71 results on '"TORTELLA, B."'
Search Results
2. Efficacy and safety of recombinant activated factor VII in the management of hemorrhagic shock due to trauma: OC-TH-069
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Hauser, C J, Boffard, K D, Dutton, R P, Bernard, G R, Croce, M A, Holcomb, J B, Leppaniemi, A K, Parr, M JA, Vincent, J L, Tortella, B J, Dimsits, J, and Bouillon, B
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- 2009
- Full Text
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3. Effects of tourism development on surface area of main lakes of Shchuchinsk-Burabay resort area, Kazakhstan
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Ramazanova, M., Bulai, M., ADRIAN URSU, Deyá Tortella, B., and Kakabayev, A.
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Water resources ,Lake surface area ,Environmental issues ,Accommodation sector ,Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Shchuchinsk -Burabay resort area ,Kazakhstan ,Tourism - Abstract
Lake (or lacustrine) water is one of the most sensitive and vulnerable resources for many tourist destinations, whose attractiveness highly depends on the water quality and availability in the lakes. The Shchuchinsk-Burabay resort area, located in the Akmola region of the Northern Kazakhstan, is one of the most popular tourist destinations of the country, known for its attractive natural landscape and for its great number of lakes. However, during the last decades, these lakes have been facing environmental issues due to their overexploitation and increasing level of pollution. Thus, the aim of the current study is to examine the changes in surface area of these lakes during the last 30 years by using GIS technologies, and the influence of tourism industry upon this phenomenon. Accommodation facilities (hotels, sanatoriums and guesthouses), as main tourism-related water consumers, have been targeted within our analysis. Results show that tourism is one of the factors responsible for surface area decline of the main lakes in the region, and its responsibility increases when combined with other factors. This study also formulates recommendations for water management policymakers in order to guarantee the sustainability of lake water as a key resource of the tourism industry in the region.
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- 2019
4. Predictors of non‐adherence to prescribed prophylactic clotting‐factor treatment regimens among adolescent and young adults with a bleeding disorder
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Witkop, M. L., primary, McLaughlin, J. M., additional, Anderson, T. L., additional, Munn, J. E., additional, Lambing, A., additional, and Tortella, B., additional
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- 2016
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5. ANTIBIOTIC PROPHYLAXIS IN HIGH RISK PENETRATING HOLLOW VISCUS INJURY
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Kirton, O.C., primary, O'Neill, P., additional, Kestner, M., additional, and Tortella, B., additional
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- 1998
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6. Cost analysis: Prehospital education vs. on-scene patient volume
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Bell, R., primary, Tpr, I., additional, Nichols, J., additional, Tortella, B., additional, and O'Connor, J., additional
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- 1996
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7. Measuring the efficacy of public safety officers as first responders
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Bell, R., primary, Nichols, J., additional, Lavery, R., additional, and Tortella, B., additional
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- 1995
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8. Techniques in establishing a public safety officer first responder trauma triage program
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Bell, R., primary, Nichols, J., additional, Lavery, R., additional, and Tortella, B., additional
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- 1995
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9. Regionalization of a trauma system increases utilization but does not increase flight times in a hospital based air medical program
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Bell, R, primary, Tortella, B, additional, and Lavery, R, additional
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- 1994
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10. The Value of Intubating and Paralyzing Patients with Suspected Head Injury in the Emergency Department
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REDAN, J. A., primary, LIVINGSTON, D. H., additional, TORTELLA, B. J., additional, and RUSH, B. F., additional
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- 1991
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11. Factors influencing successful intubation in the prehospital setting.
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Doran JV, Tortella BJ, Drivet WJ, Lavery RF, Doran, J V, Tortella, B J, Drivet, W J, and Lavery, R F
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- 1995
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12. Disabling job injuries among urban EMS providers.
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Tortella, B J, and Lavery, R F
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- 1994
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13. The effect of lipid infusion on pulmonary function in burn patients with inhalation injury.
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Demling RH and Tortella B
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- 1985
14. The prehospital treatment of pediatric trauma.
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Lavery, Robert F., Tortella, Bartholomew J., Griffin, C Clayton, Lavery, R F, Tortella, B J, and Griffin, C C
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- 1992
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15. Trauma life support education: a didactic and caprine laboratory course for Nigerian physicians
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Tortella, B. J., Swan, K. G., Donahoo, J. S., Tischler, C., Marangu, J. A. Makena, Orjiako, A. B. C., Sharples, C., Swan, B. C., and Hill, D. W.
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- 1996
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16. Out-of-hospital use of a pulse oximeter to determine systolic blood pressures.
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McCluskey B, Addis M, Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, McCluskey, B, Addis, M, Tortella, B J, and Lavery, R F
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- 1996
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17. Recombinant activated factor VII safety in trauma patients: Results from the CONTROL trial
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Dutton, R. P., Parr, M., Tortella, B. J., Champion, H. R., Bernard, G. R., Boffard, K., Bouillon, B., Croce, M. A., Dimsits, J., john holcomb, Leppaniemi, A., Vincent, J. -L, and Hauser, C. J.
18. 796 Telemetry of field spirometry data to assist physician treatment and triage of asthmatic patients
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Aquino, T., Bielory, L., Tortella, B., and Lavery, B.
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- 1996
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19. COVID-led consumption displacement: A longitudinal analysis of hotel booking patterns.
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Deyá-Tortella B, Leoni V, and Ramos V
- Abstract
This research contributes to the literature on consumption displacement by exploring the pandemic-led shifts in hotel booking patterns. We perform a longitudinal analysis and a critical comparison of bookings before and after COVID-19 outbreak, focusing on the booking window , length of stay , and booking channel . Data include weekly bookings of a representative sample of Balearic Islands' hotels between 2018 and 2021. Results indicate that the pandemic has led to a drop in the volume of bookings and a remarkable change in booking patterns. Specifically, we find a temporal shift in booking behavior, characterized by a lower anticipation and a change in the tourism supply chain, namely a decrease in the share of intermediated bookings. The expected increase in the frequency of exogenous shocks, such as weather-related and sanitary crises, could affect purchasing behaviors, thus enhancing the relevance of this study, with managerial implications for industry and destination managers., (© 2022 The Authors.)
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- 2022
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20. World Federation of Hemophilia Gene Therapy Registry.
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Konkle BA, Coffin D, Pierce GF, Clark C, George L, Iorio A, Mahlangu J, Naccache M, O'Mahony B, Peyvandi F, Pipe S, Quartel A, Sawyer EK, Skinner MW, Tortella B, Watson C, and Winburn I
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- Humans, Registries, Genetic Therapy methods, Hemophilia A genetics
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- 2020
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21. Predictors of quality of life among adolescents and young adults with a bleeding disorder.
