor management (ADM) may decrease the number of cadaveric donors lost as a result of CVC.Retrospective analysis of potential brain-dead donors evaluated from January 1995 to December 2003 at nine American College of Surgeons-verified Level I trauma centers covered by a regional organ procurement agency. One center (Los Angeles County + University of Southern California Medical Center [LAC]) had an ADM protocol in place instituted January 1999; the remaining eight centers with no ADM protocol were grouped as Center A. The incidence of CVC and organ donation demographics were compared between centers and within LAC before (LAC-Pre) and after (LAC-Post) adoption of ADM. ADM consists of early identification of potential organ donors, a dedicated team that provides medical management, and aggressive fluid resuscitation as well as hormone replacement therapy with solumedrol and thyroxin.The incidence of CVC was significantly higher in LAC-Pre (odds ratio [OR] 15.0, p0.001) and Center A (OR 5.8, p0.001) compared with LAC-Post. The number of organs harvested per potential donor for LAC-Post (2.4) was significantly higher than LAC-Pre (2.0, p = 0.02) and Center A (2.1, p0.01).An aggressive donor management protocol decreases the number of donors lost as a result of cardiovascular collapse and increases the number of harvested organs per potential donor.
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- 2006
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25. Stochastic model for outcome prediction in acute illness
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Andreas Botnen, Roger W. Jelliffe, Kevin Lu, Linda S. Chan, Li-Chien Chien, David S. Bayard, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Charles C.J. Wo, and William C. Shoemaker
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Resuscitation ,Cardiac output ,Health Informatics ,Severity of Illness Index ,Decision Support Techniques ,Pulmonary function testing ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Humans ,Medicine ,Stochastic Processes ,Models, Statistical ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,Emergency department ,Prognosis ,Survival Analysis ,Computer Science Applications ,Surgery ,Oxygen ,Pulse oximetry ,Treatment Outcome ,Blood pressure ,Acute Disease ,Cardiology ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
The aims were to apply a stochastic model to predict outcome early in acute emergencies and to evaluate the effectiveness of various therapies in a consecutively monitored series of severely injured patients with noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring. The survival probabilities were calculated beginning shortly after admission to the emergency department (ED) and at subsequent intervals during their hospitalization. Cardiac function was evaluated by cardiac output (CI), heart rate (HR), and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), pulmonary function by pulse oximetry (SapO(2)), and tissue perfusion function by transcutaneous oxygen indexed to FiO(2),(PtcO(2)/FiO(2)), and carbon dioxide (PtcCO(2)) tension. The survival probability (SP) of survivors averaged 81.5+/-1.1% (SEM) and for nonsurvivors 57.7+/-2.3% (p0.001) in the first 24-hour period of resuscitation and subsequent management. The CI, SapO(2),PtcO(2)/FiO(2) and MAP were significantly higher in survivors than in nonsurvivors during the initial resuscitation, while HR and PtcCO(2) tensions were higher in the nonsurvivors. Predictions made during the initial resuscitation period in the first 24-hours after admission were compared with the actual outcome at hospital discharge, which were usually several weeks later; misclassifications were 9.6% (16/167). The therapeutic decision support system objectively evaluated the responses of alternative therapies based on responses of patients with similar clinical-hemodynamic states.
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- 2006
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26. Outcome Prediction by a Mathematical Model Based on Noninvasive Hemodynamic Monitoring
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Demetrios Demetriades, Howard Belzberg, Li-Chien Chien, Roger W. Jelliffe, William C. Shoemaker, Kevin Lu, Charles C.J. Wo, and David S. Bayard
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Illness ,Hemodynamics ,Wounds, Penetrating ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,Lung function ,Probability ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Middle Aged ,Predictive factor ,Survival Rate ,Pulse oximetry ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Surgery ,Observational study ,business ,Outcome prediction ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The aims are to apply a mathematical search and display model based on noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring, to predict outcome early in a consecutively monitored series of 661 severely injured patients.A prospective observational study by a previously designed protocol in a Level I trauma service in a university-run inner city public hospital was conducted. The survival probabilities were calculated at the initial resuscitation on admission and at subsequent intervals during their hospitalization beginning shortly after admission to the emergency department. Cardiac function was evaluated by cardiac output (CI), heart rate (HR), and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), pulmonary function by pulse oximetry (SapO2), and tissue perfusion function by transcutaneous oxygen indexed to FiO2, (PtcO2/FiO2), and carbon dioxide (PtcCO2) tension.The survival probability (SP) averaged 89 +/- 0.4% for survivors and 75.7 +/- 1.6% (p0.001) for nonsurvivors in the first 24-hour period of resuscitation. The CI, MAP, SapO2, PtcO2, and PtcO2/FiO2 were significantly higher in survivors than in nonsurvivors in initial resuscitation, whereas HR and PtcCO2 were higher in nonsurvivors.During the initial resuscitation period, misclassifications were 102 of 661 or 15%. The SP provided early objective criteria to evaluate hospital outcome and to track changes throughout the hospital course based on a large database of patients with similar clinical-hemodynamic states.
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- 2006
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27. The Decreasing Incidence and Mortality of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome After Injury: A 5-Year Observational Study
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James Murray, Demetrios Demetriades, Ali Salim, Peter Rhee, Howard Belzberg, and Matthew J. Martin
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Adult ,Male ,ARDS ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,law.invention ,law ,Epidemiology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,Major trauma ,Mortality rate ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Respiratory disease ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Intensive care unit ,Logistic Models ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,business - Abstract
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) after major trauma has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality rates. Recently, there have been marked advances in defining etiologic factors and optimal management strategies for ARDS. We sought to examine whether there has been a corresponding change in the incidence and outcomes of ARDS after injury in recent years.A prospective observational study of all adult trauma intensive care unit (ICU) admissions over 5 years. Patients were evaluated daily for predefined ARDS criteria. Patient data, illness and injury severity, and ARDS incidence were compared by year of admission. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify independent predictors of ARDS and mortality.There were 1,913 patients identified; the majority were male (79%) and suffered blunt trauma (62%). Two hundred seventy-four patients (14%) met criteria for ARDS. The incidence of ARDS showed a significant decrease from 23% in 2000 to rates of 8.4% and 9% for 2003 and 2004 (p0.01), respectively. There was no significant difference by year for trauma mechanism, age, sex, Injury Severity Score, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, ICU length of stay, or mortality. The strongest independent predictor of ARDS was year of ICU admission, with an odds ratio of 2.9 (95% confidence interval, 1.7-5.0) for admission in 2000 versus subsequent years (p0.001). After adjusting for age and injury severity, patients with ARDS had more days on mechanical ventilation and longer hospital and ICU stays (all p0.01), but there was no significant difference in mortality with or without ARDS (p = 0.57).There has been a more than 50% reduction in the incidence of ARDS after injury during the past 5 years in our institution despite similar patient demographics and injury severities. Development of ARDS increased hospital and ICU stays but not hospital mortality.
