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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Outcomes For Hand Burns Treated With Autologous Skin Cell Suspension In 20% Tbsa And Smaller Injuries, George Malcolm Taylor, Scott A. Barnett, Charles T. Tuggle, Jeff E. Carter, Herb A. Phelan Nov 2021

Outcomes For Hand Burns Treated With Autologous Skin Cell Suspension In 20% Tbsa And Smaller Injuries, George Malcolm Taylor, Scott A. Barnett, Charles T. Tuggle, Jeff E. Carter, Herb A. Phelan

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

In order to address the confounder of TBSA on burn outcomes, we sought to analyze our experience with the use of autologous skin cell suspensions (ASCS) in a cohort of subjects with hand burns whose TBSA totaled 20% or less. We hypothesized that the use of ASCS in conjunction with 2:1 meshed autograft for the treatment of hand burn injuries would provide comparable outcomes to hand burns treated with sheet or minimally meshed autograft alone. A retrospective review was conducted for all deep partial and full-Thickness hand burns treated with split-Thickness autograft (STAG) at our urban verified burn center between …


Who Will Be The Caretakers Of Peripheral Arterial Disease?, Claudie Sheahan Nov 2021

Who Will Be The Caretakers Of Peripheral Arterial Disease?, Claudie Sheahan

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Clinical Use Of Lactate Measurements: Reply, Richard M. Pino, Jaskaran Singh Oct 2021

Clinical Use Of Lactate Measurements: Reply, Richard M. Pino, Jaskaran Singh

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Use, Yield, And Risk Of Device-Assisted Enteroscopy In The United States: Results From A Large Retrospective Multicenter Cohort, Michael G. Noujaim, Alice Parish, Daniel Raines, Seth A. Gross, David Cave, Iris Vance, David Beyer, Diana Liu, Benjamin Hoffman, Zoe Lawrence, Gabriel Castillo, Tanya Pavri, Donna Niedzwiecki, Daniel Wild Oct 2021

Use, Yield, And Risk Of Device-Assisted Enteroscopy In The United States: Results From A Large Retrospective Multicenter Cohort, Michael G. Noujaim, Alice Parish, Daniel Raines, Seth A. Gross, David Cave, Iris Vance, David Beyer, Diana Liu, Benjamin Hoffman, Zoe Lawrence, Gabriel Castillo, Tanya Pavri, Donna Niedzwiecki, Daniel Wild

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: Since 2001, device-Assisted enteroscopy (DAE) has revolutionized the diagnostic and therapeutic capabilities for managing small bowel pathology. Though commonly performed, there have been no recent large studies to assess the use, yield, and risks of DAE and none that include all 3 DAE modalities. We hypothesized that DAE is safe with high diagnostic and therapeutic yields achieved within reasonable procedure duration and here we present a large retrospective multicenter US study evaluating the use, yield, and complications of DAE. Methods: After obtaining institutional review board approval, electronic records were used to identify all DAE's performed for luminal small bowel …


Atypical Osteochondroma Of The Lumbar Spine Associated With Suprasellar Pineal Germinoma: A Case Report, Patrik Suwak, Scott A. Barnett, Bryant M. Song, Michael J. Heffernan Sep 2021

Atypical Osteochondroma Of The Lumbar Spine Associated With Suprasellar Pineal Germinoma: A Case Report, Patrik Suwak, Scott A. Barnett, Bryant M. Song, Michael J. Heffernan

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND Osteochondromas are the most common benign bone tumor, accounting for 36% of benign bone tumors. Often found within the appendicular skeleton, osteochondromas of the spine are rare, comprising 4% to 7% of primary benign spinal tumors. CASE SUMMARY We report a case of a solitary lumbar osteochondroma in an 18-year-old male with a history of a suprasellar pineal germinoma treated with combined chemotherapy and radiation. He underwent mass excision and partial laminectomy with the ultrasonic bone scalpel (Misonix, Farmingdale, NY, United States) at the L5 Level without the use of adjuvants. The patient returned to work and full activities …