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McLaughlin JM, Munn JE, Anderson TL, Lambing A, Tortella B, and Witkop ML
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- Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hemophilia A therapy, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Health Status Indicators, Hemophilia A psychology, Quality of Life psychology, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescents and young adults with bleeding disorders is under-researched. We aimed to describe factors related to HRQoL in adolescents and young adults with hemophilia A or B or von Willebrand disease., Methods: A convenience sample of volunteers aged 13 to 25 years with hemophilia or von Willebrand disease completed a cross-sectional survey that assessed Physical (PCS) and Mental (MCS) Component Summary scores on the SF-36 questionnaire. Quantile regression models were used to assess factors associated with HRQoL., Results: Of 108 respondents, 79, 7, and 14% had hemophilia A, hemophilia B, and von Willebrand disease, respectively. Most had severe disease (71%), had never developed an inhibitor (65%), and were treated prophylactically (68%). Half of patients were aged 13 to 17 years and most were white (80%) and non-Hispanic (89%). Chronic pain was reported as moderate to severe by 31% of respondents. Median PCS and MCS were 81.3 and 75.5, respectively. Quantile regression showed that the median PCS for women (61% with von Willebrand disease) was 13.1 (95% CI: 2.4, 23.8; p = 0.02) points lower than men. Ever developing an inhibitor (vs never) was associated with a 13.1-point (95% CI: 4.7, 21.5; p < 0.01) PCS reduction. MCS was 10.0 points (95% CI: 0.7, 19.3; p = 0.04) higher for prophylactic infusers versus those using on-demand treatment. Compared with patients with no to mild chronic pain, those with moderate to severe chronic pain had 25.5-point (95% CI: 17.2, 33.8; p < 0.001) and 10.0-point (95% CI: 0.8, 19.2; p = 0.03) reductions in median PCS and MCS, respectively., Conclusions: Efforts should be made to prevent and manage chronic pain, which was strongly related to physical and mental HRQoL, in adolescents and young adults with hemophilia and von Willebrand disease. Previous research suggests that better clotting factor adherence may be associated with less chronic pain.
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- 2017
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22. Racial Differences in Chronic Pain and Quality of Life among Adolescents and Young Adults with Moderate or Severe Hemophilia.
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McLaughlin JM, Lambing A, Witkop ML, Anderson TL, Munn J, and Tortella B
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- Adolescent, Adult, Blood Coagulation Factors therapeutic use, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Hemophilia A drug therapy, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Medication Adherence ethnology, Pain Measurement, White People statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Chronic Pain ethnology, Health Status Disparities, Hemophilia A ethnology, Quality of Life, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background and Objective: We explored racial differences in adherence to recommended clotting factor treatment regimens, chronic pain, and quality of life (QoL) among adolescents and young adults (AYAs) diagnosed with moderate or severe hemophilia., Methods: A convenience sample of hemophilia patients aged 13-25 years completed an online cross-sectional survey in 2012. Chronic pain was measured using the revised Faces Pain Scale (FPS-R) and dichotomized as high (FPS-R ≥ 4) or low (FPS-R < 4). QoL was measured with the SF-36., Results: Of 80 AYA participants (79 male), most had severe disease (91 %) and hemophilia A (91 %). Most were white (76 %) and non-Hispanic (88 %). At the univariate level, compared to whites, non-whites were more likely to have produced an inhibitor against clotting factor treatment (74 vs 38 %, p < .01), less likely to have commercial health insurance (16 vs 63 %, p < .001), more likely to report high levels of chronic pain (FPS-R ≥ 4) (63 vs 26 %, p < .01), and had lower SF-36 physical composite summary (PCS) scores. Adjusted logistic and quantile regression modeling, respectively, revealed that non-whites were 5.31 (95 % CI 1.62, 17.4; p < .01) times more likely to report high chronic pain and had median PCS scores that were 26.0 (95 % CI 11.0, 40.9; p < .01) points lower than whites., Conclusions: Targeted efforts to prevent and manage chronic pain among non-white AYAs with moderate or severe hemophilia are necessary. After accounting for demographic and clinical differences, there were no racial differences in adherence to recommended clotting factor treatment regimens; however, non-whites were more than five times more likely to report high levels of chronic pain, which predicted worse overall physical QoL, bodily pain, physical and social functioning, and greater role limitations due to physical health.
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- 2016
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23. Hotel water consumption at a seasonal mass tourist destination. The case of the island of Mallorca.
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Deyà Tortella B and Tirado D
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- Climate, Drinking, Geography, Housing, Humans, Models, Biological, Regression Analysis, Seasons, Spain, Commerce, Conservation of Natural Resources, Environment, Public Facilities, Recreation, Travel, Water Supply
- Abstract
While it is true that tourism is one of the main driving forces behind economic growth in several world regions, it is also true that tourism can have serious negative environmental impacts, especially with regard to water resources. The tourist water demand can generate big problems of sustainability, mainly in those regions where water is scarce, as occurs in most coastal and small island destinations where a large part of world tourism is concentrated. Given the shortage of literature on the subject, further research into the tourist water demand is required, with particular attention to the hotel sector, since hotels are the most popular option for tourists, displaying higher levels of water consumption. The main purpose of this study is to develop a model to analyse hotel water consumption at a mature sun and sand destination with a strong seasonal pattern and scarcity of water; characteristics shared by some of the world's main tourist destinations. Our model includes a set of different hotel variables associated with physical, seasonal and management-related factors and it improves on the capacity to explain water consumption at such destinations. Following a hierarchical regression methodology, the model is empirically tested through a survey distributed to managers of a representative sample of hotels on the island of Mallorca. From the obtained results, interesting recommendations can be made for both hotel managers and policy makers. Among these, it should be highlighted that the strategic move contemplated by many mature destinations towards a higher quality, low-season model could have significant negative effects in terms of the sustainability of water resources. Our results also conclude that managerial decisions, like the system of accommodation that is offered (i.e. the proliferation of the "all-inclusive" formula, both at mature and new destinations), could give rise to the same negative effect. Development of water saving initiatives (usually introduced in response to demand-based factors), also reveals significant effects over water consumption. Finally, other key factor in explaining hotel water consumption is the management system under which the hotel is run., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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24. Challenges to effective research in acute trauma resuscitation: consent and endpoints.
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Holcomb JB, Weiskopf R, Champion H, Gould SA, Sauer RM, Brasel K, Bochicchio G, Bulger E, Cotton BA, Davis D, Dutton R, Hauser CJ, Hess JR, Hides GA, Knudson P, MacKenzie E, McGinnis RL, Michalek J, Moore FA, Omert L, Pollock BH, Tortella B, Sugarman J, Schreiber MA, and Wade CE
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- Acute Disease, Animals, Congresses as Topic, Humans, Multicenter Studies as Topic, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (U.S.), Practice Guidelines as Topic, Shock, Hemorrhagic epidemiology, Shock, Hemorrhagic physiopathology, United States, United States Food and Drug Administration, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries physiopathology, Resuscitation, Shock, Hemorrhagic therapy, Wounds and Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Selection of study endpoints is one of the most important decisions in the design of effective clinical trials. Late mortality (e.g., 28 days) is an unambiguous endpoint, accepted by regulatory agencies, but it is viewed as problematic among researchers in the study of resuscitation for acute trauma injury with hemorrhagic shock. In February 2008, physicians, ethicists, statisticians, and research scientists from the military, academia, industry, the Federal Drug Administration, and the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute gathered to discuss the obstacles confronting the trauma community in their efforts to improve patient outcomes. The primary meeting objective was to generate preliminary suggestions for a series of follow-up meetings that will develop consensus guidelines for the design of large multicenter clinical trials. Twenty short presentations and discussions, summarized here, outlined the group's concerns and suggestions. Successful and failed, completed or ongoing, clinical studies provided insight as to endpoints that may be of value for future trauma and shock studies. In addition to the importance of appropriate endpoints in study design, other related topics were discussed, including trauma epidemiology, patient enrollment and inclusion criteria, community consultation and the difficulty of obtaining informed consent in acute trauma research, and the inclusion of quality of life in composite endpoints. The consensus was that more discussion was needed and that consideration of new endpoints for clinical trials in emergency trauma research was a worthwhile and necessary goal.
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- 2011
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25. Scientific and logistical challenges in designing the CONTROL trial: recombinant factor VIIa in severe trauma patients with refractory bleeding.