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- 2005
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28. Diagnosis of Acid-Base Derangements and Mortality Prediction in the Trauma Intensive Care Unit: The Physiochemical Approach
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Thomas V. Berne, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Matthew J. Martin, and James Murray
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Adult ,Anions ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anion gap ,Acid-Base Imbalance ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Medical Records ,law.invention ,Injury Severity Score ,Hyperchloremia ,Predictive Value of Tests ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Retrospective Studies ,Acidosis ,business.industry ,Metabolic disorder ,Area under the curve ,Metabolic acidosis ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Intensive care unit ,Surgery ,Intensive Care Units ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Hyperlactatemia ,Blood Gas Analysis ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: Conventional measures such as anion gap and base deficit can be inadequate for defining and managing complex acid-base derangements. Physiochemical analysis is an alternative approach based on the principles of electroneutrality and conservation of mass, and may be more accurate for defining the presence and type of acidosis and unmeasured anions. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 2,152 sets of laboratory data from 427 trauma patients admitted to the intensive care unit. All data sets included simultaneous measurements of an arterial blood gas with base deficit (BD), serum electrolytes, albumin, lactate, and a calculated anion gap (AG). Physiochemical analysis was used to calculate the corrected anion gap (AGcorr), the apparent strong ion difference, the effective strong ion difference, the strong ion gap (SIG), and the base deficit corrected for unmeasured anions (BDua). Statistical analysis comparing AG and BD to the physiochemical measures was performed on all data and the subset of admission laboratory data only (n = 427). Results: Unmeasured anions as defined by an elevated SIG were present in 92% of patients (mean SIG, 5.9 ± 3.3), whereas hyperlactatemia and hyperchloremia were present in only 18% and 21%, respectively. The physiochemical approach yielded a different clinical interpretation of the acid-base status than the conventional approach in 597 (28%) of the data sets. Lactate level was more strongly correlated with the physiochemical measures of SIG (r = 0.48) and AGcorr (r = 0.47) than with the conventional measures of AG (r = 0.24) and BD (r = 0.36, p < 0.01 for all). Both admission BD and BDua were significantly elevated in nonsurvivors, and logistic regression analysis for prediction of mortality revealed an area under the curve of 0.70 for BDua (p < 0.01) versus 0.65 for BD (p < 0.01). AGcorr and SIG did not differentiate survivors from nonsurvivors in the group as a whole. However, analysis of patients with a normal admission lactate level (n = 322) demonstrated a significant difference between survivors and nonsurvivors in SIG (7 vs. 5, p = 0.009), BDua (-4.2 vs. -2.0, p = 0.004), and AGcorr (21 vs. 19, p = 0.04), whereas the conventional measures of BD and AG showed no significant discriminatory ability. Conclusion: Unmeasured anions are the most common component of metabolic acidosis in trauma intensive care unit patients. The physiochemical approach can significantly alter the acid-base diagnosis compared with conventional measures. The SIG, AGcorr, and BDua may be particularly helpful in predicting acid-base derangements and mortality in patients with normal serum lactate levels.
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- 2005
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29. Suicide Bombing Attacks
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Yoaz Mintz, Avraham I. Rivkind, Gideon Zamir, Howard Belzberg, Alon K. Pikarsky, and Gidon Almogy
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Protocol (science) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Suicide bomber ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Suicide prevention ,humanities ,Occupational safety and health ,Surgery ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,Features - Abstract
Following a suicide bombing attack, numerous casualties with multiple penetrating wounds and blast injury are brought to the emergency department. Attention is directed at evaluating the degree of injury produced by each missile and to the care of seemingly moderate casualties. Implementation of a predetermined plan and a centrally coordinated effort are essential to achieve optimal utilization of manpower and resources.
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- 2004
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30. Imipenem Levels Are Not Predictable in the Critically Ill Patient
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Jay Zhu, George C. Velmahos, Jack Sava, Edward E. Cornwell, James Murray, Mark A. Gill, Ali Salim, and Howard Belzberg
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Adult ,Male ,Imipenem ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,Sepsis syndrome ,Blood Pressure ,Wounds, Nonpenetrating ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,β lactams ,Area under curve ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,APACHE ,Aged ,Antibacterial agent ,business.industry ,Critically ill ,Septic shock ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Intensive Care Units ,Area Under Curve ,Female ,Surgery ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,Half-Life ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Critically ill patients often demonstrate extremely unusual volumes of distribution (Vd) and half-lives (t1/2) of drugs. Imipenem is a widely used antibiotic in critically ill patients.We performed high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of imipenem in samples from 50 critically ill patients treated with either 500 or 1,000 mg.Peak imipenem levels varied from 1.56 microg/mL to 58.8 microg/mL. Trough levels varied between 0.0 microg/mL and 15.62 microg/mL. Only 54% of patients maintained a trough level greater than 4 microg/mL. Both the Vd and the t1/2 of imipenem were much greater than observed in other patient populations.The pharmacokinetic activity of imipenem in critically ill patients is different from that in other patient populations. There is a very weak correlation between dosage and serum concentrations. Therapeutic failures of imipenem may be because of unpredictable pharmacodynamics (Vd and t1/2) in critically ill surgical patients.
