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Articles 91 - 111 of 111
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Early Prediction Of Trauma Patient Discharge Disposition, Ronald Beaulieu, Priti Parikh, Akpofure Peter Ekeh, Ronald J. Markert, Mary C. Mccarthy
Early Prediction Of Trauma Patient Discharge Disposition, Ronald Beaulieu, Priti Parikh, Akpofure Peter Ekeh, Ronald J. Markert, Mary C. Mccarthy
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
Objective: Do pre-injury and early hospital admission characteristics help predict patient discharge disposition? Background: Total one-year treatment cost of adult major trauma in the United States is estimated at $30 billion annually, with 58% of the cost due to the index hospitalization. Increased length of stay (LOS) increases morbidity and delays rehabilitation. Prediction of discharge to a location other than home through univariate risk factor methodology and development of a multivariable binary logistic regression model allows early discharge planning. Methods: A one-year Level 1 trauma center registry dataset was used to develop a predictive model of discharge disposition using 2836 …
The Cutting Edge Spring 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
The Cutting Edge Spring 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
The Cutting Edge Newsletter
An eight page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting current affairs of the department. This issue highlights the arrival of a new faculty member, an announcement for the ACS Fellowship Program, research news, and more.
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, April 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, April 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Department of Surgery Updates
A four page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting changes to the department. This issue contains a message from the chair, a list of important dates, committee meetings, scholarly activity and more.
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, March 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, March 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Department of Surgery Updates
A one page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting changes to the department. This issue contains a message from the chair, a list of important dates, committee meetings, scholarly activity and more.
Hemodialysis Access: Initial Considerations And The Difficult Patient, Laura Peterson, Maria Litzendorf, Hooman Khabiri, Stanislaw P. Stawicki
Hemodialysis Access: Initial Considerations And The Difficult Patient, Laura Peterson, Maria Litzendorf, Hooman Khabiri, Stanislaw P. Stawicki
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
The population requiring hemodialysis (HD) in the United States continues to grow, with recent studies reporting over 370,000 Americans with end stage renal disease (ESRD) who are HD-dependent. The creation of functional HD access is often the limiting step in utilization of renal replacement therapy (RRT). Since the 1960s, the creation of hemodialysis access has become one of the most commonly performed procedures in the United States with over 500,000 vascular access procedures performed per year. This represents approximately 8% of the annual Medicare budget allocated to patients with ESRD. The magnitude of the associated economic and human costs is …
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, February 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, February 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Department of Surgery Updates
A two page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting changes to the department. This issue contains a message from the chair, a list of important dates, committee meetings, scholarly activity and more.
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, January 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Faculty And Staff Updates, Department Of Surgery, January 2013, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
Department of Surgery Updates
A one page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting changes to the department. This issue contains news about the faculty and staff, important dates, committee meetings, a message from the chair, and more.
The Cutting Edge Fall 2012, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
The Cutting Edge Fall 2012, Wright State University Department Of Surgery
The Cutting Edge Newsletter
An eight page newsletter created by the Department of Surgery documenting current affairs of the department. This issue highlights the arrival of two new faculty members, upcoming special lectures, alumni news, and more.
