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Dive into the research topics where Brent P. Nixon is active.

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Featured researches published by Brent P. Nixon.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2005

Maggot Therapy in "Lower-Extremity Hospice" Wound Care Fewer Amputations and More Antibiotic-Free Days

David Armstrong; Precious Salas; Brian Short; Billy R. Martin; Heather R. Kimbriel; Brent P. Nixon; Andrew J.M. Boulton

We sought to assess, in a case-control model, the potential efficacy of maggot debridement therapy in 60 nonambulatory patients (mean +/- SD age, 72.2 +/- 6.8 years) with neuroischemic diabetic foot wounds (University of Texas grade C or D wounds below the malleoli) and peripheral vascular disease. Twenty-seven of these patients (45%) healed during 6 months of review. There was no significant difference in the proportion of patients healing in the maggot debridement therapy versus control group (57% versus 33%). Of patients who healed, time to healing was significantly shorter in the maggot therapy than in the control group (18.5 +/- 4.8 versus 22.4 +/- 4.4 weeks). Approximately one in five patients (22%) underwent a high-level (above-the-foot) amputation. Patients in the control group were three times as likely to undergo amputation (33% versus 10%). Although there was no significant difference in infection prevalence in patients undergoing maggot therapy versus controls (80% versus 60%), there were significantly more antibiotic-free days during follow-up in patients who received maggot therapy (126.8 +/- 30.3 versus 81.9 +/- 42.1 days). Maggot debridement therapy reduces short-term morbidity in nonambulatory patients with diabetic foot wounds.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2003

Outcomes of hyaluronan therapy in diabetic foot wounds

Jefferey R. Vazquez; Brian Short; Andrew H. Findlow; Brent P. Nixon; Andrew J.M. Boulton; David Armstrong

The purpose of this study was to evaluate outcomes of persons with neuropathic diabetic foot wounds treated with a hyaluronan-containing dressing. Data were abstracted for 36 patients with diabetes, 72.2% male, aged 60.0+/-10.7 years and a mean glycated hemoglobin (HbA(1c)) of 9.5+/-2.5% presenting for care at two large, multidisciplinary wound care centers. All patients received surgical debridement for their diabetic foot wounds and were placed on therapy consisting of hyaluronan dressing (Hyalofill, Convatec, USA) with dressing changes taking place every other day. Outcomes evaluated included time to complete wound closure and proportion of patients achieving wound closure in 20 weeks. Hyalofill therapy was used until the wound bed achieved 100% granulation tissue. Therapy was then followed by a moisture-retentive dressing until complete epithelialization. In total, 75.0% of wounds measuring a mean 2.2+/-2.2 cm(2) healed in the 20-week evaluation period. Of those that healed in this period, healing took place in a mean 10.0+/-4.8 weeks. The average duration of Hyalofill therapy in all patients was 8.6+/-4.2 weeks. Deeper (UT Grade 2A) wounds were over 15 times less likely to heal than superficial (1A) wounds (94.7 vs. 52.9%, Odds Ratio=15.9, 95% Confidence Interval=1.7-142.8, P=0.006). We conclude that a regimen consisting of moist wound healing using hyaluronan-containing dressings may be a useful adjunct to appropriate diabetic foot ulcer care. We await the completion of a multicenter randomized controlled trial in this area to either support or refute this initial assessment.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2002

Maggot debridement therapy: A primer

David Armstrong; Jeff Mossel; Brian Short; Brent P. Nixon; E. Ann Knowles; Andrew J.M. Boulton

Treatment of chronic wounds of the lower extremity requires a systematic, multidisciplinary approach as well as flexibility in order to achieve acceptable, consistent short-term and long-term results. Maggots, once considered an obsolete therapeutic modality, can be a useful addition to the armamentarium of the foot and ankle specialist. This article describes the use of maggot debridement therapy for intractable wounds of the lower extremity.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2001

Continuous Activity Monitoring in Persons at High Risk for Diabetes-Related Lower-Extremity Amputation

David Armstrong; Patricia L. Abu-Rumman; Brent P. Nixon; Andrew J.M. Boulton

This study evaluated the magnitude and location of activity of diabetic patients at high risk for foot amputation. Twenty subjects aged 64.6 +/- 1.8 years with diabetes, neuropathy, deformity, or a history of lower-extremity ulceration or partial foot amputation were dispensed a continuous activity monitor and a log book to record time periods spent in and out of their homes for 1 week. The results indicate that patients took more steps per hour outside their home, but took more steps per day inside their homes. Although 85% of the patients wore their physician-approved shoes most or all of the time while they were outside their homes, only 15% continued to wear them at home. Focusing on protection of the foot during in-home ambulation may be an important factor on which to focus future multidisciplinary efforts to reduce the incidence of ulceration and amputation. The ability to continuously monitor the magnitude, duration, and time of activity ultimately may assist clinicians in dosing activity just as they dose drugs.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2002

Use of Subatmospheric (VAC) Therapy to Improve Bioengineered Tissue Grafting in Diabetic Foot Wounds

Eric H. Espensen; Brent P. Nixon; Lawrence A. Lavery; David Armstrong

The use of bioengineered tissue and topical subatmospheric pressure therapy have both been widely accepted as adjunctive therapies for the treatment of noninfected, nonischemic diabetic foot wounds. This article describes a temporally overlapping method of care that includes a period of simultaneous application of bioengineered tissue (Apligraf, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp, East Hanover, New Jersey) and subatmospheric pressure therapy delivered through the VAC (Vacuum Assisted Closure) system (KCI, Inc, San Antonio, Texas). Future descriptive and analytic works may test the hypothesis that combined therapies used at different and often overlapping periods during the wound-healing cycle may be more effective than a single modality.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2002

Chemical matrixectomy for ingrown toenails: Is there an evidence basis to guide therapy?