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Dutton R, Hauser C, Boffard K, Dimsitts J, Bernard G, Holcomb J, Leppäniemi A, Tortella B, and Bouillon B
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- Guideline Adherence, Hemorrhage mortality, Humans, Informed Consent, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Selection, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Recombinant Proteins therapeutic use, Time Factors, Wounds and Injuries classification, Wounds and Injuries mortality, Factor VIIa therapeutic use, Hemorrhage drug therapy, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic methods, Research Design, Wounds and Injuries drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Clinical research in trauma patients poses multiple challenges in study design. These reflect the heterogeneity of injury and treatment, the paucity of acceptable study endpoints aside from mortality, and the difficulties inherent in obtaining informed consent in acutely ill populations. A current example of this problem is the study of recombinant factor VIIa (rFVIIa), which has attracted considerable interest as a systemic procoagulant agent for use in trauma patients with exsanguinating hemorrhage., Purpose: To report on the implementation of an international trial - CONTROL - intended to assess the efficacy and safety of rFVIIa in trauma, and discuss trauma research study design in light of this experience., Methods: The CONTROL trial international steering committee confronted a number of barriers in the design of the CONTROL trial. They addressed methodologies for (1) standardizing entry criteria for trauma patients suffering inherently heterogeneous injuries, (2) obtaining informed consent in an acutely injured population with altered levels of consciousness, (3) avoiding futile care, while recruiting subjects with incompletely diagnosed injuries, (4) standardizing trauma intensive care across different investigating sites and countries, and (5) establishing study endpoints that were both clinically relevant and convincing to regulatory authorities. The resulting study methodology is reported., Results: The CONTROL trial began active recruitment in October 2005, and was halted on June 11, 2008 because the observed mortality in the 576 enrolled patients was so far below expectations that the study would lack sufficient statistical power at the planned number of subjects to demonstrate a benefit. The utility of the endpoints selected for study will not be known until completion of data analysis., Limitations: Any clinical trial in trauma patients must cope with the urgency of care required, issues of patient heterogeneity, standardization of care across multiple centers, and the difficulties of obtaining informed consent., Conclusion: Research in acutely hemorrhaging trauma patients presents numerous scientific and ethical challenges. The methodology of the CONTROL study is presented as an example of how some of these challenges can be approached and managed, and of the pitfalls that may arise.
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- 2009
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26. Analysis of 162 colon injuries in patients with penetrating abdominal trauma: concomitant stomach injury results in a higher rate of infection.
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O'Neill PA, Kirton OC, Dresner LS, Tortella B, and Kestner MM
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- Abdominal Injuries surgery, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Duodenum injuries, Female, Humans, Infections epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Trauma epidemiology, Multiple Trauma surgery, Pancreas injuries, Risk Factors, Thoracic Injuries complications, Thoracic Injuries epidemiology, Wounds, Penetrating epidemiology, Wounds, Penetrating surgery, Abdominal Injuries complications, Colon injuries, Multiple Trauma complications, Stomach injuries, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Wounds, Penetrating complications
- Abstract
Background: Fecal contamination from colon injury has been thought to be the most significant factor for the development of surgical site infection (SSI) after trauma. However, there are increasing data to suggest that other factors may play a role in the development of postinjury infection in patients after colon injury. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of gastric wounding on the development of SSI and nonsurgical site infection (NSSI) in patients with colon injury., Methods: Post hoc analysis was performed on data prospectively collected for 317 patients presenting with penetrating hollow viscus injury. One hundred sixty-two patients with colon injury were subdivided into one of three groups: patients with isolated colon wounds (C), patients with colon and stomach wounds with or without other organ injury (C+S), and patients with colon and other organ injury but no stomach injury (C-S) and assessed for the development of SSI and NSSI. Infection rates were also determined for patients who sustained isolated gastric injury (S) and gastric injury in combination with other injuries other than colon (S-C). Penetrating Abdominal Trauma Index, operative times, and transfusion were assessed. Discrete variables were analyzed by Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel chi2 test and Fisher's exact test. Risk factor analysis was performed by multivariate logistic regression., Results: C+S patients had a higher rate of SSI infection (31%) than C patients (3.6%) (p=0.008) and C-S patients (13%) (p=0.021). Similarly, the incidence of NSSI was also significantly greater in the C+S group (37%) compared with the C patients (7.5%) (p=0.07) and the C-S patients (17%) (p=0.019). There was no difference in the rate of SSI or NSSI between the C and C-S groups (p=0.3 and p=0.24, respectively). The rate of SSI was significantly greater in the C+S patients when compared with the S-C patients (31% vs. 10%, p=0.008), but there was no statistical difference in the rate of NSSI in the C+S group and the S-C group (37% vs. 24%, p=0.15)., Conclusion: The addition of a gastric injury to a colon injury has a synergistic effect on the rate of postoperative infection.
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- 2004
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27. Perioperative antibiotic use in high-risk penetrating hollow viscus injury: a prospective randomized, double-blind, placebo-control trial of 24 hours versus 5 days.
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Kirton OC, O'Neill PA, Kestner M, and Tortella BJ
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- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Cross Infection etiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Injury Severity Score, Logistic Models, Male, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Surgical Wound Infection etiology, Surgical Wound Infection prevention & control, Time Factors, Ampicillin therapeutic use, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Drug Therapy, Combination therapeutic use, Penicillins therapeutic use, Perioperative Care methods, Sulbactam therapeutic use, Viscera injuries, Wounds, Penetrating drug therapy, Wounds, Penetrating surgery
- Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to compare the safety and therapeutic efficacy of a 24-hour versus 5-day course of ampicillin/sulbactam for the prevention of postoperative infections in high-risk patients sustaining hollow viscus injury from penetrating abdominal trauma., Methods: A total of 317 patients from four Level I trauma centers with penetrating abdominal injuries and at least one hollow viscus perforation each received one preoperative and three postoperative doses of ampicillin/sulbactam 3 g intravenously. After receiving 24 hours of unblinded ampicillin/sulbactam, patients were then randomized into one of two groups. Group 1 received 4 additional days of blinded ampicillin/sulbactam (5 days total of antibiotic), and Group 2 received 4 days of placebo (24 hours of antibiotic). Patients were assessed postoperatively for occurrence of deep surgical-site infections (intra-abdominal abscess, fasciitis, and peritonitis) and superficial (wound) surgical-site infections. Development of nonsurgical-site infections (e.g., pneumonia, urinary tract infection, phlebitis, and cellulitis) was also recorded. Continuous variables were analyzed by analysis of variance and discrete variables by the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel chi2 test. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were also performed to identify independent risk factors for postoperative infection., Results: A total of 159 patients were randomized into Group 1, and 158 patients were randomized into Group 2. The Injury Severity Score and penetrating abdominal trauma index were 18+/-8 and 21+/-13, respectively, for Group 1 and 18+/-9 and 20+/-15, respectively, for Group 2. A total of 162 (51%) patients sustained one or more colon injuries (82 in Group 1 and 80 in Group 2). There were 16 (10%) surgical-site infections in Group 1 and 13 (8%) surgical-site infections in Group 2 (p = 0.74). Group 1 patients experienced 17 (11%) nonsurgical-site infections, whereas Group 2 had 32 (20%) nonsurgical-site infections. This difference, however, was not statistically significant (p = 0.16). Only the total number of blood units transfused and the presence of a PATI score greater than or equal to 25 were found to be independently associated with the development of a postoperative surgical- and nonsurgical-site infections (p = 0.001 and p = 0.003, respectively). Of note, the presence of a colon injury was not found to be an independent risk factor (p = 0.11) for either surgical or nonsurgical site postoperative infection in our study., Conclusion: High-risk patients with colon or other hollow viscus injuries from penetrating abdominal trauma are at no greater risk for surgical-site or nonsurgical-site infection when treated with only a 24-hour course of a broad-spectrum antibiotic.
- Published
- 2000
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28. The utility of venous lactate to triage injured patients in the trauma center.