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- 2004
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31. Reducing Phlebotomy Losses by Streamlining Laboratory Test Ordering in a Surgical Intensive Care Unit
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Ira A. Shulman, Marilyn Chogyoji, Howard Belzberg, Sunita Saxena, and Susan Wilcox
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Laboratory test ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Medicine ,Surgical intensive care unit ,Phlebotomy ,business ,Intensive care medicine - Published
- 2003
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32. Cadaveric organ donor recruitment at Los Angeles County Hospital: improvement after formation of a structured clinical, educational and administrative service
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Bradley Roth, James Murray, Linda Sher, Tom Mone, A Heeran, Javier Romero, Howard Belzberg, Rodrigo Mateo, Rick Selby, and Linda Chan
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Service (business) ,Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Donor recruitment ,business.industry ,Organ transplantation ,Coroner ,Donation ,Health care ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Organ donation ,business ,Cadaveric spasm ,Intensive care medicine - Abstract
Background/Aims: There remains a critical shortage of cadaveric organs. At a large inner city level one trauma centre, several strategies were devised and combined to (a) optimize the physiologic status of potential donors, (b), promote awareness of the donation process among health care professionals and (c) perform quality control on the organ donation system - all in an effort to improve organ donation rates. Resuscitative and maintenance protocols were devised and implemented through a multidisciplinary team approach for patients diagnosed with brain death. We report the effect this approach has had on organ donation in a single centre. Method: A death record review (DRR) by the local organ procurement agency (OPO) was used to identify the number of patients diagnosed with brain death at Los Angeles County Hospital each year from 1995 through 2001. Data were collected to determine the number of these potential donors that eventually underwent organ donation. Data were collected for two time intervals: Phase 1(1995-98)and Phase II (1999-2001). During Phase I, there was no focused institutional programme for the approach to potential donors. During Phase II, an institutional programme including the following characteristics was implemented: 1) donor resuscitation protocol, 2) assignment of a dedicated OPO coordinator liaison to interact with families, hospital personnel and the coroner's office, 3) assignment of the primary role of stabilization and care of potential donors and the integration of all medical services to the trauma service, and 4) biweekly conferences to review policies, protocols, and outcomes of donor management strategies. Results: From 1995 to 2001 there was a large increase in patient referrals for donor evaluation from 86 (Phase 1) to 124 (Phase II). There was a smaller increase in the number of suitable donors: Phase I (mean: 51/year) and Phase II (mean: 63/year). There was, however, an increase in the mean number of actual organ donors from 14.2/year to 25.7/year from Phase I to Phase II and an increase in organs donated from 29 to 49. Organ donor declines decreased from 53% (Phase I) to 39% (Phase II). Conclusions: Strategies to increase the number of cadaveric organs available for organ transplantation are crucial. A strategy combining prompt identification of potential organ donors, institution of resuscitative protocols, a multidisciplinary team approach, educational activities and utilization of personnel expert in organ procurement led to a marked increase in the number of organ donors and the number of organs donated at a single institution. Wider application of this approach should prove successful in increasing organ donation in a similar fashion in other institutions.
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- 2003
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33. Effect on outcome of early intensive management of geriatric trauma patients
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Marios Karaiskakis, George C. Velmahos, Demetrios Demetriades, Edward J. Newton, James Murray, Howard Belzberg, William C. Shoemaker, Kathy Alo, Thomas C. Berne, and Juan A. Asensio
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Resuscitation ,Critical Care ,Injury Severity Score ,Geriatric trauma ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Hospital Costs ,Emergency Treatment ,Aged ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mortality rate ,Sequela ,Length of Stay ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Confidence interval ,Relative risk ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business - Abstract
Background Despite significant injuries elderly patients (aged 70 years or more) often do not exhibit any of the standard physiological criteria for trauma team activation (TTA), i.e. hypotension, tachycardia or unresponsiveness to pain. As a result of these findings the authors' TTA criteria were modified to include age 70 years or more, and a protocol of early aggressive monitoring and resuscitation was introduced. The aim of the present study was to assess the effect of the new policy on outcome. Methods This trauma registry study included patients aged 70 years or more with an Injury Severity Score (ISS) greater than 15 who were admitted over a period of 8 years and 8 months. The patients were divided into two groups: group 1 included patients admitted before age 70 years and above became a TTA criterion and group 2 included patients admitted during the period when age 70 years or more was a TTA criterion and the new management protocol was in place. The two groups were compared with regard to survival, functional status on discharge and hospital charges. Results There were 336 trauma patients who met the criteria, 260 in group 1 and 76 in group 2. The two groups were similar with respect to mechanism of injury, age, gender, ISS and body area Abbreviated Injury Score. The mortality rate in group 1 was 53·8 per cent and that in group 2 was 34·2 per cent (P = 0·003) (relative risk (RR) 1·57 (95 per cent confidence interval 1·13 to 2·19)). The incidence of permanent disability in the two groups was 16·7 and 12·0 per cent respectively (P = 0·49) (RR 1·39 (0·59 to 3·25)). In subgroups of patients with an ISS of more than 20 the mortality rate was 68·4 and 46·9 per cent in groups 1 and 2 respectively (P = 0·01) (RR 1·46 (1·06 to 2·00)); 12 of 49 survivors in group 1 and two of 26 in group 2 suffered permanent disability (P = 0·12) (RR 3·18 (0·77 to 13·20)). Conclusion Activation of the trauma team and early intensive monitoring, evaluation and resuscitation of geriatric trauma patients improves survival.
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- 2002
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34. Development and validation of a modified version of the Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire
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Maria Orlando, Grant N. Marshall, David W. Foy, Lisa H. Jaycox, and Howard Belzberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Test validity ,Structural equation modeling ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Item response theory ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Socioeconomic status - Abstract
This article reports results from 3 studies conducted to develop and validate a modified version of the self-administered form of the Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire (PDEQ; C. R. Marmar, D. S. Weiss, & T. J. Metzler, 1997). The objective was to develop an instrument suitable for use with persons from diverse ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds. In Study 1, the original PDEQ was administered to a small sample (N = 15) recruited from among men admitted to the hospital for physical injuries stemming from exposure to community violence. Results led to modifications aimed at improving the utility of the instrument. In Study 2, the modified PDEQ was subjected to structural equation modeling and item response theory analyses to assess its psychometric properties in a larger, primarily male, sample of community violence survivors (N = 284). In Study 3, the reliability and validity of the modified instrument were further assessed in a sample of female survivors of sexual assault (N = 90). Results attest to the psychometric properties as well as the reliability and validity of the modified 8-item PDEQ.
