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Dive into the research topics where Amy N. Hildreth is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy N. Hildreth.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2008

Adrenal suppression following a single dose of etomidate for rapid sequence induction: a prospective randomized study.

Amy N. Hildreth; Vicente A. Mejia; Robert A. Maxwell; Philip W. Smith; Benjamin W. Dart; Donald E. Barker

BACKGROUND The administration of etomidate for rapid sequence induction (RSI) has been linked to subsequent adrenocortical insufficiency in nontrauma patients. However, etomidate-related adrenocortical insufficiency has not been well studied in the trauma population. PURPOSE We performed a prospective, randomized, controlled study to assess the effect of one dose of etomidate for RSI on adrenal function and its clinical significance during and after resuscitation in trauma patients. METHODS Adult trauma patients admitted to our Level I trauma center requiring RSI were randomized to receive etomidate 0.3 mg/kg and succinylcholine 1 mg/kg (E group) or fentanyl 100 microg, midazolam 5 mg, and succinylcholine 1 mg/kg (FM group) for induction. A baseline serum cortisol level was drawn before RSI. Four to six hours after RSI, a postintubation serum cortisol level was drawn. An ACTH stimulation test was performed. RESULTS Thirty patients were enrolled: 18 E group patients and 12 FM group patients. No statistical difference was detected between the two groups with respect to age, injury severity score, and baseline serum cortisol. Mean serum cortisol levels were significantly lower in E group patients than in FM group patients 4 to 6 hours after intubation (18.2 vs. 27.8 mug/dL, p < 0.05). Change in serum cortisol between baseline and postintubation levels was different (-12.8 mg/dL +/- 9.6 microg/dL vs. 1.1 microg/dL +/- 7.6 microg/dL, p < 0.01). Patients in the E group had an average increase in cortisol after ACTH administration of 4.2 microg/dL +/- 4.9 microg/dL vs. 11.2 microg/dL +/- 6.1 microg/dL in the FM group, p < 0.001. Patients in the E group required longer ICU lengths of stay (mean, 6.3 days vs. 1.5 days, p < 0.05), more ventilator days (mean, 28 days vs. 17 days, p < 0.01), and longer hospital lengths of stay (mean, 11.6 days vs. 6.4 days, p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS The use of etomidate for RSI in trauma patients led to chemical evidence of adrenocortical insufficiency and may have contributed to increased hospital and ICU lengths of stay and increased ventilator days. Further studies should be considered to evaluate the safety profile of this drug in trauma patients.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Practice management guidelines for management of hemothorax and occult pneumothorax.

Nathan T. Mowery; Oliver L. Gunter; Bryan R. Collier; Joseʼ J. Diaz; Elliott R. Haut; Amy N. Hildreth; Michelle Holevar; John C. Mayberry; Erik Streib

STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEMThoracic trauma is a notable cause of morbidity and mortality in American trauma centers, where 25% of traumatic deaths are related to injuries sustained within the thoracic cage.1 Chest injuries occur in ∼60% of polytrauma cases; therefore, a rough estimate of the occurrence


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2014

Prospective Trial of Angiography and Embolization for All Grade III to V Blunt Splenic Injuries: Nonoperative Management Success Rate Is Significantly Improved

Preston R. Miller; Michael C. Chang; J. Jason Hoth; Nathan T. Mowery; Amy N. Hildreth; R. Shayn Martin; James H. Holmes; J. Wayne Meredith; Jay A. Requarth

BACKGROUND Nonoperative management (NOM) of blunt splenic injury is well accepted. Substantial failure rates in higher injury grades remain common, with one large study reporting rates of 19.6%, 33.3%, and 75% for grades III, IV, and V, respectively. Retrospective data show angiography and embolization can increase salvage rates in these severe injuries. We developed a protocol requiring referral of all blunt splenic injuries, grades III to V, without indication for immediate operation for angiography and embolization. We hypothesized that angiography and embolization of high-grade blunt splenic injury would reduce NOM failure rates in this population. STUDY DESIGN This was a prospective study at our Level I trauma center as part of a performance-improvement project. Demographics, injury characteristics, and outcomes were compared with historic controls. The protocol required all stable patients with grade III to V splenic injuries be referred for angiography and embolization. In historic controls, referral was based on surgeon preference. RESULTS From January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2012, there were 168 patients with grades III to V spleen injuries admitted; NOM was undertaken in 113 (67%) patients. The protocol was followed in 97 patients, with a failure rate of 5%. Failure rate in the 16 protocol deviations was 25% (p = 0.02). Historic controls from January 1, 2007 to December 31, 2009 were compared with the protocol group. One hundred and fifty-three patients with grade III to V injuries were admitted during this period, 80 (52%) patients underwent attempted NOM. Failure rate was significantly higher than for the protocol group (15%, p = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS Use of a protocol requiring angiography and embolization for all high-grade spleen injuries slated for NOM leads to a significantly decreased failure rate. We recommend angiography and embolization as an adjunct to NOM for all grade III to V splenic injuries.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Emergency department length of stay is an independent predictor of hospital mortality in trauma activation patients