External Iliac Artery Stenting: High Incidence Of Concomitant Revascularization Procedures, Vance L. Smith, Laura Peterson, Jean E. Starr, Bhagwan Satiani
External Iliac Artery Stenting: High Incidence Of Concomitant Revascularization Procedures, Vance L. Smith, Laura Peterson, Jean E. Starr, Bhagwan Satiani
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
Objectives: To review immediate results, patency rates, hemodynamic success, and incidence of concomitant procedures with external iliac artery stenting (EIAS). Methods: Demographic features, category and clinical grade, Trans-Atlantic Inter-Society Consensus II classification lesion type, pre- and postprocedure ankle–brachial indices, and primary patency were compared between group 1 (EIAS without distal revascularization) and group 2 (EIAS with concomitant distal revascularization).Results: No mortality and a 100% immediate technical success rate was recorded in group 1 (n = 12) and group 2 (n = 24). Eleven patients (30.6%) also had stenting of the adjacent common iliac artery. Two thirds …
Beyond Mannequins: A Potpourri Of Enabling Technology For Healthcare Education, Rosalyn P. Scott
Beyond Mannequins: A Potpourri Of Enabling Technology For Healthcare Education, Rosalyn P. Scott
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Expression Of Microphthalmia Transcription Factor In Sentinel Lymph Nodes Of Patients With Melanoma, Minia Hellan, Michelle S. Gentile, Luay Ailabouni, George I. Salti
Expression Of Microphthalmia Transcription Factor In Sentinel Lymph Nodes Of Patients With Melanoma, Minia Hellan, Michelle S. Gentile, Luay Ailabouni, George I. Salti
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
Background: Sentinel lymph node biopsy is widely used in the management of melanoma patients. Multiple markers are used to stain sentinel lymph node tissue including S100, HMB-45 and melan A with different success. We investigated, for the first time, the use of Microphthalmia transcription factor (Mitf) staining in a larger series of sentinel lymph nodes. Mitf is a transcription factor essential for the development and survival of melanocytes. It has been introduced recently as a sensitive and specific marker for melanomas. Methods: Thirty patients with cutaneous melanoma were included in our study: twenty patients underwent sentinel lymph node biopsy; ten …
Current Management Of Complicated Pneumonia In Children, Sherman J. Alter, Elizabeth H. Ey, Mark Warren, Jeffrey C. Pence
Current Management Of Complicated Pneumonia In Children, Sherman J. Alter, Elizabeth H. Ey, Mark Warren, Jeffrey C. Pence
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Intravenous Ascorbic Acid To Prevent And Treat Cancer-Associated Sepsis?, Thomas E. Ichim, Boris Minev, Todd Braciak, Brandon Luna, Ron Hunninghake, Nina A. Mikirova, James A. Jackson, Michael J. Gonzalez, Jorge R. Miranda-Massari, Doru T. Alexandrescu, Constantin A. Dasanu, Vladimir Bogin, Janis Ancans, R. Brian Stevens, Boris Markosian, James Koropatnick, Chien-Shing Chen, Neil H. Riordan
Intravenous Ascorbic Acid To Prevent And Treat Cancer-Associated Sepsis?, Thomas E. Ichim, Boris Minev, Todd Braciak, Brandon Luna, Ron Hunninghake, Nina A. Mikirova, James A. Jackson, Michael J. Gonzalez, Jorge R. Miranda-Massari, Doru T. Alexandrescu, Constantin A. Dasanu, Vladimir Bogin, Janis Ancans, R. Brian Stevens, Boris Markosian, James Koropatnick, Chien-Shing Chen, Neil H. Riordan
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
The history of ascorbic acid (AA) and cancer has been marked with controversy. Clinical studies evaluating AA in cancer outcome continue to the present day. However, the wealth of data suggesting that AA may be highly beneficial in addressing cancer-associated inflammation, particularly progression to systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and multi organ failure (MOF), has been largely overlooked. Patients with advanced cancer are generally deficient in AA. Once these patients develop septic symptoms, a further decrease in ascorbic acid levels occurs. Given the known role of ascorbate in: a) maintaining endothelial and suppression of inflammatory markers; b) protection from sepsis …
Portable Ultrasonography In Mass Casualty Incidents: The Caveat Examination, Stanislaw P. Stawicki, James M. Howard, John P. Pryor, David P. Bahner, Melissa L. Whitmill, Anthony J. Dean
Portable Ultrasonography In Mass Casualty Incidents: The Caveat Examination, Stanislaw P. Stawicki, James M. Howard, John P. Pryor, David P. Bahner, Melissa L. Whitmill, Anthony J. Dean
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
Ultrasonography used by practicing clinicians has been shown to be of utility in the evaluation of time-sensitive and critical illnesses in a range of environments, including pre-hospital triage, emergency department, and critical care settings. The increasing availability of light-weight, robust, user-friendly, and low-cost portable ultrasound equipment is particularly suited for use in the physically and temporally challenging environment of a multiple casualty incident (MCI). Currently established ultrasound applications used to identify potentially lethal thoracic or abdominal conditions offer a base upon which rapid, focused protocols using hand-carried emergency ultrasonography could be developed. Following a detailed review of the current use …