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Lavery RF, Livingston DH, Tortella BJ, Sambol JT, Slomovitz BM, and Siegel JH
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- Accidents, Traffic, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arteries, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Length of Stay, Trauma Centers, Veins, Lactates blood, Triage methods, Wounds and Injuries blood
- Abstract
Background: Field triage criteria for trauma patients results in over-triage rates of 30% to 50% to achieve under-triage rates of 10%. This large number of patients may stress trauma center resources. Elevated arterial lactate (ALAC) levels have been shown to be a marker of serious injury but the need for arterial sampling limits the utility of the determination. The goal of this study was: 1) to determine the correlation between venous lactate (VLAC) and ALAC; 2) to determine whether VLAC could identify those patients with serious injuries; and 3) to compare an elevated VLAC level against standard triage criteria (STC) in their ability to identify major injury., Study Design: Arterial and venous samples for blood gas and lactate analyses were obtained in 375 patients within 10 minutes of patient arrival to the trauma center. Arterial and venous samples were drawn within 2 minutes of each other, placed on ice, and analyzed within 10 minutes of sampling. The location of sampling was left to physician discretion. Data collected included injury mechanism, demographics, admission vital signs, emergency department disposition, length of stay, and injury severity scores (ISS). Admission to the ICU, need for emergency operation, length of stay, and death were noted. Emergency medical service staff were queried to determine which standard triage criteria (STC) were fulfilled., Results: The mean ALAC was 3.11 mmol/L (SD 3.45, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.67 to 3.55) and mean VLAC was 3.43 mmol/L (SD 3.41, 95% CI 2.96 to 3.90). There was no significant difference between ALAC and VLAC. The correlation between ALAC and VLAC was 0.94 (95% CI 0.94 to 0.96, p = 0.0001). An elevated VLAC predicted moderate to severe injury and there was a significant association between an increased lactate and maximum Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) of 4 and 5 (ANOVA, F = 8.26, p < 0.001). Patients with VLAC > or =2 mmol/L had significantly increased relative risks of ISS > or = 13, death, admission to the ICU, and length of stay > 2 days. In comparison with STC, a VLAC > or = 2 mmol/L decreased undertriage in patients with ISS > or = 13 by one half (11% versus 24%) for patients with ISS > or = 13 and decreased over-triage by 28% (46% versus 64%). These data were most pronounced for patients injured in motor vehicle collisions., Conclusions: VLAC is an excellent approximation for ALAC. A VLAC > or = 2 mmol/L appears to predict an ISS > or = 13, the need for ICU resources, and prolonged hospital stays. VLAC was significantly better than STC in all patients and was most useful in victims of blunt trauma, especially motor vehicle collisions.
- Published
- 2000
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29. A national survey of air medical infectious disease control practices.
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Corriere C, Zarro C, Connelly PE, Tortella BJ, and Lavery RF
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- Data Collection, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Infection Control statistics & numerical data, Inservice Training organization & administration, Organizational Policy, Transportation of Patients, United States, Air Ambulances statistics & numerical data, Infection Control methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Caring for an infectious patient in the air medical environment presents a special challenge to all air crew members (ACMs) involved. The purpose of this study was to survey the infectious disease control practices of air medical programs (AMPs) that are members of the Association of Air Medical Services., Methods: A structured telephone survey was designed to gather data. Using one interviewer (an undergraduate student) with no knowledge of the study's goal minimized experimental bias. AMPs from 151 geographically selected areas were called between June and August 1996. Only the programs' chief flight nurses (CFNs) were targeted as respondents., Results: The response rate was 91% (138 of 151). Although no program refused to participate, 13 CFNs were unavailable to be interviewed. Mission profile was 32% scene and 68% interhospital with an annual average of 950 patient transports per program. Transport type was 61% rotor-wing aircraft, 17% fixed-wing, and 22% both. Flight physicals for ACMs were required by 57% of the AMPs. Pre-employment screenings for rubella, tuberculosis (TB), and varicella were noted. Interestingly, 17% of the AMPs reported pre-employment HIV testing. Immunization was mandated by 57% of AMPs, including hepatitis B virus, measles, rubella, and tetanus. Nine percent of the respondents refused to accept a transport with specific contagious conditions, primarily TB. A formal decontamination policy was in effect at 88% of the AMPs, and OSHA-approved filter masks were available at 70%. Pathogen exposure reporting was required by 97%., Conclusion: A current, comprehensive infection control program, continuing education, and 100% compliance with standard precautions will help reduce the possibility of accidental exposures. These strategies to reduce transmission also can be extended during training sessions to the prehospital and hospital personnel with whom the air medical program serves.
- Published
- 2000
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30. Storage temperatures of medications on an air medical helicopter.
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Szucs P, Allegra JR, Fields LA, Grabiner FR, Lavery R, Prusik T, and Tortella B
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- Guideline Adherence, Reference Standards, United States, Air Ambulances standards, Drug Storage standards, Temperature
- Abstract
Introduction: The safety and efficacy of medications stored on air medical helicopters may be adversely affected by extreme temperatures. The purpose of this study was to determine whether temperatures inside an air medical helicopter drug box were within the U.S. Pharmacopeia recommendations for controlled room temperature. This is defined as a temperature between 15 degrees and 30 degrees C (59 degrees and 86 degrees F) with a mean kinetic temperature of less than 25 degrees C (77 degrees F). An additional goal was to determine whether time/temperature indicator labels can reliably monitor mean kinetic temperatures., Methods: Temperatures were monitored with miniature electronic temperature recorders and color-changing time/temperature indicator labels., Results: The mean kinetic temperatures for the summer and winter periods were 25.1 degrees C (77.2 degrees F) and 12.7 degrees C (54.8 degrees F), respectively. In the summer, the electronic recorders logged temperatures exceeding 25 degrees C (59 degrees F) 37% of the time and more than 30 degrees C (86 degrees F) 6% of the time. In the winter, temperatures less than 15 degrees C (59 degrees F) were recorded 83% of the time. The mean kinetic temperatures obtained from the electronic recorder and the time/temperature indicator labels differed by less than 0.7 degree C (1.3 degrees F). The results show that medications on an air medical helicopter are subject to temperatures out of the recommended range and that time/temperature indicator labels can reliably monitor mean kinetic temperatures.
- Published
- 2000
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31. Taking care of the "good guys:" a trauma center-based model of medical support for tactical law enforcement.
- Author
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Lavery RF, Adis MD, Doran JV, Corrice MA, Tortella BJ, and Livingston DH
- Subjects
- Humans, Job Description, Needs Assessment, New Jersey, Organizational Objectives, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Physician's Role, Program Development, Program Evaluation, Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Government Agencies organization & administration, Interinstitutional Relations, Models, Organizational, Police organization & administration, Trauma Centers organization & administration
- Abstract
The potential need for rapid medical intervention and access to a trauma center after major injury is crucial to the safety and success of SWAT team operations. This manuscript describes the genesis and development of a unique model for which advanced medical care is rendered by trained health care professionals within a regional trauma system in the support of a SWAT team. The model was developed jointly by the Newark, New Jersey, Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and The New Jersey Trauma Center-University Hospital, an academic, urban Level I trauma center. After the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the two agencies in 1995, the program became operational. The medical team is composed of physicians, nurses, and paramedics. Since inception, the medical team has provided medical support for 33 tactical missions and 99 training days. Ten patients were treated: 7 agents (syncope, fractured foot, blunt head/neck trauma, lacerations), 2 bystanders (chest pain, asthma), and 1 suspect (chest pain). The advantages of the Newark model in contrast to other programs of tactical medical support, are the operational activities of the team and the cost of the program was outlined.
- Published
- 2000
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32. Think before you act: a national survey of interhospital transfer policies and practices.