Eric H. Espensen; Brent P. Nixon; David Armstrong

Chemical matrixectomy for ingrown toenails is one of the most common surgical procedures performed on the foot. The procedure was first described in 1945 by Otto Boll, who discussed the use of phenol to correct ingrown toenails. In the years that followed, many variations of technique and method have been described. This article reviews the pertinent literature detailing chemical matrixectomies and advocates the use of an evidence basis for care.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2006

Do US veterans wear appropriately sized shoes? The veterans affairs shoe size selection study

Brent P. Nixon; David Armstrong; Christopher Wendell; Jefferey R. Vazquez; Zinoviy Rabinovich; Heather R. Kimbriel; Mark Anthony Rosales; Andrew J.M. Boulton

Poorly fitting footwear has frequently been cited as an etiologic factor in the pathway to diabetic foot ulceration. However, we are unaware of any reports in the medical literature specifically measuring shoe size versus foot size in this high-risk population. We assessed the prevalence of poorly fitting footwear in individuals with and without diabetic foot ulceration. We evaluated the shoe size of 440 consecutive patients (94.1% male; mean +/- SD age, 67.2 +/- 12.5 years) presenting to an interdisciplinary teaching clinic. Of this population, 58.4% were diagnosed as having diabetes, and 6.8% had active diabetic foot ulceration. Only 25.5% of the patients were wearing appropriately sized shoes. Individuals with diabetic foot ulceration were 5.1 times more likely to have poorly fitting shoes than those without a wound (93.3% versus 73.2%; odds ratio [OR], 5.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.2-21.9; P = .02). This association was also evident when assessing only the 32.3% of the total population with diabetes and loss of protective sensation (93.3% versus 75.0%; OR, 4.8; 95% CI, 1.1-20.9; P = .04). Poorly fitting shoes seem to be more prevalent in people with diabetic foot wounds than in those without wounds with or without peripheral neuropathy. This implies that appropriate meticulous screening for shoe-foot mismatches may be useful in reducing the risk of lower-extremity ulceration.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2004

Plantar pressure changes using a novel negative pressure wound therapy technique.

David Armstrong; Kristin Kunze; Billy R. Martin; Heather R. Kimbriel; Brent P. Nixon; Andrew J.M. Boulton

This study evaluated changes in pressure imparted to diabetic foot wounds using a novel negative pressure bridging technique coupled with a robust removable cast walker. Ten patients had plantar pressures assessed with and without a bridged negative pressure dressing on the foot. Off-loading was accomplished with a pressure-relief walker. Plantar pressures were recorded using two pressure-measurement systems. The location and value of peak focal pressure (taken from six midgait steps) were recorded at the site of ulceration. Paired analysis revealed a large difference (mean +/- SD, 74.6% +/- 6.0%) between baseline barefoot pressure and pressure within the pressure-relief walker (mean +/- SD, 939.1 +/- 195.1 versus 235.7 +/- 66.1 kPa). There was a mean +/- SD 9.9% +/- 5.6% higher pressure in the combination device compared with the pressure-relief walker alone (mean +/- SD, 258.0 +/- 69.7 versus 235.7 +/- 66.1 kPa). This difference was only 2% of the initial barefoot pressure imparted to the wound. A modified negative pressure dressing coupled with a robust removable cast walker may not impart undue additional stress to the plantar aspect of the foot and may allow patients to retain some degree of freedom (and a potentially reduced length of hospital stay) while still allowing for the beneficial effects of negative pressure wound therapy and sufficient off-loading.


Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery | 1998

Effect of local corticosteroids on early inflammatory function in surgical wound of rats

Hienvu Nguyen; Jackson Lim; Martin L. Dresner; Brent P. Nixon

To investigate the effects of local corticosteroids during the early inflammatory process in iatrogenically induced surgical wounds, three different types of corticosteroids, dexamethasone sodium phosphate (Decadron), betamethasone sodium phosphate (Celestone Phosphate), and betamethasone sodium phosphate-acetate (Celestone Soluspan), were evaluated using rats. Single doses of corticosteroid were administered locally to male Sprague-Dawley rats after the surgical implantation of a wound chamber, which was used to collect fluid from the surrounding surgical wound. Wound fluids were drawn from the wound chamber at postoperative days 1, 3, and 5 and analyzed for total white blood cells (WBCs) and differential count. In this study, the authors have demonstrated that the corticosteroids (dexamethasone sodium phosphate, betamethasone sodium phosphate, betamethasone sodium phosphate-acetate) cause at least 50% reduction in the total circulating WBCs at the surgical wound site on postoperative day 1, followed by decreased reductions on days 3 and 5.


Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association | 2004

Treatment of Freiberg's infraction with the titanium hemi-implant

Alan T. Shih; Richard E. Quint; David Armstrong; Brent P. Nixon

Freibergs infraction is a relatively rare disease for which there is currently no consensus regarding surgical management. We present a case study describing a surgical procedure that uses a novel metatarsophalangeal hemi-implant. This procedure does not alter the metatarsal parabola, and it allows for other surgical procedures to be performed in the future.

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David Armstrong

University of Southern California

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Lawrence A. Lavery

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Eric H. Espensen

Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center

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David Jolley

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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Frank Maben

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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