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- 2002
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35. Penetrating trauma in patients older than 55 years: a case-control study
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Demetrios Demetriades, Raymond Tatevossian, Danila Oder, Pantelis Vassiliu, Bradley Roth, George C. Velmahos, Kathleen Alo, and Howard Belzberg
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Adult ,Male ,Resuscitation ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Critical Care ,Wounds, Penetrating ,California ,law.invention ,Injury Severity Score ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,General Environmental Science ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Age Factors ,Case-control study ,Retrospective cohort study ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Surgery ,Blunt trauma ,Case-Control Studies ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Female ,business ,Penetrating trauma - Abstract
Background: Multiple studies have compared young and elderly blunt trauma patients, and concluded that, because elderly patients have outcomes similar to young patients, aggressive resuscitation should be offered regardless of age. Similar data on penetrating trauma patients are limited. Study design: In a retrospective review, 79 patients with penetrating injuries and age ≥55 were blindly matched for Injury Severity Score (ISS) and Abbreviated Injury Scores (AIS) with 79 penetrating trauma patients aged 15–35 years, who were admitted to the hospital over the same 4 year period (June 1994–June 1998). Mortality rates and length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) and the hospital were compared between the two groups. Results: The average ISS for all patients was 12 (range 1–75) and identical for both groups. Both groups had similar injuries and were evaluated by an equal number and type of diagnostic studies. The mean ISS was not different between severely injured older and younger patients who required ICU admission or died. Among 32 nonsurvivors (18 older and 14 younger), older patients were more likely than younger patients to present with normal vital signs, although the comparison did not reach statistical significance (50% vs. 13%, P=0.25). There was a clinically significant trend for longer ICU (15±30 vs. 3±2 days, P=0.096) and hospital stay (10±18 vs. 6±8 days, P=0.08) among older patients, but mortality rates were similar (23% in older vs. 18% in younger, P=NS). Furthermore, these outcome parameters showed no difference when both groups were classified according to severity of injury or physiologic response. Conclusions: Following penetrating trauma, older patients arriving alive and admitted to the hospital are as likely to survive as younger patients who have injuries of similar severity, but at the expense of longer ICU and hospital stays.
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- 2001
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36. Selective Nonoperative Management in 1,856 Patients With Abdominal Gunshot Wounds: Should Routine Laparotomy Still Be the Standard of Care?
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Linda S. Chan, Pantelis Vassiliu, Demetrios Demetriades, Thomas V. Berne, James Murray, Namir Katkhouda, Rafik Ishak, Juan A. Asensio, George C. Velmahos, Konstantinos Toutouzas, Ali Salim, Kathleen Alo, Howard Belzberg, and Grant Sarkisyan
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Standard of care ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Peritonitis ,Physical examination ,Abdominal Injuries ,Blunt ,Laparotomy ,Scientific Papers ,medicine ,Humans ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Surgery ,body regions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Abdominal trauma ,Abdomen ,Female ,Wounds, Gunshot ,business - Abstract
To evaluate the safety of a policy of selective nonoperative management (SNOM) in patients with abdominal gunshot wounds.Selective nonoperative management is practiced extensively in stab wounds and blunt abdominal trauma, but routine laparotomy is still the standard of care in abdominal gunshot wounds.The authors reviewed the medical records of 1,856 patients with abdominal gunshot wounds (1,405 anterior, 451 posterior) admitted during an 8-year period in a busy academic level 1 trauma center and managed by SNOM. According to this policy, patients who did not have peritonitis, were hemodynamically stable, and had a reliable clinical examination were observed.Initially, 792 (42%) patients (34% of patients with anterior and 68% with posterior abdominal gunshot wounds) were selected for nonoperative management. During observation 80 (4%) patients developed symptoms and required a delayed laparotomy, which revealed organ injuries requiring repair in 57. Five (0.3%) patients suffered complications potentially related to the delay in laparotomy, which were managed successfully. Seven hundred twelve (38%) patients were successfully managed without an operation. The rate of unnecessary laparotomy was 14% among operated patients (or 9% among all patients). If patients were managed by routine laparotomy, the unnecessary laparotomy rate would have been 47% (39% for anterior and 74% for posterior abdominal gunshot wounds). Compared with patients with unnecessary laparotomy, patients managed without surgery had significantly shorter hospital stays and lower hospital charges. By maintaining a policy of SNOM instead of routine laparotomy, a total of 3,560 hospital days and $9,555,752 in hospital charges were saved over the period of the study.Selective nonoperative management is a safe method for managing patients with abdominal gunshot wounds in a level 1 trauma center with an in-house trauma team. It reduces significantly the rate of unnecessary laparotomy and hospital charges.
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- 2001
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37. Hemodynamic Patterns of Survivors and Nonsurvivors during High Risk Elective Surgical Operations
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William C. Shoemaker, Howard Belzberg, Duraiyah Thangathurai, Demetrios Demetriades, George C. Velmahos, Juan A. Asensio, and Charles C.J. Wo
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Male ,Catheterization, Central Venous ,Mean arterial pressure ,Time Factors ,Thermodilution ,Hemodynamics ,Hypoxemia ,Oxygen Consumption ,Risk Factors ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,Hypovolemia ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Shock, Surgical ,business.industry ,Oxygen transport ,Middle Aged ,Survival Analysis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Shock (circulatory) ,Anesthesia ,Vascular resistance ,Female ,Surgery ,Intraoperative Period ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Postoperative survivors' and nonsurvivors' hemodynamic and oxygen transport patterns have been extensively studied, and the early postoperative circulatory events leading to organ failures and death have been documented. Outcome was improved when potentially lethal circulatory patterns were treated during the early (the first 8-12 hours) postoperative period; but after the appearance of organ failure, reversal of nonsurvival patterns did not improve the outcome. The purpose of this study was to describe prospectively intraoperative circulatory deficiencies that precede shock, organ failures, and death. The ultimate aim was to elucidate nonsurvivor patterns at the earliest possible time to develop more effective preventive strategies for lethal organ failures. This approach is based on the assumption that it is easier and more effective to prevent the initiators of shock, such as hypovolemia, hypoxemia, poor tissue perfusion, and tissue hypoxia, than to treat the mediators of organ failure, such as cytokines, antigens, eicosinoids, and heat shock proteins. We monitored 356 high risk elective surgical patients with preoperative and intraoperative hemodynamic monitoring by the pulmonary artery (PA) thermodilution catheter. The conventionally monitored mean arterial pressure and heart rate remained in the normal range in both groups; the nonsurvivor pattern included decreased cardiac index, stroke index, stroke work, oxygen delivery, and oxygen consumption. Low oxygen consumption was partly compensated by increased oxygen extraction rates, and arterial pressures were maintained by increasing systemic vascular resistance. The early temporal pattern of nonsurvivors' changes were similar to those described during the postoperative period that preceded development of organ failure and death. This suggests that lethal circulatory dysfunctions may begin during the intraoperative period but become more apparent before and after organs fail during later postoperative stages.