Nathan T. Mowery; Stacy D. Dougherty; Amy N. Hildreth; James H. Holmes; Michael C. Chang; R. Shayn Martin; J. Jason Hoth; J. Wayne Meredith; Preston R. Miller

BACKGROUND The early resuscitation occurs in the emergency department (ED) where intensive care unit protocols do not always extend and monitoring capabilities vary. Our hypothesis is that increased ED length of stay (LOS) leads to increased hospital mortality in patients not undergoing immediate surgical intervention. METHODS We examined all trauma activation admissions from January 2002 to July 2009 admitted to the Trauma Service (n = 3,973). Exclusion criteria were as follows: patients taken to the operating room within the first 2 hours of ED arrival, nonsurvivable brain injury, and ED deaths. Patients spending >5 hours in the ED were not included in the analysis because of significantly lower acuity and mortality. RESULTS Patients spent a mean of 3.2 hours ± 1 hour in the ED during their initial evaluation. Hospital mortality increases for each additional hour a patient spends in the ED, with 8.3% of the patients staying in the ED between 4 hours and 5 hours ultimately dying (p = 0.028). ED LOS measured in minutes is an independent predictor of mortality (odds ratio, 1.003; 95% confidence interval, 1.010-1.006; p = 0.014) when accounting for Injury Severity Score, Revised Trauma Score, and age. Linear regression showed that a longer ED LOS was associated with anatomic injury pattern rather than physiologic derangement. CONCLUSION In this patient population, a longer ED LOS is associated with an increased hospital mortality even when controlling for physiologic, demographic, and anatomic factors. This highlights the importance of rapid progression of patients through the initial evaluation process to facilitate placement in a location that allows implementation of early goal directed trauma resuscitation.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2017

Predicting Mortality and Independence at Discharge in the Aging Traumatic Brain Injury Population Using Data Available at Admission

Preston R. Miller; Michael C. Chang; J. Jason Hoth; Amy N. Hildreth; Stacey Quintero Wolfe; Jessica L. Gross; R. Shayn Martin; Jeffrey E. Carter; J. Wayne Meredith; Ralph B. D'Agostino

BACKGROUND Aging worsens outcome in traumatic brain injury (TBI), but available studies may not provide accurate outcomes predictions due to confounding associated injuries. Our goal was to develop a predictive tool using variables available at admission to predict outcomes related to severity of brain injury in aging patients. STUDY DESIGN Characteristics and outcomes of blunt trauma patients, aged 50 or older, with isolated TBI, in the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB), were evaluated. Equations predicting survival and independence at discharge (IDC) were developed and validated using patients from our trauma registry, comparing predicted with actual outcomes. RESULTS Logistic regression for survival and IDC was performed in 57,588 patients using age, sex, Glasgow Coma Scale score (GCS), and Revised Trauma Score (RTS). All variables were independent predictors of outcome. Two models were developed using these data. The first included age, sex, and GCS. The second substituted RTS for GCS. C statistics from the models for survival and IDC were 0.90 and 0.82 in the GCS model. In the RTS model, C statistics were 0.80 and 0.67. The use of GCS provided better discrimination and was chosen for further examination. Using a predictive equation derived from the logistic regression model, outcome probabilities were calculated for 894 similar patients from our trauma registry (January 2012 to March 2016). The survival and IDC models both showed excellent discrimination (p < 0.0001). Survival and IDC generally decreased by decade: age 50 to 59 (80% IDC, 6.5% mortality), 60 to 69 (82% IDC, 7.0% mortality), 70 to 79 (76% IDC, 8.9% mortality), and 80 to 89 (67% IDC, 13.4% mortality). CONCLUSIONS These models can assist in predicting the probability of survival and IDC for aging patients with TBI. This provides important data for loved ones of these patients when addressing goals of care.