- Author
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Bisciglia JM, Binder C, Tortella BJ, and Lavery RF
- Subjects
- Air Ambulances statistics & numerical data, Data Collection, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Health Care Reform, Health Services Research organization & administration, Patient Admission, Patient Transfer statistics & numerical data, United States, Air Ambulances organization & administration, Organizational Policy, Patient Transfer organization & administration
- Abstract
Introduction: As health care evolves, air medical program (AMP) interhospital transfers will come under increasing scrutiny. The object of this study was to evaluate various components of the interhospital transfer policies of AMPs across the country., Methods: A structured telephone interview of the chief flight nurse (CFN) or administrator of 90 geographically selected AMPs was conducted by a college-educated research assistant using a scripted questionnaire., Results: Seventy-seven (86%) of the AMPs contacted agreed to answer the questionnaire. CFN or administrator unavailability was the reason for nonresponse. The mean number of flights performed per year was 1046: 29% scence and 71% interhospital missions. Mission profile ranged from fixed-wing (19), rotor-wing (45), and both (13). Forty-five percent of respondents require prior administrative approval and 31% require prior medical approval before accepting an interhospital mission. Financial approval or long distance transport was the most common reason for requiring approval. Ninety-four percent of programs transferred patients to facilities other than the AMPs' host hospital; two-thirds of these programs required medical (30%) or administrative (35%) authorization before accepting missions., Conclusion: This survey indicates that most AMPs use some form of screening mechanism for interhospital flight requests. With managed care requiring health care delivery systems to examine the use of resources, AMPs should continue to stay ahead of trends that affect the industry.
- Published
- 1998
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33. Validation of a hand-held lactate device in determination of blood lactate in critically injured patients.
- Author
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Slomovitz BM, Lavery RF, Tortella BJ, Siegel JH, Bachl BL, and Ciccone A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Regression Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Critical Care methods, Lactic Acid blood, Point-of-Care Systems standards, Wounds and Injuries blood, Wounds and Injuries diagnosis
- Abstract
Objectives: Admission blood lactate is an accurate predictor of injury severity and mortality in trauma patients. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a portable lactate analyzer in a clinical setting by patient care staff., Design: A prospective, single-operator control solution and patient sample study, using two test devices and a reference device., Setting: An urban Level I trauma center., Patients: A convenience sample of 47 trauma patients., Interventions: Intra-assay precision was demonstrated by performance of consecutive analyses of two lactate control solutions (high and low lactate control concentrations) by medical students and physicians. Split sample, simultaneous testing of the portable lactate analyzer was then performed on 66 whole blood specimens from a convenience sample of 47 trauma patients admitted to an urban Level 1 trauma center over 4 mos. Samples were tested simultaneously tested on two portable lactate analyzers and a reference instrument., Measurements and Main Results: Acceptable intra-assay precision was achieved. Regression analysis for two test instruments demonstrated a slope of 0.920, an intercept of 0.323, an r2 of .982, and an SEM of 0.496. Regression analysis for test instrument "A" vs. the reference instrument showed a slope of 0.861, an intercept of 0.209, an r2 of .977, and an SEM of 0.598. Regression analysis for test instrument "B" vs. the reference instrument demonstrated a slope of 0.929, an intercept of -0.095, an r2 of .983, and an SEM of 0.506., Conclusions: Good correlation with a low SEM was obtained over a wide range of clinically relevant lactate values. Use of point of care lactate analysis will decrease analytic time, making an important diagnostic parameter immediately available in the critical care setting.
- Published
- 1998
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34. Requiring on-line medical command for helicopter request prolongs computer-modeled transport time to the nearest trauma center.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Kamat M, and Ramani M
- Subjects
- Humans, Models, Organizational, Program Evaluation, Time Factors, Air Ambulances, Computer Simulation, Emergency Medical Service Communication Systems standards, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Online Systems standards, Trauma Centers
- Abstract
Introduction: Rapid transport from scene to closest trauma center requires optimal use of public safety first responder (FR), basic life support (BLS), advanced life support (ALS), and transport resources (ground or air). In some parts of this regional emergency medical services (EMS) system, on-scene ALS requires contact with on-line medical command (OLMC) to obtain authorization for air medical helicopter (AMH) dispatch, because some EMS medical directors believe that this may decrease overutilization of AMH services., Hypothesis: The hypothesis of this study was that requiring prior OLMC for AMH dispatch prolongs mean time to a trauma center versus either FR or BLS request for AMH., Methods: Computer mapping programs were used to model the most rapid driving time to the closest trauma center from 167 actual AMH responses to the scene of a motor vehicle accident. In an OLMC-ALS model, only OLMC-ALS can request an AMH. In a BLS model, BLS units arrive on the scene and the crew requests simultaneous dispatch of an ALS response and an AMH. In the FR model, on arrival at the scene, a FR requests simultaneous dispatch of a BLS unit, an ALS unit, and an AMH., Results: The OLMC-ALS model resulted in a longer mean value for time to trauma center by an AMH than did the computer model for all ground transport settings. The FR model yielded a shorter mean time for AMH compared with the mean values for time to trauma center for all settings. Differences in mean values for time in urban settings were small (ground: 42 minutes, air: 36 minutes), whereas those for the suburban (ground: 52 minutes, air: 41 minutes), and those for rural (ground: 69 minutes, air: 47 minutes) were significant clinically. For the BLS model, these differences persisted, but were significant clinically only in the rural setting (ground: 68 minutes, air: 53 minutes)., Conclusions: Optimal use of AMH requires balancing the need for early helicopter dispatch to fully exploit its speed advantage with the disadvantage of expensive overutilization. This computer model indicates that the best person to request AMH varies by venue: in urban settings, the OLMC physician should request AMH dispatch; in suburban venues, BLS should request AMH dispatch; and in rural venues, FRs should request AMH dispatch.
- Published
- 1996
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35. Precision, accuracy, and managed care implications of a hand-held whole blood analyzer in the prehospital setting.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Doran JV, and Siegel JH
- Subjects
- Blood Chemical Analysis economics, Diagnostic Errors, Emergency Medical Services economics, Emergency Service, Hospital economics, Humans, Reference Values, Reproducibility of Results, Ambulances, Blood Chemical Analysis instrumentation, Blood Chemical Analysis methods, Emergency Medical Services methods, Managed Care Programs
- Abstract
Hand-held portable clinical analyzers permit the rapid measurement of whole blood electrolytes, glucose, blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and hematocrit. Knowledge of these values in the field might aid radio telemetry emergency department physicians in the field treatment and triage of patients. The purpose of this study was determine if the analyzer could function in the hostile prehospital environment. In phase 1, analyses of control electrolyte (n = 30) and hematocrit (n = 28) solutions were performed in a moving ambulance by paramedics to determine precision performance. The F-statistic was used to compare variances against reference values and no significant differences were found. In phase 2, prospective split-sample testing of 57 whole blood samples drawn in the field were analyzed on 2 machines by paramedics in a moving ambulance, and then again within 10 minutes of arrival at the receiving hospital emergency department. Regression analysis between ambulance and emergency department venues revealed high correlation (r) values: sodium (Na)+ (0.93), potassium (K)+ (0.99), chloride (Cl)- (0.89), BUN (0.99), glucose (0.99), hematocrit (0.95), and hemoglobin (0.92). A hand-held whole blood analyzer can be reliably used in the field to obtain blood chemistry and hematocrit values. There was excellent correlation between field and hospital emergency department values. Clinical pathologists extend their oversight and consider encouraging emergency physicians to obtain field blood chemistry values in research studies aimed at improving medical treatment and patient triage in the prehospital setting. We speculate that these results might be important to managed care groups because knowledge of blood chemistry values in the field might provide physicians with objective, criteria-based data on which to triage patients to the emergency department, to an ambulatory care setting, or to a community health center with attendant cost savings.