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- 1999
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38. Preoperative Cardiac Preparation
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Avraham I. Rivkind and Howard Belzberg
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac output ,Heart Diseases ,Heart disease ,Context (language use) ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Risk Assessment ,Preoperative care ,Coronary artery disease ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Preoperative Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,business.industry ,Cardiac reserve ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Preoperative preparation of the cardiac patient is based on matching the cardiac reserve to the blood flow demands imposed by surgical stress and the underlying disease state. Evaluation must include functional assessment of any coronary artery disease or other organic cardiac disease that may place myocardial tissue at risk of ischemia as demand for cardiac output increases. Monitoring should be individualized based on anticipated problems and the risk assessment of the patient. Preoperative therapy should include maneuvers that reduce congestive heart failure, optimize volume status, and provide adequate cardiac output to deliver oxygen sufficient to meet or exceed demand. Underlying electrical and metabolic abnormalities should be corrected and controlled in the perioperative period. Long-term therapy should be evaluated and modified in the context of the anesthetic and surgical plan. Preventive interventions such as fluid loading and low-dose dopamine should be considered prior to surgery.
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- 1999
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39. Colonic Resection in Trauma
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Zhenkai Song, Demetrios Demetriades, George C. Velmahos, James Murray, Thomas V. Berne, Michelle Colson, Howard Belzberg, Juan A. Asensio, and Edward E. Cornwell
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colon ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anastomosis ,Risk Factors ,Colostomy ,medicine ,Humans ,Abscess ,Colectomy ,Retrospective Studies ,Analysis of Variance ,Univariate analysis ,Trauma Severity Indices ,Ileostomy ,business.industry ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Abdominal trauma ,Wounds and Injuries ,Abdomen ,Female ,business ,Complication - Abstract
Objectives: The management of colonic trauma is well established for simple injuries with primary repair, and ileocolostomy for right-sided injuries that undergo colonic resection. Segmental colon resection for injuries to the left colon can be managed with either an end colostomy or primary anastomosis. A retrospective review was performed to evaluate the outcome and complications associated with colonic resection for trauma to determine the risk factors associated with anastomotic leakage. Methods: A retrospective review included patients undergoing colonic resection for trauma. The patients were stratified into colostomy, ileocolostomy, and colocolostomy groups. Patient demographics and colon-related complications were collected. Comparison between the colostomy and colocolostomy groups was performed to determine the difference in outcome. The outcome of right-sided colon injuries managed by either an ileocolonic or colocolonic anastomosis was compared. Analysis was performed to identify the factors associated with an increased risk of anastomotic leakage. Results: One hundred forty patients over a 66-month period were included in the analysis. Overall, 41% (57 of 140) of patients developed a colon-related complication; 28% (39 of 140) of patients developed an abscess. Overall, the anastomotic leak rate was 13% (7 of 56) in the colocolostomy group, 4% (2 of 56) in the ileocolostomy group. Right-sided colon injuries managed with a colocolonic anastomosis had a higher incidence of anastomotic leakage than ileocolonic anastomosis, i.e., 14 versus 4% respectively. Of the seven patients who developed a leak from a colocolonic anastomosis, two patients died (29% ). Univariate analysis identified an Abdominal Trauma Index Score ≥25 (p = 0.03) or hypotension in the emergency department (p = 0.001) to be associated with increased risk of developing an anastomotic leak from a colocolonic anastomosis. Conclusion: Colonic injuries that are managed with resection are associated with a high complication rate regardless of whether an anastomosis or colostomy is performed. Colonic resection and anastomosis can be performed safely in the majority of patients with severe colonic injury, including injuries to the left colon. For injuries of the right colon, an ileocolostomy has a lower incidence of leakage than a colocolonic anastomosis. For injuries to the left colon, there remains a role for colostomy specifically in the subgroups of patients with a high ATI or hypotension, because these patients are at greater risk for an anastomotic leak. The role of resection and primary anastomosis versus colostomy in colonic trauma requires further investigation.
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- 1999
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40. Multicenter Study of Noninvasive Monitoring Systems as Alternatives to Invasive Monitoring of Acutely III Emergency Patients
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Mae Ann Fuss, Michael J. Sullivan, Patrick J. Ferraro, William R. Dougherty, Joseph P. Van DeWater, Ramesh S. Patii, Karen Yarbrough, Gerard J. Fulda, C. Boyd James, Juan A. Asensio, William C. Shoemaker, Leslie Baga, George C. Velmahos, Charles C.J. Wo, Michael D. Pasquale, Durai Thangathurai, Howard Belzberg, Khalid ElTawil, Peter Roffey, Jafar Adibi, Demetrios Demetriades, James A. Murray, and David Milzman
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac output ,Resuscitation ,Technology Assessment, Biomedical ,Critical Illness ,Thermodilution ,Cardiac index ,Hemodynamics ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.artery ,Electric Impedance ,medicine ,Humans ,Oximetry ,Cardiac Output ,Intensive care medicine ,Aged ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Hospitals ,United States ,Pulse oximetry ,Treatment Outcome ,Blood pressure ,Pulmonary artery ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Emergencies ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Recent reports showed lack of effectiveness of pulmonary artery catheterization in critically ill medical patients and relatively late-stage surgical patients with organ failure. Since invasive monitoring requires critical care environments, the early hemodynamic patterns may have been missed. Ideally, early noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring systems, if reliable, could be used as the “front end” of invasive monitoring to supply more complete descriptions of circulatory pathophysiology. Objectives To evaluate the accuracy and reliability of noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring consisting of a new bioimpedance method for estimating cardiac output combined with arterial BP, pulse oximetry, and transcutaneous Po 2 and Pco 2 ; we compared this system of noninvasive monitoring with simultaneous invasive measurements to evaluate circulatory deficiencies in acutely ill patients shortly after hospital admission where invasive monitoring was not readily available. We also preliminarily explored early differences in temporal hemodynamic patterns of survivors and nonsurvivors. Design and setting Prospective comparison of simultaneous invasive and noninvasive measurements of circulatory function with retrospective analysis of data in university-run county hospitals, university hospitals and affiliated teaching hospitals, and a community private hospital. Patients We studied 680 patients, including 139 severely injured or hemorrhaging patients in the emergency department (ED), 129 medical (nontrauma) patients on admission to the ED, 274 high-risk surgical patients intraoperatively, and 138 patients recently admitted to the ICU. Results A new noninvasive impedance device provided cardiac output estimations under conditions in which invasive thermodilution measurements were not usually applied. There were 2,192 simultaneous bioimpedance and thermodilution cardiac index measurements; the correlation coefficient, r = 0.85, r 2 = 0.73, p 2 . Both invasive and noninvasive monitoring systems provide similar information and identified episodes of hypotension, low cardiac index, arterial hemoglobin desaturation, low transcutaneous O 2 , high transcutaneous CO 2 , and low oxygen consumption before and during initial resuscitation. The limitations of noninvasive systems were described. Conclusions Noninvasive monitoring systems gave continuous displays of physiologic data that provided information allowing early recognition of low flow and poor tissue perfusion that were more pronounced in the nonsurvivors. Noninvasive systems may be acceptable alternatives where invasive monitoring is not available.
