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Dive into the research topics where Carla DiScala is active.

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Featured researches published by Carla DiScala.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1986

The pediatric trauma score as a predictor of injury severity: an objective assessment

Joseph J. Tepas; Max L. Ramenofsky; Daniel L. Mollitt; Bruce M. Gans; Carla DiScala

The ability of the Pediatric Trauma Score (P.T.S.) to predict injury severity and mortality was evaluated by analysis of its relationship with the Injury Severity Score (I.S.S.) of 615 children entered into the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (N.P.T.R.). Mean age was 8.2 years and mortality was 3.5%. Mean I.S.S. of survivors was 8.1 in comparison to 59.7 for nonsurvivors. Linear regression coefficient determined from analysis of these variables produced a slope of -3.7 with a statistically significant correlation of P.T.S. to I.S.S. (p less than 0.001; r2 = 0.89). Analysis of the mortality for each cohort of patients with the same P.T.S. identified three categories of mortality potential. Children whose P.T.S. was greater than 8 had a 0% mortality. Children whose P.T.S. was between 0 and 8 had an increasing mortality related to their decreasing P.T.S. (r2 = 0.86), and children whose P.T.S. was below 0 had 100% mortality. This study documents the direct linear relationship between P.T.S. and injury severity, and confirms the P.T.S. as an effective predictor of both severity of injury and potential for mortality.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1994

Mortality and truncal injury: The pediatric perspective

Arthur Cooper; Barbara Barlow; Carla DiScala; Dana String

To determine the extent and consequences of major truncal injury in children, we analyzed data collected prospectively by the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR) from 1985 to 1991. Of the 25,301 patients entered into the study, 1,553 (6%) had thoracic injuries (T); 2,047 (8%) had abdominal injuries (A). Blunt mechanisms predominated for both groups (86% T, 83% A), with the automobile being the most frequent blunt agent (74% T, 59% A); gunshot wounds were responsible for the majority of penetrating injuries (60% T, 56% A). Fifteen percent (195) of those with blunt thoracic injuries died; however, in only 14% of these cases (27) was thoracic injury the cause of death. Fourteen percent (33) of those with penetrating thoracic injuries died, with thoracic injury the cause of death in 97% of these cases (32). Only 9% (161) of those with blunt abdominal injuries died; in 22% (35) abdominal injury was the cause of death. Likewise, only 6% (15) of those with penetrating abdominal injuries died, but abdominal injury was the cause of death in 67% (10). The pleural space, lung, and ribs were the most frequently damaged thoracic organs; with the exception of lung contusion, injuries to these structures were associated with fatality rates in excess of 50%. The liver, spleen, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tract were the most frequently damaged abdominal organs; injuries to these structures were associated with fatality rates of 15% or less, except for injuries involving major blood vessels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1990

Mortality and head injury: The pediatric perspective

Joseph J. Tepas; Carla DiScala; Max L. Ramenofsky; Barbara Barlow

The records of 10,098 children entered into the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR) were analyzed to define the characteristics of pediatric head injury and the impact of extracranial trauma on Central Nervous System (CNS) injury. The 4,400 NPTR head injuries were then compared with 16,524 head injuries recently reported from a predominantly adult trauma registry to illustrate potential population differences. Results indicate that children have a lower mortality, that the addition of extracranial injury significantly reduces recovery potential, that CNS injury is the predominant and most common cause of pediatric traumatic death, and that the automobile is the most lethal component of a childs environment.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1989

National pediatric trauma registry

Joseph J. Tepas; Max L. Ramenofsky; Barbara Barlow; Bruce M. Gans; Burton H. Harris; Carla DiScala; Karen Butler

The National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR) is a multi-institutional database designed to compile information concerning all aspects of pediatric trauma care. The registry is designed and operated in a manner that maximizes data accuracy and provides this information to all participating investigators. The growth of the database has allowed the NPTR to provide the first accurate epidemiologic description of pediatric trauma as a national disease, as well as to develop national norms for pediatric trauma care. The registry presently contains 10,177 patients, and is undergoing revisions (phase II) to allow a more focused evaluation of various aspects of the clinical care and rehabilitation of the pediatric trauma patient.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1993

Efficacy of pediatric trauma care: results of a population-based study

Arthur Cooper; Barbara Barlow; Carla DiScala; Dana String; Kevin Ray; Lawrence Mottley

To determine concordance between regional outcome and national norms with respect to pediatric injury diagnosis, severity, and mortality in a state lacking a well-organized trauma system, we compared summary data from all pediatric trauma-related hospital discharge abstracts compiled by the [New York State Department of Health] Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative [Mandatory Hospital Reporting] System (SPARCS), with comparable data from pediatric trauma centers participating in the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR), for similar epochs in the late 1980s. Analysis was based on 14,234 cases from SPARCS and 17,098 cases from NPTR. Data were grouped by principal anatomic diagnosis (ICD-9-CM N-code) and injury severity score (ISS), for each of which incidence and mortality were calculated, both individually and collectively, then compared item by item for sources of variance. Overall, the two data sets showed the expected discordance, with NPTR being skewed toward more complex and severe injury. However, when analyzed cell by cell, a striking degree of concordance emerged in both incidence and mortality for injuries of comparable severity in all but a few selected subsets. Isolated skeletal injuries were treated less frequently in pediatric trauma centers, and combined system injuries to the skeleton, brain, and internal organs were treated more frequently in pediatric trauma centers. However, while the fatality rates were similar between SPARCS and NPTR for most diagnoses, given comparable ISS, survival was some ten times greater in pediatric trauma centers for patients with either brain or internal injuries--the leading causes of pediatric injury mortality--and for skeletal injuries, when the injuries sustained were of moderately great severity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1998