JAMA Surgery | 2017

Association of a Surgical Task During Training With Team Skill Acquisition Among Surgical Residents: The Missing Piece in Multidisciplinary Team Training

Jessica L. Sparks; Dustin L. Crouch; Kathryn Sobba; Douglas Fennell Evans; Jing Zhang; James E. Johnson; Ian Saunders; John Thomas; Sarah Bodin; A. Tonidandel; Jeff Carter; Carl Westcott; R. Shayn Martin; Amy N. Hildreth

Importance The human patient simulators that are currently used in multidisciplinary operating room team training scenarios cannot simulate surgical tasks because they lack a realistic surgical anatomy. Thus, they eliminate the surgeon’s primary task in the operating room. The surgical trainee is presented with a significant barrier when he or she attempts to suspend disbelief and engage in the scenario. Objective To develop and test a simulation-based operating room team training strategy that challenges the communication abilities and teamwork competencies of surgeons while they are engaged in realistic operative maneuvers. Design, Setting, and Participants This pre-post educational intervention pilot study compared the gains in teamwork skills for midlevel surgical residents at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center after they participated in a standardized multidisciplinary team training scenario with 3 possible levels of surgical realism: (1) SimMan (Laerdal) (control group, no surgical anatomy); (2) “synthetic anatomy for surgical tasks” mannequin (medium-fidelity anatomy), and (3) a patient simulated by a deceased donor (high-fidelity anatomy). Interventions Participation in the simulation scenario and the subsequent debriefing. Main Outcomes and Measures Teamwork competency was assessed using several instruments with extensive validity evidence, including the Nontechnical Skills assessment, the Trauma Management Skills scoring system, the Crisis Resource Management checklist, and a self-efficacy survey instrument. Participant satisfaction was assessed with a Likert-scale questionnaire. Results Scenario participants included midlevel surgical residents, anesthesia providers, scrub nurses, and circulating nurses. Statistical models showed that surgical residents exposed to medium-fidelity simulation (synthetic anatomy for surgical tasks) team training scenarios demonstrated greater gains in teamwork skills compared with control groups (SimMan) (Nontechnical Skills video score: 95% CI, 1.06-16.41; Trauma Management Skills video score: 95% CI, 0.61-2.90) and equivalent gains in teamwork skills compared with high-fidelity simulations (deceased donor) (Nontechnical Skills video score: 95% CI, −8.51 to 6.71; Trauma Management Skills video score: 95% CI, −1.70 to 0.49). Conclusions and Relevance Including a surgical task in operating room team training significantly enhanced the acquisition of teamwork skills among midlevel surgical residents. Incorporating relatively inexpensive, medium-fidelity synthetic anatomy in human patient simulators was as effective as using high-fidelity anatomies from deceased donors for promoting teamwork skills in this learning group.


JAMA Surgery | 2018

Multiple-Institution Comparison of Resident and Faculty Perceptions of Burnout and Depression During Surgical Training

Michael L. Williford; Sara Scarlet; Michael O. Meyers; Daniel J. Luckett; Jason P. Fine; Claudia E. Goettler; John Green; Thomas V. Clancy; Amy N. Hildreth; Samantha Meltzer-Brody; Timothy M. Farrell

Importance Prior studies demonstrate a high prevalence of burnout and depression among surgeons. Limited data exist regarding how these conditions are perceived by the surgical community. Objectives To measure prevalence of burnout and depression among general surgery trainees and to characterize how residents and attendings perceive these conditions. Design, Setting, and Participants This cross-sectional study used unique, anonymous surveys for residents and attendings that were administered via a web-based platform from November 1, 2016, through March 31, 2017. All residents and attendings in the 6 general surgery training programs in North Carolina were invited to participate. Main Outcomes and Measures The prevalence of burnout and depression among residents was assessed using validated tools. Burnout was defined by high emotional exhaustion or depersonalization on the Maslach Burnout Inventory. Depression was defined by a score of 10 or greater on the Patient Health Questionnaire–9. Linear and logistic regression models were used to assess predictive factors for burnout and depression. Residents’ and attendings’ perceptions of these conditions were analyzed for significant similarities and differences. Results In this study, a total of 92 residents and 55 attendings responded. Fifty-eight of 77 residents with complete responses (75%) met criteria for burnout, and 30 of 76 (39%) met criteria for depression. Of those with burnout, 28 of 58 (48%) were at elevated risk of depression (P = .03). Nine of 77 residents (12%) had suicidal ideation in the past 2 weeks. Most residents (40 of 76 [53%]) correctly estimated that more than 50% of residents had burnout, whereas only 13 of 56 attendings (23%) correctly estimated this prevalence (P < .001). Forty-two of 83 residents (51%) and 42 of 56 attendings (75%) underestimated the true prevalence of depression (P = .002). Sixty-six of 73 residents (90%) and 40 of 51 attendings (78%) identified the same top 3 barriers to seeking care for burnout: inability to take time off to seek treatment, avoidance or denial of the problem, and negative stigma toward those seeking care. Conclusions and Relevance The prevalence of burnout and depression was high among general surgery residents in this study. Attendings and residents underestimated the prevalence of these conditions but acknowledged common barriers to seeking care. Discrepancies in actual and perceived levels of burnout and depression may hinder wellness interventions. Increasing understanding of these perceptions offers an opportunity to develop practical solutions.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2017