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- 1998
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41. Relative Bradycardia in Patients with Traumatic Hypotension
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James Murray, Edward E. Cornwell, Demetrios Demetriades, Frederick Huicochea, Linda S. Chan, Paradeep Bhasin, George C. Velmahos, Thomas V. Berne, Howard Belzberg, Juan A. Asensio, and Emily Ramicone
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Adult ,Male ,Risk ,Bradycardia ,Tachycardia ,Shock, Hemorrhagic ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Medicine ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Trauma Severity Indices ,Abbreviated Injury Scale ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Trauma center ,Middle Aged ,Survival Analysis ,Blood pressure ,Relative risk ,Anesthesia ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Hypotension ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: Tachycardia is considered a physiologic response to traumatic hypotension. The inability of the heart to respond to shock with tachycardia has been described as paradoxical bradycardia or relative bradycardia. The incidence and clinical significance of this condition in major trauma is not known. The objective of this study was to examine the incidence and prognostic significance of tachycardia and relative bradycardia in patients with traumatic hypotension. Relative bradycardia is defined as a systolic pressure ≤ 90 mm Hg and a pulse rate ≤ 90 beats per minute. Methods: This is a retrospective study conducted at a large Level I academic trauma center during a 4-year period. Seventeen demographic and injury severity factors were analyzed for their possible role in tachycardic or bradycardic response in hypotensive patients. Incidence and mortality were derived for each subpopulation. Bivariate analysis of the association of incidence and mortality with each risk factor was performed. Factors with p values < 0.2 were included in stepwise logistic regression analyses that identified significant risk factors and derived adjusted relative mortality risks between tachycardic and bradycardic hypotensive patients. Results: Excluding transfers and patients dead on arrival, 10,833 major trauma patients were seen during the study period. Seven hundred fifty patients (6.9%) had systolic blood pressure ≤ 90 mm Hg; 533 patients had tachycardia (overall incidence of 4.9%, or 71.1% of hypotensive patients), and 217 patients had bradycardia (overall incidence of 2.0%, or 28.9% of hypotensive patients). The overall crude mortality was 29.2% among tachycardia patients and 21.7% among bradycardia patients (crude relative risk = 1.34; 95% confidence interval = 1.00-1.81; p = 0.047). The adjusted relative mortality risk between the two groups was 1.23 (95% confidence interval = 0.84-1.73; p = 0.284). Multivariate analysis showed that patients with relative bradycardia in the subgroups with Injury Severity Scores ≥ 16, chest Abbreviated Injury Scale scores ≥ 3, or abdominal Abbreviated Injury Scale scores ≥ 3 had significantly better survival than patients with similar injuries presenting with tachycardia. Conclusion: Relative bradycardia in hypotensive trauma patients is a common hemodynamic finding. Mortality among tachycardic patients was more predictable than among bradycardic patients using commonly used demographic and injury indicators. The presence of relative bradycardia in some subgroups of patients with severe injuries seems to be associated with better prognosis than the presence of tachycardia.
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- 1998
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42. Lethal abdominal gunshot wounds at a level I trauma center: analysis of TRISS (revised trauma score and injury severity score) fallouts
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Thomas V. Berne, George C. Velmahos, Demetrios Demetriades, James Murray, Mark Eckstein, Juan A. Asensio, Howard Belzberg, Edward E. Cornwell, and Raymond Tatevossian
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Abdominal Injuries ,Occupational safety and health ,Trauma Centers ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Aged ,Trauma Severity Indices ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Middle Aged ,Revised Trauma Score ,humanities ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Emergency medicine ,Injury Severity Score ,Abdomen ,Female ,Wounds, Gunshot ,business - Abstract
The TRISS methodology (composite index of the Revised Trauma Score and the Injury Severity Score) has become widely used by trauma centers to assess quality of care. The American College of Surgeons recommends including negative TRISS fallouts (fatally injured patients predicted to survive by the TRISS methodology) as a filter to select patients for peer review. The purpose of this study was to analyze the TRISS fallouts among patients with lethal abdominal gunshot wounds admitted to a level I trauma center.All patients categorized as TRISS fallouts admitted from January 1995 through December 1996 were analyzed.During the study period, 848 patients with abdominal gunshot wounds were admitted. Of the 108 patients with any sign of life on admission who subsequently died, 39 (36%) were TRISS fallouts. The patients were largely young (mean age, 29 years) and male (87%), received rapid transport (mean scene time, 11 minutes), and had an attending-led trauma-team response (5 minutes, 87%). Major vascular (80%) and multiple intraabdominal injuries (90%) predominated. The mean Penetrating Abdominal Trauma Index was 40.3. The mean TRISS probability of survival was 89%. The peer-review process deemed the deaths to be nonpreventable in 38 patients (97%) and potentially preventable in one patient (3%)."TRISS fallouts" were predominantly patients who died despite receiving rapid prehospital transport, rapid senior-level trauma-team response, and surgical intervention for a serious complex of injuries. We conclude that without regional adjustment of coefficients used to predict the probability of survival, the TRISS methodology is of limited use in patients with abdominal gunshot wounds.