Relationship of Trauma Patient Volume to Outcome Experience: Can a Relationship Be Defined?

Joseph J. Tepas; Jateen C. Patel; Carla DiScala; Robert L. Wears; Henry C. Veldenz

OBJECTIVES Five years experience recorded in a multi-institutional pediatric trauma registry was analyzed to define the relationship between case volume and outcome as measured by mortality. METHODS A total of 30,930 records with complete data were categorized by contributing hospital. Patients with fatal injury as indicated by an injury severity score of 75 or any abbreviated injury scale of 6 were excluded. Each centers experience was stratified by injury severity using injury severity score > or = 15 as indicative of severe injury. Centers were then classified as low volume (LV, 100-500 cases), mid volume (MV, 501-1,000 cases), or high volume (HV, > 1,000 cases). Proportion of patients with severe injury (injury severity score > 15) and mortality were compared among groups using the chi(2) test with significance accepted at p < 0.05. Using the Pediatric Risk Indicator to adjust for mortality risk, the combined hospital experience of each volume group was further analyzed to assess performance with specific levels of increasing injury severity. RESULTS Findings demonstrated a trend of increasing mortality with increasing volume, despite a consistent proportion of severe injury. Risk adjusted mortality for each volume class indicates best outcome in the mid level group. CONCLUSIONS Regardless of overall volume of patients encountered, there is a consistent proportion of severe injury. The increasing mortality with the most severe injuries seen in the high volume centers may reflect overdemand on resources.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1999

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation in pediatric trauma patients : Survival and functional outcome

Guohua Li; Nelson Tang; Carla DiScala; Zachary Meisel; Nadine Levick; Gabor D. Kelen

BACKGROUND Although injury is the leading cause of cardiac arrests in children older than 1 year, few studies have examined the survival and functional outcome of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in pediatric trauma patients. METHODS A historical cohort of 957 trauma patients younger than 15 years who received CPR at the scene of injury or at the admitting hospital was constructed on the basis of the National Pediatric Trauma Registry. The rate of survival to discharge and factors related to survival were examined. Functional impairments were documented for surviving patients. RESULTS The overall survival rate was 23.5%. With adjustment for the Injury Severity Score, the risk of fatality after CPR increased for children with systolic blood pressure below 60 mm Hg at admission (odds ratio [OR] 24.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] 8.6-69.3), for those who were comatose at admission (OR, 4.7; 95% CI, 1.9-11.6), for those with penetrating injury (OR, 4.4; 95% CI, 1.5-13.3), and for those with CPR initiated at the hospital (OR, 2.4; 95% CI, 1.5-3.9). Surviving patients stayed in hospitals for an average of 24.3 days; at discharge, 64% had at least one impairment in the functional activities of daily living. CONCLUSIONS Survival outcome of CPR in pediatric trauma patients appears to be comparable to that reported in adults of mixed arrest causes. Future research needs to identify factors underlying the excess mortality associated with penetrating trauma.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1995

Children who are shot: A 30-year experience

Danielle Laraque; Barbara Barlow; Maureen S. Durkin; Joy Howell; Franklyn Cladis; David Friedman; Carla DiScala; Rao R. Ivatury; William M. Stahl

Three data sets describe the pattern of gunshot injuries to children from 1960 to 1993: The Harlem Hospital pediatric trauma registry (HHPTR), the northern Manhattan injury surveillance system (NMISS) a population-based study, and the National Pediatric Trauma Registry (NPTR). A small case-control study compares the characteristics of injured children with a control group. Before 1970 gunshot injuries to Harlem children were rare. In 1971 an initial rise in pediatric gunshot admissions occurred, and by 1988 pediatric gunshot injuries at Harlem Hospital had peaked at 33. Population-based data through NMISS showed that the gunshot rate for Central Harlem children 10 to 16 years of age rose from 64.6 per 100,000 in 1986 to 267.6 per 100,000 in 1987, a 400% increase. The case fatality for children admitted to Harlem Hospital (1960 to 1993) was 3%, usually because of brain injury, but the majority of deaths occurred before hospitalization. During the same period, felony drug arrests in Harlem increased by 163%. The neighboring South Bronx experienced the same increase in gunshot wound admissions and felony arrests from 1986 to 1993. The NPTR showed a similar injury pattern for other communities in the United States. In a case-control analysis. Harlem adolescents who had sustained gunshot wounds were more likely to have dropped out of school, to have lived in a household without a biological parent, to have experienced parental death, and to have known of a relative or friend who had been shot than community adolescents treated for other medical or surgical problems.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Annals of Surgery | 2003

Pediatric trauma is very much a surgical disease.