Nucleated Red Blood Cells As A Biomarker For Mortality In Neonates Following Cardiac Surgery, Kurt D. Piggott, Syeda Maqsood, Cynthia L. Warner, Timothy Pettitt, Shengping Yang, Jason Turner, Amira Soliman, Casey Norlin, Latasha Lewis, Ajay Bhatia Aug 2021

Nucleated Red Blood Cells As A Biomarker For Mortality In Neonates Following Cardiac Surgery, Kurt D. Piggott, Syeda Maqsood, Cynthia L. Warner, Timothy Pettitt, Shengping Yang, Jason Turner, Amira Soliman, Casey Norlin, Latasha Lewis, Ajay Bhatia

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: Nucleated red blood cells (NRBCs) are immature red cells that under normal conditions are not present in the peripheral circulation. Several studies have suggested an association between elevated NRBC and poor outcome in critically ill adults and neonates. We sought to determine if elevations in NRBC value following cardiac surgery and following clinical events during the hospital stay can be used as a biomarker to monitor for mortality risk in neonates post-cardiac surgery. Materials and methods: We constructed a retrospective study of 264 neonates who underwent cardiac surgery at Children's Hospital, New Orleans between 2011 and 2020. Variables included …


Surgeon Decision-Making For Individuals With Obesity When Indicating Total Joint Arthroplasty, William F. Sherman, Akshar H. Patel, Nisha N. Kale, Christina M. Freiberger, C. Lowry Barnes, Olivia C. Lee Aug 2021

Surgeon Decision-Making For Individuals With Obesity When Indicating Total Joint Arthroplasty, William F. Sherman, Akshar H. Patel, Nisha N. Kale, Christina M. Freiberger, C. Lowry Barnes, Olivia C. Lee

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Background: Obesity is a risk factor for complications after total joint arthroplasty (TJA). This study analyzed the impact of individual surgeon demographics, financial concerns, and other factors in determining patient candidacy for TJA based on body mass index (BMI). Methods: A 21-question survey was approved by the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Research Committee for distribution to its membership. Objective questions asked about surgeon or hospital BMI thresholds for offering TJA. Subjective questions asked about physician comfort discussing topics including obesity, bariatric surgery, and weight loss before TJA, as well as insurance and age considerations. Results: For TJA …


Diagnosis-To-Surgery Interval And Survival For Different Histologies Of Stage I-Iia Lung Cancer, Lu Zhang, Mei Chin Hsieh, Lior Rennert, Paige Neroda, Xiao Cheng Wu, Chindo Hicks, Jiande Wu, Ronald Gimbel Jul 2021

Diagnosis-To-Surgery Interval And Survival For Different Histologies Of Stage I-Iia Lung Cancer, Lu Zhang, Mei Chin Hsieh, Lior Rennert, Paige Neroda, Xiao Cheng Wu, Chindo Hicks, Jiande Wu, Ronald Gimbel

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Background: Guidelines on timeliness of lung cancer surgery are inconsistent. Lung cancer histologic subtypes have different prognosis and treatment. It is important to understand the consequences of delayed surgery for each lung cancer histologic subtype. This study aimed to examine the association between diagnosis-to-surgery time interval and survival for early stage lung cancer and selected histologic subtypes. Methods: Patients diagnosed with stage I-IIA lung cancer between 2004 and 2015 receiving definitive surgery and being followed up until Dec. 31, 2018, were identified from Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database. Histologic subtypes included adenocarcinoma, squamous or epidermoid carcinoma, bronchioloalveolar carcinoma, large …


Temporary Intravascular Shunts After Civilian Arterial Injury: A Prospective Multicenter Eastern Association For The Surgery Of Trauma Study, Lily Tung, Jennifer Leonard, Ryan A. Lawless, Alexis Cralley, Richard Betzold, Jason D. Pasley, Kenji Inaba, Jennie S. Kim, Dennis Y. Kim, Kwang Kim, Bradley M. Dennis, Michael C. Smith, Margaret Moore, Christina Tran, Joshua P. Hazelton, Atlee Melillo, Tejal S. Brahmbhatt, Stephanie Talutis, Noelle N. Saillant, Jae Moo Lee, Mark J. Seamon May 2021