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- 1998
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43. Selective management of renal gunshot wounds
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Juan A. Asensio, Howard Belzberg, James Murray, George C. Velmahos, Edward E. Cornwell, Thomas V. Berne, and Demetrios Demetriades
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Health Services Misuse ,Kidney ,Nephrectomy ,Injury Severity Score ,Hematoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Kidney surgery ,Aged ,Hematuria ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Plastic Surgery Procedures ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Drainage ,Female ,Wounds, Gunshot ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Exploratory surgery ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background Gunshot wounds to the kidney have been managed traditionally by surgical exploration. Concerns over increased nephrectomy rates and unnecessary explorations have placed this method under scrutiny. Selective renal exploration based on solid clinical and radiographic criteria may be a safer alternative and deserves evaluation. Methods The medical records of 52 consecutive patients with renal gunshot wounds, who were managed between September 1994 and August 1995 by a protocol of selective exploration, were reviewed. Renal injuries were explored only if they involved the hilum or were accompanied by signs of continued bleeding. Main outcome measures were the numbers of kidneys lost, as well as the morbidity and mortality related to the management of the renal injury. Results Three patients died from associated injuries shortly after admission. Fifteen patients suffered complications but only two had complications directly associated with the renal injury. Thirty-two patients underwent renal exploration and 17 of them required nephrectomy for major renovascular or parenchymal trauma (grade IV and V). Renal exploration was successfully avoided in the remaining 20 patients. No kidneys were lost unnecessarily as a result of this policy. Conclusion Mandatory exploration of all gunshot wounds to the kidney is not necessary. Injuries that produce stable peripheral haematomas do not require exploration.
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- 1998
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44. One Hundred Five Penetrating Cardiac Injuries
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Thomas V. Berne, James Murray, George C. Velmahos, Linda Chan, John D. Berne, Andres Falabella, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Juan A. Asensio, Edward E. Cornwell, Santiago Chahwan, Hugo Gomez, and William C. Shoemaker
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Male ,Risk ,Sternum ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Movement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Blood Pressure ,Wounds, Penetrating ,Wounds, Stab ,Reflex, Pupillary ,Injury Severity Score ,Heart Rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Sinus rhythm ,Prospective Studies ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Stab wound ,Prospective cohort study ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Trauma center ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Surgery ,Logistic Models ,Treatment Outcome ,Heart Injuries ,Thoracotomy ,Female ,Wounds, Gunshot ,Gunshot wound ,business - Abstract
Objectives: To analyze the parameters measured in the field, during transport, and upon arrival of the physiologic condition of patients sustaining penetrating cardiac injuries, along with the Cardiovascular Respiratory Score (CVRS) component of the Trauma Score, the mechanism and anatomical site of injury, operative characteristics, and cardiac rhythm as predictors of outcome. We also set out to identify a set of patient characteristics that best predict mortality outcome and to correlate cardiac injury grade as determined by the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma-Organ Injury Scale (AAST-OIS) with mortality. Methods: This report was a prospective study at American College of Surgeons Level I urban trauma center. Interventions included thoracotomy, sternotomy, or both, for resuscitation and definitive repair of cardiac injury. The main outcome measures used were those parameters measuring physiologic condition of patients, CVRS, mechanism and anatomical site of injury, mortality, and grade of injury. Results: A total of 105 patients sustained penetrating cardiac injuries: 68 injuries (65%) were gunshot wounds and 37 injuries (35%) were stab wounds. The mean Injury Severity Score was 36. Of the 105 wounds, 23 wounds (22%) involved multiple-chamber injuries. The overall survival was 35 of 105 patients (33%): survival of gunshot wound victims was 11 of 68 patients (16%); survival of stab wound victims was 24 of 37 patients (65%). Emergency department thoracotomy was performed in 71 of the 105 patients (68%) with 10 survivors (14%). CVRS: 94% mortality (50 of 53) when CVRS = 0, 89% mortality (57 of 64) when CVRS = 0 to 3, and 31% mortality (12 of 39) when CVRS 4 to 11 (p < 0.001). The presence of sinus rhythm when pericardium was opened predicted survival (p < 0.001). Anatomical site of injury (injured chamber) and the presence of tamponade did not predict survival. Stepwise logistic regression analysis identified gunshot wound, exsanguination, and restoration of blood pressure as most predictive variables of mortality. AAST-OIS injury grade and mortality: grade I, 0 of 1 (0%); grade II, 1 of 2 (50%); grade III, 2 of 3 (66%); grade IV, 28 of 50 (56%); grade V, 29 of 38 (76%); grade VI, 10 of 11 (91%). Overall incidence: grades IV-VI, 99 of 105 (94%). Conclusions: Parameters measuring physiologic condition, CVRS, and mechanism of injury are significant predictors of outcome in penetrating cardiac injuries. AAST-OIS injury grades I-III are rare in penetrating cardiac trauma. AAST-OIS Injury grades IV-VI are common in penetrating cardiac trauma and accurately predict outcome.
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- 1998
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45. TRISS methodology in trauma: the need for alternatives
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James Murray, George C. Velmahos, Edward E. Cornwell, William C. Shoemaker, John D. Berne, Juan A. Asensio, Demetrios Demetriades, Howard Belzberg, Thomas V. Berne, and Linda S. Chan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Poison control ,Logistic regression ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Occupational safety and health ,law.invention ,Trauma Centers ,law ,Positive predicative value ,Injury prevention ,Urban Health Services ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Trauma Severity Indices ,business.industry ,Major trauma ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Survival Analysis ,Intensive care unit ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Emergency medicine ,Wounds and Injuries ,Injury Severity Score ,Wounds, Gunshot ,business - Abstract
Background Trauma and Injury Severity Score (TRISS) methodology has become a standard tool for evaluating the performance of trauma centres and identifying cases for critical review. Recent work has identified several limitations and questioned the validity of the methodology in certain types of trauma. Methods The usefulness and limitations of the TRISS methodology were evaluated in an urban trauma centre. Trauma registry data of 5445 patients with major trauma were analysed with respect to 30 demographic, prehospital, injury severity and hospitalization attributes. The performance of TRISS was measured primarily by the percentage of misclassifications, including false positives and false negatives, comparing the survival status predicted by TRISS with the true status. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were also measured for subgroups defined by the 30 attributes. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify significant independent factors related to the performance of TRISS. Results The overall misclassification rate was 4·3 per cent. However, in many subgroups of patients with severe trauma the misclassification rate was very high: 34 per cent in patients older than 54 years with Injury Severity Score (ISS) greater than 20; 29 per cent in those with fall injuries and ISS above 20; 29 per cent in patients with injuries involving four or more body areas and ISS greater than 20; 28·6 per cent in patients with injuries needing admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) and ISS greater than 20; 26·4 per cent in patients in severe distress before reaching hospital with ISS greater than 20; and 26·1 per cent in patients whose ISS score was above 20 and who had complications in hospital. Conclusion The TRISS methodology has major limitations in many subgroups of patients, especially in severe trauma. In its present form TRISS has no useful role in major urban trauma centres. Its use should be seriously reconsidered, if not abandoned.