Joseph J. Tepas; Eric R. Frykberg; Miren A. Schinco; Pam Pieper; Carla DiScala

ObjectiveThe evolution of nonoperative management of certain solid visceral injuries has stimulated speculation that management of the severely injured child is no longer a surgical exercise. The authors hypothesized that the incidence of injuries that require surgical evaluation is disproportionately high in children at risk of death or disability from significant injury. MethodsNational Pediatric Trauma Registry data were queried for all patients with ICDA-9-CM diagnoses requiring at least surgical evaluation. Selected diagnoses included CNS: 800 to 804, 850 to 854; thoracoabdominal: 860 to 870; pelvic fracture: 808; and acute vascular disruption: 900 to 904. Operative intervention was identified by ICDA-9-CM operative codes less than 60 and selected operative orthopedic codes between 79.8 and 84.4. At-risk patients were identified as those with at least one of the following: Glasgow Coma Scale score less than 15, Glasgow Coma Scale motor score less than 6, initial systolic blood pressure less than 90, or Injury Severity Scale score more than 10. The incidence of a surgical diagnosis in at-risk children was compared to the incidence in the population with no identifiable risk. Within the population undergoing surgical evaluation, resource utilization, as reflected by operative intervention and ICU days, and outcome, as reflected by mortality, were compared between the at-risk group and the group with no identifiable risk. ResultsFrom 1987 to 2000, 87,424 records were complete enough for analysis. Of those, 48,687 (55.6%) patients sustained at least one injury requiring a surgical evaluation and 28,645 (32.7%) children were determined to be at risk. Mortality for at-risk children was 5.8% versus 0.02% for those with no identifiable risk. Of the children at risk, 24,706 (86.2%) had at least one injury requiring a surgical evaluation. Of the 58,779 children with no risk, 23,981 (40.8%) also had at least one injury requiring a surgical evaluation. Operative intervention for surgical injuries was required in 20.5% of cases (n = 10,015). Of these, 5,562 (56%) were at-risk children, and they had a mortality rate of 11.5%. Of the children not at risk, 4,453 required operative care, and they had a mortality of 0.1%. At-risk children undergoing surgery required an average of 5.02 days of ICU care compared to 1.2 for cases performed on children without risk. ConclusionsThese data clearly demonstrate the primacy of surgical pathology as the major determinant of outcome in pediatric injury. Operative intervention and the option of timely operative care remain major components of clinical management of children with injuries that pose a significant risk of morbidity or mortality.


Injury Prevention | 1997

Characteristics and outcomes of self inflicted pediatric injuries: the role of method of suicide attempt.

Guohua Li; Carla DiScala; K. Nordenholz; S. Sterling; Susan Pardee Baker

OBJECTIVE: To examine the epidemiologic characteristics and clinical outcomes of self inflicted pediatric injuries in relation to the method of suicide attempt. METHODS: Using data from the National Pediatric Trauma Registry Phase II, a comparative analysis was conducted for children under 15 years of age who were admitted from 1 October 1988 through 30 April 1996 because of self inflicted injury by firearm (n = 28), hanging (n = 38), or jumping from heights (n = 21). RESULTS: Of the 87 cases under study, 90% occurred at home, and 86% occurred between noon and midnight, with a peak in early evening (between 6 pm and 7 pm)-More than one quarter (29%) had preexisting mental disorders, such as disturbance of conduct and depression. Toxicological tests were conducted on admission on 40 (46%) of the patients; 20% tested positive for alcohol or other illicit drugs. The method of suicide attempt was associated with gender and age of the patients: 75% of the firearm cases and 82% of the hanging cases were boys compared with 29% of the jumping cases (p < 0.01); 79% of the hanging cases were aged 13 years or younger compared with 39% of the firearm cases and 48% of the jumping cases (p < 0.01). The mean injury severity score was 18.6 for the firearm cases and 16.3 for the hanging cases, significantly greater than 8.5 for the jumping cases (p < 0.02). Reflecting the differences in injury severity, firearm cases and hanging cases were more likely than jumping cases to be sent to intensive care units or operating rooms from emergency departments, and to develop complications during hospitalization. The case fatality rate was 50% for the firearm cases, 32% for the hanging cases, and 5% for the jumping cases (p < 0.01). On average, these patients stayed in hospitals for 11 days and 52% of those who were alive at discharge had at least one impairment in communication, cognition, or self care functions. CONCLUSION: Boys and older children tend to use more lethal methods in suicide attempts. Even in this age group, suicide attempts often involve psychiatric disorders and acute abuse of alcohol or other illicit drugs. Firearms are associated with significantly increased risk of inhospital fatality. The clinical outcomes of self inflicted injuries appear to be worse than other injuries treated in the same trauma centers.

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Arthur Cooper

University of California

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Gabor D. Kelen

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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