Temporary Intravascular Shunts After Civilian Arterial Injury: A Prospective Multicenter Eastern Association For The Surgery Of Trauma Study, Lily Tung, Jennifer Leonard, Ryan A. Lawless, Alexis Cralley, Richard Betzold, Jason D. Pasley, Kenji Inaba, Jennie S. Kim, Dennis Y. Kim, Kwang Kim, Bradley M. Dennis, Michael C. Smith, Margaret Moore, Christina Tran, Joshua P. Hazelton, Atlee Melillo, Tejal S. Brahmbhatt, Stephanie Talutis, Noelle N. Saillant, Jae Moo Lee, Mark J. Seamon

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction: We sought to determine the impact of the indication for shunt placement on shunt-related outcomes after major arterial injuries. We hypothesized that a shunt placed for damage control indications would be associated with an increase in shunt-related complications including shunt dislodgement, thrombosis, or distal ischemia. Patients & methods: A prospective, multicenter study (eleven level one US trauma centers) of all adult trauma patients undergoing temporary intravascular shunts (TIVS) after arterial injury was undertaken (January 2017-May 2019). Exclusion criteria included age <15years, shunt placement distal to popliteal/brachial arteries, isolated venous shunts, and death before shunt removal. Clinical variables were compared by indication and shunt-related complications. The primary endpoint was TIVS complications (thrombosis, migration, distal ischemia). Results: The 66 patients who underwent TIVS were primarily young (30years [IQR 22-36]) men (85%), severely injured (ISS 17 [10-25]) by penetrating mechanisms (59%), and had their shunts placed for damage control (41%). After a median SDT of 198min [89-622], 9% experienced shunt-related complications. Compared by shunt placement indication (damage control shunts [n=27] compared to non-damage control shunts [n=39]), there were no differences in gender, mechanism, extremity AIS, MESS score, fractures, or surgeon specialty between the two groups (all p>0.05). Patients with shunts placed for damage control indications had more severe injuries (ISS 23.5 compared to 13; SBP …


Igg4-Related Disease With Multiorgan Involvement: A Case-Based Review, Nikhil N. Tarte, Chandana Shilpa Ravipati, Jose A. Leon De La Rocha, Elizabeth Rinker, Nirupa J. Patel Apr 2021

Igg4-Related Disease With Multiorgan Involvement: A Case-Based Review, Nikhil N. Tarte, Chandana Shilpa Ravipati, Jose A. Leon De La Rocha, Elizabeth Rinker, Nirupa J. Patel

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is an immune-mediated multi-organ inflammatory disorder caused by tissue infiltration of lymphocytes with IgG4-secreting plasma cells. Herein, we discuss a case of a patient with IgG4-RD who had involvement of multiple organs: the kidneys, lymph nodes, bone marrow (biopsy performed), lungs, liver, and small intestine (imaging abnormalities). Although several case reports and series of IgG4-RD involving different organ involvement are in the literature, our patient has extensive simultaneous multi-organ involvement. We utilized the four domains (serologic, pathologic, radiologic, and pathologic) as discussed in the new 2019 ACR/EULAR classification criteria to provide a useful framework in considering an …


Disinfectants In Interventional Practices, Mayank Aranke, Roya Moheimani, Melissa Phuphanich, Alan D. Kaye, Anh L. Ngo, Omar Viswanath, Jared Herman Mar 2021

Disinfectants In Interventional Practices, Mayank Aranke, Roya Moheimani, Melissa Phuphanich, Alan D. Kaye, Anh L. Ngo, Omar Viswanath, Jared Herman

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Purpose of Review: This review aims to provide relevant, aggregate information about a variety of disinfectants and antiseptics, along with potential utility and limitations. While not exhaustive, this review’s goal is to add to the body of literature available on this topic and give interventional providers and practitioners an additional resource to consider when performing procedures. Recent Findings: In the current SARS-CoV2 epidemiological environment, infection control and costs associated with healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are of paramount importance. Even before the onset of SARS-CoV2, HAIs affected nearly 2million patients a year in the USA and resulted in nearly 90,000 deaths, all …