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- 1998
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46. Patterns of Injury in Victims of Urban Free-Falls
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Thomas V. Berne, James Murray, George C. Velmahos, Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Theodorou, Juan A. Asensio, Edward E. Cornwell, and Demetrios Demetriades
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Poison control ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Prospective cohort study ,Aortic rupture ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Trauma center ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Spinal column ,Surgery ,Child, Preschool ,Etiology ,Spinal Fractures ,Wounds and Injuries ,Accidental Falls ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify the patterns of injury in urban free-fall victims so as to establish guidelines of management. This prospective study at an academic level I trauma center included 187 consecutive patients who presented to our trauma center during a 9-month period (September 1994 to June 1995) after a fall from a height of 5 to 70 feet. Only three falls were from heights of more than 40 feet. Of these patients, 116 (65.1%) suffered significant trauma. Fractures were the most common injuries, accounting for 76.2% of all injuries. Spinal fractures were detected in 37 patients and were associated with neurologic deficits in 7. Intraabdominal injuries occurred in 11 patients, requiring operative intervention in 9 of them. Solid organ lacerations prevailed, but small bowel perforation and bladder rupture were present in one case each. A significant retroperitoneal hematoma was detected in only one case and a thoracic aortic rupture in one more. The height of the fall correlated highly with the incidence of intoxication and severity of injury, the need for operation, the length of hospitalization, and mortality. Most urban free-falls occur from moderate heights. The spinal column is frequently injured and therefore should be thoroughly assessed clinically and radiographically in all fall victims. Intraabdominal organ injuries are much more common than retroperitoneal ones. Thus the abdominal cavity should be the primary target of aggressive workup in hemodynamically unstable patients. The height of the fall is a good predictor of injury severity and outcome prognosis.
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- 1997
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47. A unified approach to the surgical exposure of pancreatic and duodenal injuries
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Juan A. Asensio, James Murray, John D. Berne, Thomas V. Berne, Demetrios Demetriades, George C. Velmahos, Hugo Gomez, Howard Belzberg, Andres Falabella, Edward E. Cornwell, and William C. Shoemaker
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Ligaments ,Pancreatic disease ,Duodenum ,business.industry ,General surgery ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Intraoperative Period ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Methods ,medicine ,Humans ,Pancreas ,Pancreas surgery ,business ,Grading (tumors) ,Application methods - Abstract
One of the greatest challenges to any surgeon is the intraoperative detection and surgical management of duodenal and pancreatic injuries. A uniform approach to the surgical exposure of all suspected pancreatic and duodenal injuries will decrease their morbidity and mortality by identifying all injuries. Proper intraoperative assessment and grading will help with procedure selection from the broad surgical armamentarium available to manage these injuries.
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- 1997
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48. Methods and concepts for noninvasive cardiac output measurements
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William C. Shoemaker and Howard Belzberg
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Cardiac output ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business - Published
- 1997
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49. Pharmacokinetics of aztreonam in critically ill surgical patients
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Howard Belzberg, Demetrios Demetriades, Edward E. Cornwell, Juan A. Asensio, Thomas V. Berne, Winnie M. Yu, Mark A. Gill, Dimitrios Theodorou, and Jack W. Kern
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Critical Illness ,Aztreonam ,Sepsis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Pharmacokinetics ,Intensive care ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Antibacterial agent ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pharmacology ,Volume of distribution ,APACHE II ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,Monobactams - Abstract
The pharmacokinetics of aztreonam in critically ill surgical patients with serious gram-negative infections were studied. Blood samples were taken before and at 30 minutes, 2.5 hours, and 5 hours after a dose of aztreonam 2 g i.v. every six hours. All patients had received at least two aztreonam doses before the dosage interval being studied. Aztreonam concentrations were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography. Aztreonam's pharmacokinetics, the severity of illness, and patient outcomes were examined. A total of 28 patients with 111 serum aztreonam concentrations were included in the analysis. The patients were young (mean age, 35 years) and predominantly male. The mean APACHE II score was 19.3, and 22 patients had sepsis. Four patients died. The mean volume of distribution (V) of 0.35 L/ kg was nearly twice the previously reported steady-state value for healthy volunteers (0.18 L/kg) and was highly variable. A slightly higher than normal mean V, 0.22 L/ kg, was seen in a subset of six patients whose infection occurred earlier in their intensive care and who had lower APACHE II scores. While with some antibiotics the elevated V would imply difficulty in achieving therapeutic drug levels, 99 (89%) of the 111 concentrations were at or above the in vitro susceptibility breakpoint of 8 micrograms/mL. Despite observations of markedly increased and highly variable V in critically ill surgical patients, a standard dosage of aztreonam was usually sufficient to maintain adequate serum drug levels.
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- 1997
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50. Aminoglycoside Levels in Critically Ill Surgical Patients
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Demetrios Demetriades, Edward E. Cornwell, Thomas V. Berne, Jack W. Kern, Gavin Henriques, Howard Belzberg, and Juan A. Asensio
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Loading dose ,Sepsis ,Tobramycin ,Humans ,Surgical Wound Infection ,Medicine ,Dosing ,Child ,APACHE ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Antibacterial agent ,business.industry ,Aminoglycoside ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Gentamicin ,Gentamicins ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We retrospectively reviewed medical records and computerized critical care data for 40 consecutive critically ill surgical patients receiving "standard" doses (1.5 to 2.0 mg/kg loading dose and 3 to 5 mg/kg/day) of gentamicin or tobramycin for gram-negative infections. End points measured were serum drug levels and clearance of infection. Therapeutic serum aminoglycoside levels were achieved within 48 hours of therapy by only 7 patients (17.5%). Among the remaining 33 patients, significantly fewer septic than nonseptic patients had clearance of their infection (11% vs 92%). Specific physiologic criteria of sepsis may be used to identify critically ill patients who will most likely benefit from aggressive initial aminoglycoside dosing when these drugs are used to treat gram-negative infections.
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- 1997
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