- Published
- 1996
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36. The impact of multiple patient transport on patient care in helicopter emergency medical services.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Corriere C, Bell RA, and Mann KJ
- Subjects
- Aircraft, Emergency Medical Technicians, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Retrospective Studies, United States, Air Ambulances, Emergency Medical Services standards, Transportation of Patients organization & administration
- Abstract
Introduction: Many helicopter emergency medical services can transport either one (singles) or two (doubles) patients. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the additional patient in the doubles flight had an adverse impact on patient care because of the deceased provider-to-patient ratio., Setting: Patients were flown by a Level 1 trauma center-based helicopter emergency medical service staffed by a nurse and paramedic. METHOD. A retrospective record and trauma registry review comparing 124 randomly selected scene trauma singles frequency-matched to 100 doubles (1/89 through 6/92) was performed. Data collected included patient demographics, Injury Severity Score, Glasgow Coma Scale, Revised Trauma Score, mechanism of injury, scene time, and ground ALS and helicopter emergency medical services procedures performed., Results: Doubles accounted for 6.5% of all on-scene helicopter emergency medical service trauma patient transports. Paired comparison of Glasgow Coma Scale, Revised Trauma Score, and Injury Severity Score revealed that only one of the doubles patients had a field Glasgow Coma Scale as low, or a Injury Severity Score as high as the average singles. Revised trauma scores were equivalent. Although more procedures were performed during doubles missions, no procedures were performed in most singles missions (58%) and a substantial minority of doubles missions (41%). No differences were found between the groups in change in Glasgow Coma Scale during flight., Conclusion: Only of the two patients during doubles missions was as severely injured as the average patient in a singles transport. The decreased ratio of helicopter emergency medical service crew to patients in doubles missions does not jeopardize patient care because few procedures were performed during either singles or doubles missions.
- Published
- 1996
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37. A comparison of pediatric and adult trauma patients transported by helicopter and ground EMS: managed-care considerations.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Sambol J, Lavery RF, Cudihy K, and Nadzam G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Air Ambulances economics, Air Ambulances statistics & numerical data, Ambulances economics, Ambulances statistics & numerical data, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Guidelines as Topic, Health Care Rationing economics, Health Care Rationing organization & administration, Hospital Costs, Humans, Infant, Injury Severity Score, Managed Care Programs organization & administration, New Jersey epidemiology, Patient Selection, Transportation of Patients methods, Transportation of Patients standards, Triage standards, Wounds and Injuries economics, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology, Air Ambulances standards, Ambulances standards, Managed Care Programs economics, Transportation of Patients economics, Wounds and Injuries physiopathology
- Abstract
Introduction: There is a paucity of data comparing injured pediatric patients transported by helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS) with patients transported by ground ambulance. The purpose of this study was to compare HEMS pediatric trauma patients to: 1) pediatric patients transported by ground to an urban level-1 trauma center (TC), and; 2) a similar cohort of adult patients. The managed-care consequences of these comparisons are highlighted., Methods: All trauma patients flown directly from the scene by HEMS from January 1, 1990, to April 30, 1993, were compared to a cohort of trauma patients arriving by ground advanced life support (ALS). All patients were transported to the same level-1 TC. The data collected included the mechanism of injury and the prehospital procedures performed, the injury severity score (ISS), and outcome., Results: There was no difference in the ISS between the HEMS (n = 216) and ground ALS (n = 355) pediatric patients (16.8 vs 17.1; p = 0.55). Adult HEMS patients (n = 202) had significantly higher ISS than did injured adults (n = 1652) transported by ground (18.0 vs 13.6; p < 0.0001). Overall, trauma patients transported by air directly from the scene have a higher ISS than patients transported by ground (17.5 vs 13.6; p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Pediatric patients transported by HEMS were as severely injured as those transported by ground, in contrast to adult patients. We conjecture that since trauma triage schemes classically focus on adults, ground personnel are more selective about which patients are flown to a TC, and less selective for pediatric patients. Trauma centers and HEMS programs should develop pediatric trauma triage protocols that do not overemphasize physiologic parameters.
- Published
- 1996
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38. Use of on-line medical command to randomize patients in a prehospital research study.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Quadrel M, Cody RP, and Heyt G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Allied Health Personnel, Asthma therapy, Dyspnea therapy, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Selection, Prospective Studies, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic methods, Research Design, Respiratory Sounds, Emergency Medical Services, Online Systems
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the efficiency of using on-line medical command (OLMC) to conduct a prospective, randomized clinical trial addressing safety and patient enrollment., Design, Setting, and Participants: Prospective design using OLMC to randomize adult asthmatics into one of three treatment groups. After verifying inclusion and exclusion criteria, OLMC physicians removed a covering label on study sheets and ordered the treatment specified underneath the label that had been assigned in a random sequence., Results: A total of 204 patients were seen with dyspnea and wheezing during the three-month study. Of these, 68 (33%) were excluded from the study. Of the 136 (67%) patients who were eligible for study, 87 were enrolled (enrollment efficiency 64%), with 79 fully evaluable (evaluable efficiency 91%). The study safety was 100% because no enrolled patients met any exclusion criteria., Conclusions: The design was random and prospective, with patient entry blinded, using paramedics to enroll patients and OLMC physicians as gatekeepers, thus ensuring appropriate patient eligibility and study-arm assignment. Use of OLMC physicians to perform prospective randomized studies is safe and efficient, and results in a high yield of evaluable patients.
- Published
- 1996
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39. Incidence and risk factors for early small bowel obstruction after celiotomy for penetrating abdominal trauma.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Chandrakantan A, and Medina D
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Intestine, Small, Laparotomy, Male, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Abdominal Injuries surgery, Intestinal Obstruction epidemiology, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Wounds, Penetrating surgery
- Abstract
The reported overall incidence of postoperative Small Bowel Obstruction (SBO) is 0.69 per cent. This study examined the incidence and risk factors for early postoperative SBO for penetrating abdominal trauma (PAT), with early SBO defined as SBO within 6 months of operation. This was a prospective cohort study of patients admitted to a Level 1 Trauma Center from 5/91 to 12/93 who required celiotomy for PAT. Patients were followed at least 6 months for readmission for SBO to be considered evaluable. Of 341 patients undergoing celiotomy for PAT and surviving to discharge, 298 (87.4%) were evaluable. The overall incidence of early SBO was 7.4 per cent and varied between 2.3 per cent (nontherapeutic celiotomy) and 10.8 per cent (small/large bowel injury). All patients with celiotomy for PAT are at increased risk for early SBO compared with elective surgery patients. Those with small/large bowel penetration or gunshot wounds are at the highest risk. Previous abdominal surgery is not a risk factor for early SBO in PAT patients. Surgeons and Managed Care case managers should devote special attention to close follow-up in PAT patients, particularly those with the risk factors identified in this study.
- Published
- 1995
40. Prospective, randomized trial of epinephrine, metaproterenol, and both in the prehospital treatment of asthma in the adult patient.