Comparison Of Short-Leg And Long-Leg Casts For The Treatment Of Distal Third Tibial Shaft Fractures In Children, Scott A. Barnett, Bailli Fontenot, Claudia Leonardi, Joseph A. Gonzales, Dominic Gargiulo, Michael J. Heffernan Mar 2021

Comparison Of Short-Leg And Long-Leg Casts For The Treatment Of Distal Third Tibial Shaft Fractures In Children, Scott A. Barnett, Bailli Fontenot, Claudia Leonardi, Joseph A. Gonzales, Dominic Gargiulo, Michael J. Heffernan

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Background:Long-leg casts (LLCs) are an established treatment for pediatric tibial shaft fractures including fractures involving the distal third. There is a paucity of literature assessing the use of short-leg cast (SLC) for tibial shaft fractures. The purpose of this study was to determine if SLC were as effective as LLC for the treatment of pediatric distal third tibial shaft fractures.Methods:A retrospective review was conducted on consecutive distal third tibial shaft fractures treated at a tertiary pediatric hospital from 2013 to 2018. Exclusion criteria included midshaft and proximal fractures of the tibia, distal fractures that violated the tibial physis or plafond, …


Characteristic Pancreatic And Splenic Immune Cell Infiltration Patterns In Mouse Acute Pancreatitis, Baibing Yang, Joy M. Davis, Thomas H. Gomez, Mamoun Younes, Xiurong Zhao, Qiang Shen, Run Wang, Tien C. Ko, Yanna Cao Feb 2021

Characteristic Pancreatic And Splenic Immune Cell Infiltration Patterns In Mouse Acute Pancreatitis, Baibing Yang, Joy M. Davis, Thomas H. Gomez, Mamoun Younes, Xiurong Zhao, Qiang Shen, Run Wang, Tien C. Ko, Yanna Cao

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Background: A systemic evaluation of immune cell infiltration patterns in experimental acute pancreatitis (AP) is lacking. Using multi-dimensional flow cytometry, this study profiled infiltrating immune cell types in multiple AP mouse models. Methods: Three AP models were generated in C57BL/6 mice via cerulein (CAE) injection, alcohol and palmitoleic acid (EtOH + POA) injection, and alcohol diet feeding and cerulein (EtOH + CAE) injection. Primary pancreatic cells and splenocytes were prepared, and multi-dimensional flow cytometry was performed and analyzed by manual gating and computerized PhenoGraph, followed by visualization with t-distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (t-SNE). Results: CAE treatment induced a time-dependent increase …


Short- And Long-Term Outcomes For Single-Port Risk-Reducing Salpingo-Oophorectomy With And Without Hysterectomy For Women At Risk For Gynecologic Cancer, Caitlin E. Carr, Laura Chambers, Amelia Marie Jernigan, Lindsey Freeman, Pedro F. Escobar, Chad M. Michener Feb 2021

Short- And Long-Term Outcomes For Single-Port Risk-Reducing Salpingo-Oophorectomy With And Without Hysterectomy For Women At Risk For Gynecologic Cancer, Caitlin E. Carr, Laura Chambers, Amelia Marie Jernigan, Lindsey Freeman, Pedro F. Escobar, Chad M. Michener

School of Medicine Faculty Publications

Introduction Risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy has been established as one of the most effective strategies in risk reduction for ovarian and breast cancers among women at increased genetic risk. However, there are limited data regarding the single-port laparoscopic platform in the field of risk-reducing surgery. Our objective was to describe outcomes after single-port risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy for reduction of ovarian, breast, or endometrial cancer risk. Methods A retrospective, single institution (Canadian Task Force Classification II.2) analysis was performed in women at high genetic or familial risk for ovarian/tubal/primary peritoneal cancer or with personal history of breast cancer who underwent …