Appendicitis: When Simple Becomes Not So Simple, Elizabeth H. Ey, Jeffrey C. Pence
Appendicitis: When Simple Becomes Not So Simple, Elizabeth H. Ey, Jeffrey C. Pence
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Technology, Context, Synthesis, Rosalyn P. Scott
Technology, Context, Synthesis, Rosalyn P. Scott
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Bleeding Meckel’S Diverticulum In A 4-Month-Old Infant: Treatment With Laparoscopic Diverticulectomy. A Case Report And Review Of The Literature, J. Rainer Poley, Thomas E. Thielen, Jeffrey C. Pence
Bleeding Meckel’S Diverticulum In A 4-Month-Old Infant: Treatment With Laparoscopic Diverticulectomy. A Case Report And Review Of The Literature, J. Rainer Poley, Thomas E. Thielen, Jeffrey C. Pence
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
A bleeding Meckel’s diverticulum is presented in a 4-month-old African American infant. This event is rare at this age, and our patient is only the second 4-month-old infant reported in the English literature. The infant presented with painless frank rectal bleeding, the blood being maroon-colored, and clots were found in the diaper. There was also anemia, with an hemoglobin of less than 8 gm/dl. The color of the blood suggested a bleeding site in the ileocecal region, a Meckel’s diverticulum was suspected, which was then confirmed by an isotope scan. A typical Meckel’s diverticulum was found on laparoscopic surgery, was …
Robotic Rectal Cancer Surgery, Minia Hellan, Joshua Ellenhorn, Alessio Pigazzi
Robotic Rectal Cancer Surgery, Minia Hellan, Joshua Ellenhorn, Alessio Pigazzi
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Interventional Options For Malignant Upper Gi Obstruction, 2nd Ed, James R. Ouellette, Lisa Patterson, Paula M. Termuhlen
Interventional Options For Malignant Upper Gi Obstruction, 2nd Ed, James R. Ouellette, Lisa Patterson, Paula M. Termuhlen
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
Background
Patients with unresectable cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract often suffer severe symptoms due to pain, nausea and vomiting, weight loss, cachexia, and poor food tolerance. This can be related to gastric and duodenal cancers causing intrinsic obstruction of the intestinal lumen or pancreatic and biliary cancers causing extrinsic biliary compression. Management options vary depending on the site of obstruction, the patient’s functional status, the patient-defined goals of care, and estimated prognosis. Fast Fact #45 discussed medical management options. This Fact Fact reviews interventional approaches for upper GI obstructions, especially when further radiation, chemotherapy, medical management, or curative surgical …
Fracture Of The Scapula With Intrathoracic Penetration In A Skeletally Mature Patient, Cary C. Schwartzbach, Hani Seoudi, Amy E. Ross, Kimberly M. Hendershot, Linda Robinson, Alireza Maekzadeh
Fracture Of The Scapula With Intrathoracic Penetration In A Skeletally Mature Patient, Cary C. Schwartzbach, Hani Seoudi, Amy E. Ross, Kimberly M. Hendershot, Linda Robinson, Alireza Maekzadeh
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
To our knowledge, intrathoracic displacement of a fractured scapula has only been described in two reports involving adolescents1,2. We present the case of a skeletally mature adult with a scapular fracture that penetrated the thoracic cage without causing a pneumothorax. We speculate as to how the adult scapula can deform in a manner consistent with this rare injury. As the patient had advanced Alzheimer disease, the family consented to the publication of data concerning this case.
Medical Student, Resident, And Faculty Use Of A Computerized Literature Searching System, Ronald J. Markert, Anthony J. Parisi, H. Verdain Barnes, Steven Cohen, Kim X. Goldenberg, Lawrence E. Mieczkowski, Margaret M. Dunn
Medical Student, Resident, And Faculty Use Of A Computerized Literature Searching System, Ronald J. Markert, Anthony J. Parisi, H. Verdain Barnes, Steven Cohen, Kim X. Goldenberg, Lawrence E. Mieczkowski, Margaret M. Dunn
Department of Surgery Faculty Publications
The experiences of medical students, residents, and faculty with a computerized literature searching system were evaluated. Third-year medical students, internal medicine and family practice residents, and full-time and voluntary faculty at one medical school had the opportunity to use a full-text and bibliographic medical literature retrieval system free of charge for an eleven-month period. Subjects conducted nearly nine thousand literature searches over a period of 942 system hours. Questionnaire data showed that participants could learn to use and would use an electronic information system, felt capable of using the system, utilized the system for a variety of purposes and in …