- Author
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Quadrel M, Lavery RF, Jaker M, Atkin S, Tortella BJ, and Cody RP
- Subjects
- Adrenergic beta-Agonists adverse effects, Adult, Bronchodilator Agents adverse effects, Drug Therapy, Combination, Emergency Medical Services, Epinephrine adverse effects, Female, Hemodynamics drug effects, Humans, Injections, Subcutaneous, Male, Metaproterenol adverse effects, Middle Aged, Nebulizers and Vaporizers, Peak Expiratory Flow Rate drug effects, Prospective Studies, Adrenergic beta-Agonists therapeutic use, Asthma drug therapy, Bronchodilator Agents therapeutic use, Epinephrine therapeutic use, Metaproterenol therapeutic use
- Abstract
Study Objective: To compare the effectiveness and incidence of adverse reactions with three treatment regimens for asthma in adults in the prehospital setting., Design: Prospective, randomized clinical study., Setting: Inner-city emergency medical service system providing basic and advanced life support and transport to 14 urban area hospital emergency departments., Participants: One hundred fifty-four adult asthmatic patients, 18 to 50 years old, who presented to paramedics with shortness of breath and wheezing., Results: Eligible patients were randomly assigned by the base station physician to one of three treatment groups: subcutaneous epinephrine, nebulized metaproterenol, or subcutaneous epinephrine and nebulized metaproterenol. Peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR), blood pressure, heart rate, and respiratory rate were measured before and after treatment in each patient. During a 9-month period (October 1992 through June 1993), 154 patients were enrolled in the study; 53 (34%) received epinephrine, 49 (32%) received metaproterenol, and 52 (34%) received both. There were no significant differences in patient demographics, initial vital signs, or pretreatment PEFR among the three groups. The mean difference between pretreatment and posttreatment PEFR was 73 L/min and did not significantly differ among the treatment groups. Significant changes in vital signs were seen in no treatment group., Conclusion: Nebulized metaproterenol is as effective as subcutaneous epinephrine in the prehospital treatment of adult patients with acute asthma. The combination of these two treatments offered no additional clinical benefit in the patients we studied.
- Published
- 1995
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41. Physician medical direction and advanced life support in the United States.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, Cody RP, and Doran J
- Subjects
- Chi-Square Distribution, Emergency Medical Services standards, Health Services Research, Humans, Job Description, Life Support Care standards, Physician Executives statistics & numerical data, Physician's Role, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Statistics, Nonparametric, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Urban Health, Emergency Medical Services organization & administration, Emergency Medicine education, Life Support Care organization & administration, Physician Executives standards
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the specialty training and responsibilities of urban U.S. emergency medical service (EMS) medical directors how these factors relate to the type of service involved (fire, hospital, private, municipal)., Methods: A single mailed survey of training officers--field supervisors of 211 urban advanced life support (ALS) services in the United States. The survey also requested information about medications carried, approved procedures. and who set these standards. Respondents also rated the EMS medical director's involvement in various activities (quality assurance, administrative, executive, run reviews, and in-service/education)., Results: Eighty-five percent (n = 179) of the forms were returned. with 165 (78%) usable. The physician EMS medical directors were primarily trained in emergency medicine (77%) and were paiid (75%) for EMS responsibilities. The number of medications carried and the number of approved procedures were not related to either the number of hours the physicians commit weekly to the EMS service or their degree of involvement in ALS activities. The physician EMS medical directors were most often involved in quality assurance and education and were less likely to devote time to executive or other administrative functions of ALS units, with the exception of fire-based EMS physician medical directors, who contributed significantly to executive and administrative functions (p < 0.05). Overall practice standards were established by the medical director (46%), the state department of health (24%), and local/regional health authorities (23%)., Conclusions: EMS training officers believe that urban ALS medical directors in the United States primarily provide quality assurance and educational support. With the exception of fire-based EMS systems. physicians appear to have limited involvement in other EMS administrative and executive functions.
- Published
- 1995
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42. Utility of routine admission serum chemistry panels in adult trauma patients.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Lavery RF, and Rekant M
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Blood Chemical Analysis economics, Cohort Studies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Diagnostic Tests, Routine economics, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Blood Chemical Analysis statistics & numerical data, Diagnostic Tests, Routine statistics & numerical data, Patient Admission economics, Wounds and Injuries diagnosis
- Abstract
Objectives: To determine the frequency of abnormal serum chemistries and whether they provide clinically useful information regarding trauma patients. To identify clinical criteria associated with critical serum chemistry values (CSCVs)., Methods: The records of all trauma patients admitted to one urban, Level I Trauma Center were retrospectively reviewed for the period (July 1-December 31, 1989). All trauma patients who had had serum chemistry determinations at hospital admission and at least once more prior to discharge were studied. The CSCVs were determined by a panel of experts prior to record review. Serum chemistry values, patient demographics, mechanisms of injury, and outcomes were statistically analyzed., Results: Most (814/913; 89%) trauma patients had abnormal serum chemistry values. However, only 54/913 (6%) had CSCVs and only six of these CSCVs had prompted a change in resuscitation or treatment (therapeutic K+ infusions). Age > 50 years, a history of hypertension therapy, and a Glasgow Coma Scale score < or = 10 were associated with CSCVs; and CSCVs were correlated with increased mortality and critical care unit admission., Conclusion: Routine-admission serum chemistry values, while frequently abnormal for major trauma patients, generally do not provide clinically useful information in the resuscitation and treatment of trauma patients. Hypoglycemia and metabolic acidosis were more rapidly determined using bedside glucose determination and arterial blood gas evaluation. The routine-admission serum chemistry panel described in the study lacked utility for most trauma patients. Selective chemistry panel ordering should be used at the time of hospital admission for major trauma patients.
- Published
- 1995
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43. Surgical resource consumption in an academic health consortium.
- Author
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Muñoz E, Tortella BJ, Jaker M, Sakmyster M, and Kanofsky P
- Subjects
- Emergency Medical Services, Ethnicity, Health Care Costs, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Admission, Sex Factors, Survival Analysis, Health Care Rationing, Hospitals, Teaching, Surgical Procedures, Operative economics
- Abstract
Background: Health care costs continue to spiral; aggregate costs for 1992 are $850 billion, 13.6% of the U.S. gross national product. The issue has assumed national proportions, and change appears to be on the federal agenda. Great interest in surgical expenditures exists, which comprise 30.1% of all health care outlays., Methods: We analyzed 13,600 general surgical patients in eight teaching hospitals in New Jersey during 1988. Hospital resource consumption was measured for hospital length of stay, hospital cost per patient, race, gender, diagnoses and procedures, and mortality rate., Results: Surgical patients at these medical centers had a mean hospital cost per patient of $8,193, mean hospital length of stay of 12.4 days, an emergency admission rate of 40.4%, and a mortality rate of 6.0%. Emergency admissions had higher costs compared with nonemergencies ($11,717 vs $5,804, p < 0.001) and a poorer outcome (11.2% mortality rate vs 2.6%, p < 0.01). Patients who died had a higher hospital cost per patient compared with survivors ($29,314 vs $6,837, p < 0.001) and a higher emergency admission rate (74.7% vs 38.2%, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Changes to the surgical delivery system will occur during the next decade. This study showed factors associated with higher hospital costs for surgical patients; changing reimbursement systems must recognize these characteristics for surgical patients in teaching hospitals. Factors associated with emergency admission and mortality, once identified, could be used to improve the health delivery system that affects surgical patients.