Surgical management of pancreatic necrosis: A practice management guideline from the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma

Nathan T. Mowery; Brandon R. Bruns; Heather MacNew; Suresh Agarwal; Toby Enniss; Mansoor Khan; Weidun Alan Guo; Jeremy W. Cannon; Matthew E. Lissauer; Therese M. Duane; Amy N. Hildreth; Peter A. Pappas; Lynn Gries; Meghann Kaiser; Bryce R.H. Robinson

BACKGROUND Pancreatic or peripancreatic tissue necrosis confers substantial morbidity and mortality. New modalities have created a wide variation in approaches and timing of interventions for necrotizing pancreatitis. As acute care surgery evolves, its practitioners are increasingly being called upon to manage these complex patients. METHODS A systematic review of the MEDLINE database using PubMed was performed. English language articles regarding pancreatic necrosis from 1980 to 2014 were included. Letters to the editor, case reports, book chapters, and review articles were excluded. Topics of investigation included operative timing, the use of adjuvant therapy and the type of operative repair. Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations methodology was applied to question development, outcome prioritization, evidence quality assessments, and recommendation creation. RESULTS Eighty-eight studies were included and underwent full review. Increasing the time to surgical intervention had an improved outcome in each of the periods evaluated (72 hours, 12–14 days, 30 days) with a significant improvement in outcomes if surgery was delayed 30 days. The use of percutaneous and endoscopic procedures was shown to postpone surgery and potentially be definitive. The use of minimally invasive surgery for debridement and drainage has been shown to be safe and associated with reduced morbidity and mortality. CONCLUSION Acute Care Surgeons are uniquely trained to care for those with pancreatic necrosis due their training in critical care and complex surgery with ongoing shock. In adult patients with pancreatic necrosis, we recommend that pancreatic necrosectomy be delayed until at least day 12. During the first 30 days of symptoms with infected necrotic collections, we conditionally recommend surgical debridement only if the patients fail to improve after radiologic or endoscopic drainage. Finally, even with documented infected necrosis, we recommend that patients undergo a step-up approach to surgical intervention as the preferred surgical approach. Level of Evidence Systematic review/guideline, level III.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2014

Clarification on angiography and embolization for blunt splenic injuries: in reply to Livingston and colleagues.

Preston R. Miller; Michael C. Chang; J.Jason Hoth; Nathan T. Mowery; Amy N. Hildreth; Shayn Martin; James F. Holmes; Wayne Meredith; Jay A. Requarth

We owe thanks to Drs Livingston, Moffat, Leeper, Parry, and Gray for giving us the opportunity to clarify some of the findings in our recent work on angiography and embolization for blunt splenic injuries. They are correct about the studied endpoints. Mortality examined was all cause, in-hospital mortality. Nonoperative management (NOM) was defined as management of a spleen injury without an initial plan for laparotomy for any reason. With respect to the concept of failure of NOM, we are referring to the requirement for laparotomy during planned nonoperative therapy. We did not use repeat angiography in any of the studied patients as a salvage method. No patient who had unsuccessful NOM died, but this is certainly a described risk that must be examined if it occurs. In evaluating the similarities and differences between the control and study periods, the evaluated parameters are listed in the article. No other characteristics were included in the analysis. This comparison was done to determine if there were important differences between the 2 groups that might explain the increase in NOM success independently of the increased angioembolization described. As is pointed out, the Injury Severity Score was higher in the earlier control group as compared with the study group. This is why we also highlighted the fact that the Injury Severity Score was similar in the patients who actually went on to have unsuccessful NOM in both groups. In closing, we appreciate these physicians’ thoughts on our work. We hope this represents one more step in the understanding of safer and more effective ways to avoid laparotomy for splenic injury in appropriately selected patients.


American Surgeon | 2010

Surgical Intensive Care Unit Mobility is Increased after Institution of a Computerized Mobility Order Set and Intensive Care Unit Mobility Protocol: A Prospective Cohort Analysis

Amy N. Hildreth; Toby Enniss; Robert S. Martin; Preston R. Miller; Donna Mitten-Long; Janice Gasaway; Fran Ebert; Wendy Butcher; Kevin Browder; Michael C. Chang; J.Jason Hoth; Nathan T. Mowery; Meredith Jw

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J.Jason Hoth

University of Louisville

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