- Published
- 1994
44. The role of laparoscopy in abdominal trauma.
- Author
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Livingston DH, Tortella BJ, Blackwood J, Machiedo GW, and Rush BF Jr
- Subjects
- Abdominal Injuries epidemiology, Abdominal Injuries surgery, Adolescent, Adult, Female, Hospitals, University, Humans, Insurance, Health statistics & numerical data, Laparoscopes, Laparoscopy methods, Laparotomy standards, Male, Middle Aged, New Jersey epidemiology, Peritoneal Lavage, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Abdominal Injuries diagnosis, Laparoscopy standards
- Abstract
Thirty-nine hemodynamically stable trauma patients were evaluated prospectively by laparoscopy before planned celiotomy. Laparoscopy was performed using a forward-viewing laparoscope connected to two high-resolution video monitors. The mechanism of injury was blunt trauma in eight, stab wounds (SWs) in 16, and gunshot wounds (GSWs) in 15. Laparoscopy correctly identified the presence of an intraperitoneal injury in 26 patients. Six other patients had retroperitoneal injuries, five of which were seen on laparoscopy. The remaining seven patients had no demonstrable intraperitoneal or retroperitoneal injuries, did not undergo celiotomy, and were observed without morbidity. In comparison with findings at surgery, laparoscopy identified injuries to the liver in eight of ten, to the diaphragm in three of three, to the colon in two of three, to the stomach in three of three, to the kidney in one of one, to the spleen in none of three, and to the small bowel in none of four patients. Visualization of the spleen was achieved in only one patient. The extent of the hemoperitoneum was underestimated from the laparoscopic examination in all nine patients with greater than 750 mL of peritoneal blood, four of whom had undetected active bleeding. Laparoscopy was performed easily in all patients and there were no complications associated with its use. In conclusion, the absence of an intra-abdominal injury was correctly identified with laparoscopy in 11 patients and laparoscopy may decrease the need for celiotomy in selected patients. However, the inability to "run the small bowel," visualize the spleen, and evaluate hemorrhage limits the utility of laparoscopy in determining which patients with laparoscopically visualized injuries will require celiotomy.
- Published
- 1992
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45. Enteral nutrition supplied by jejunostomy can result in jejunal infarction.
- Author
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Odom JW, Pastena JA, Ritota P, Tortella BJ, and Blackwood J
- Subjects
- Adult, Coma etiology, Critical Care methods, Enteral Nutrition methods, Humans, Infarction pathology, Jejunum pathology, Male, Necrosis, Accidental Falls, Accidents, Occupational, Coma therapy, Enteral Nutrition adverse effects, Infarction etiology, Jejunostomy adverse effects, Jejunum blood supply
- Published
- 1992
46. The value of intubating and paralyzing patients with suspected head injury in the emergency department.
- Author
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Redan JA, Livingston DH, Tortella BJ, and Rush BF Jr
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Ethanol blood, Glasgow Coma Scale, Humans, Injury Severity Score, Middle Aged, Multiple Trauma diagnosis, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Brain Injuries diagnostic imaging, Brain Injuries pathology, Brain Injuries therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital, Intubation, Intratracheal methods, Succinylcholine administration & dosage, Vecuronium Bromide administration & dosage
- Abstract
One hundred consecutive trauma patients who underwent planned emergency intubation with muscle paralysis in the ED were studied to investigate the safety of these procedures and to determine their impact on the evaluation of patients with suspected head injury. Patients were intubated by either a surgeon (n = 47) or anesthesiologist (n = 53), and paralyzed with either vecuronium (n = 59) or succinylcholine (n = 41). Nasal intubation was used in 40 patients, oral in 57, and cricothyroidotomy in three. Ninety-four patients with suspected head injuries had a CT scan performed. Fifty-five (59%) had a positive scan and 15 required emergent neurosurgical intervention. Only two patients had lateral cervical spine roentgenograms before intubation; seven patients were eventually found to have cervical fractures. No patient suffered a neurologic deficit. One patient developed aspiration pneumonia following intubation. The three failed intubations occurred in patients with multiple facial fractures. We conclude that induced paralysis and intubation in the ED is safe, can facilitate the diagnostic workup, and may be a potentially life-saving maneuver in combative trauma patients.
- Published
- 1991
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47. Successful CPR in a severely hypothermic patient using continuous thoracostomy lavage.
- Author
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Iversen RJ, Atkin SH, Jaker MA, Quadrel MA, Tortella BJ, and Odom JW
- Subjects
- Body Temperature, Heart Arrest therapy, Humans, Hypothermia complications, Hypothermia physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Sodium Chloride therapeutic use, Heart Arrest etiology, Hot Temperature therapeutic use, Hypothermia therapy, Resuscitation methods, Therapeutic Irrigation methods, Thoracostomy
- Abstract
Severe hypothermia with cardiopulmonary arrest often requires prolonged resuscitation while rewarming procedures are implemented. A 63-year-old male in cardiopulmonary arrest with a core body temperature of 23.7 C was resuscitated successfully after core rewarming by means of a two-chest-tube continuous thoracostomy lavage procedure. This lavage procedure resulted in effective and rapid rewarming after other conventional rewarming methods had failed.
- Published
- 1990
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48. Effect of steroid therapy in experimental head trauma.
- Author
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Spillert CR, Glicini RL, Tortella BJ, and Lazaro EJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood-Brain Barrier drug effects, Brain physiopathology, Intracranial Pressure drug effects, Mice, Alcoholic Intoxication physiopathology, Brain Injuries physiopathology, Methylprednisolone analogs & derivatives, Methylprednisolone Hemisuccinate administration & dosage
- Abstract
Since steroid therapy has been mostly utilized on an empirical basis in the management of head injury, this experimental study to assess the efficacy of steroid therapy was performed. Swiss-Webster mice (n = 85) were given 0.2 m of 50% ethanol intraperitoneally (IP) and lightly anaesthetized with ether. Ten randomly chosen mice were set aside and received no further treatment (non-head injury controls: Group A). The remaining mice (n = 75) were subjected to head injury and the survivors at 30 minutes (n = 52) were assigned randomly to two Groups, B and C. Group B was given 0.1 ml of saline IP at 30 minutes, 28 hours and 48 hours post-injury. At similar time intervals, animals in Group C received methylprednisolone 30 mg/kg IP. All animals were observed up to seven days and the number of survivors in each group recorded. All ten animals in Group A survived seven days. The daily mortality in Groups B and C were similar, and all animals were dead at seven days. Steroids were not found to be efficacious in this animals model.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Gastric autonomic nerve (GAN) tumor and extra-adrenal paraganglioma in Carney's triad. A common origin.
- Author
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Tortella BJ, Matthews JB, Antonioli DA, Dvorak AM, and Silen W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms surgery, Humans, Male, Paraganglioma pathology, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms pathology, Retroperitoneal Neoplasms pathology, Stomach Neoplasms pathology, Syndrome, Neoplasms, Multiple Primary, Paraganglioma surgery, Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms surgery, Retroperitoneal Neoplasms surgery, Stomach Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Carney's Triad comprises a triad of neoplasms: gastric stromal tumor, extra-adrenal paraganglioma (usually functional), and pulmonary chondroma. At least two of these are needed for the presumptive diagnosis of the Triad. This report presents a patient who had resected a gastric tumor and nonfunctional extra-adrenal paraganglioma. The gastric tumor resembled a gastric leiomyosarcoma by light microscopy, but electron microscopy revealed it to be a gastric autonomic nerve (GAN) tumor. Based on this evidence it appears that both the gastric lesions and the paragangliomata of Carney's Triad are tumors of the autonomic nervous system. Thus, the Triad may be a disorder of the autonomic nervous system rather than a multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome or multiple hamartoma syndrome.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. False-positive aortography following blunt chest trauma: case report.
- Author
-
Orron DE, Porter DH, Kim D, and Tortella B
- Subjects
- Adult, Aorta, Thoracic, Aortic Rupture diagnostic imaging, Aortic Rupture etiology, False Positive Reactions, Female, Humans, Thoracic Injuries complications, Wounds, Nonpenetrating complications, Aortography, Thoracic Injuries diagnostic imaging, Wounds, Nonpenetrating diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
We describe a patient in whom thoracic aortography performed following blunt chest trauma revealed what appeared to be a traumatic tear of the proximal descending aorta. As the patient initially refused surgery, aortography was repeated 18 days later, confirming these findings. At thoracic aortotomy the aorta appeared normal; there was no hematoma or tear. We believe this to be the first reported case of false-positive aortography following blunt chest trauma (see Note added in proof).
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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