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Dive into the research topics where Charles J. Yowler is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles J. Yowler.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2007

American Burn Association consensus conference to define sepsis and infection in burns.

David G. Greenhalgh; Jeffrey R. Saffle; James H. Holmes; Richard L. Gamelli; Tina L. Palmieri; Jureta W. Horton; Ronald G. Tompkins; Daniel L. Traber; David W. Mozingo; Edwin A. Deitch; Cleon W. Goodwin; David N. Herndon; James J. Gallagher; Arthur P. Sanford; James C. Jeng; David H. Ahrenholz; Alice N. Neely; Michael S. O'mara; Steven E. Wolf; Gary F. Purdue; Warren L. Garner; Charles J. Yowler; Barbara A. Latenser

Because of their extensive wounds, burn patients are chronically exposed to inflammatory mediators. Thus, burn patients, by definition, already have “systemic inflammatory response syndrome.” Current definitions for sepsis and infection have many criteria (fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, leukocytosis) that are routinely found in patients with extensive burns, making these current definitions less applicable to the burn population. Experts in burn care and research, all members of the American Burn Association, were asked to review the literature and prepare a potential definition on one topic related to sepsis or infection in burn patients. On January 20, 2007, the participants met in Tucson, Arizona to develop consensus for these definitions. After review of the definitions, a summary of the proceedings was prepared. The goal of the consensus conference was to develop and publish standardized definitions for sepsis and infection-related diagnoses in the burn population. Standardized definitions will improve the capability of performing more meaningful multicenter trials among burn centers.


Surgical Infections | 2002

The Surgical Infection Society Guidelines on Antimicrobial Therapy for Intra-Abdominal Infections: An Executive Summary

John E. Mazuski; Robert G. Sawyer; Avery B. Nathens; Joseph T. DiPiro; Moshe Schein; Kenneth A. Kudsk; Charles J. Yowler

The Surgical Infection Society last published guidelines on antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections in 1992 (Bohnen JMA, et al., Arch Surg 1992;127:83-89). Since then, an appreciable body of literature has been published on this subject. Therefore, the Therapeutics Agents Committee of the Society undertook an effort to update the previous guidelines, primarily using data published over the past decade. An additional goal of the Committee was to characterize its recommendations according to contemporary principles of evidence-based medicine. To develop these guidelines, the Committee carried out a systematic search for all English language articles published between 1990 and 2000 related to antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections. This literature was reviewed individually and collectively by the Committee, and categorized according to the type of study and its quality. Additional articles published prior to 1990 were also utilized when necessary. By a process of iterative consensus, the Committee developed provisional guidelines for antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections based on this evidence. Following extensive review by members of the Society, these guidelines were approved for publication in final form by the Council of the Surgical Infection Society. This executive summary delineates the Societys current recommendations for antimicrobial therapy of patients with intra-abdominal infections. Topics discussed include the selection of patients needing therapeutic antimicrobials, duration of antimicrobial therapy, acceptable antimicrobial regimens, and identification and treatment of higher-risk patients. Guidelines for patient selection and specific antimicrobial regimens were based on relatively good evidence, but those regarding optimal duration of therapy and treatment of higher-risk patients relied mostly on expert opinion, since there was a paucity of high-quality studies on those issues. Relevant areas for future investigation include the safety, convenience, and cost-effectiveness of available antimicrobial regimens for lower-risk patients, and better means for identifying and treating higher-risk patients with intra-abdominal infections.


Surgical Infections | 2002

The Surgical Infection Society guidelines on antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections: evidence for the recommendations.

John E. Mazuski; Robert G. Sawyer; Avery B. Nathens; Joseph T. DiPiro; Moshe Schein; Kenneth A. Kudsk; Charles J. Yowler

Revised guidelines for the use of antimicrobial therapy in patients with intra-abdominal infections were recently developed by the Therapeutic Agents Committee of the Surgical Infection Society (Mazuski et al., Surg Infect 2002;3:161-173). These were based, insofar as possible, on evidence published over the past decade. The objective of this document is to describe the process by which the Committee identified and reviewed the published literature utilized to develop the recommendations and to summarize the results of those reviews. English-language articles published between 1990 and 2000 related to antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections were identified by a systematic MEDLINE search and an examination of references included in recent review articles. If current literature with regard to a specific issue was lacking, relevant articles published prior to 1990 were identified. All prospective randomized controlled trials, as well as other articles selected by the Committee, were evaluated individually and collectively. Data with regard to patient numbers, types of infections, and results of interventions were abstracted. Studies were categorized according to their design, and all included trials were graded according to quality. On the basis of this evidence, the Committee formulated recommendations for antimicrobial therapy for intra-abdominal infections and graded those recommendations. After receiving comments from invited reviewers and the general membership of the Society, the guidelines were finalized and submitted to the Council of the Surgical Infection Society for approval. The final recommendations related to the selection of patients needing therapeutic antimicrobials, acceptable antimicrobial regimens, duration of antimicrobial use, and the identification and treatment of higher-risk patients. Although numerous publications pertaining to these topics were identified, but nearly all of the prospective randomized controlled trials represented comparisons of different antimicrobial regimens for the treatment of intra-abdominal infections. A few prospective trials evaluated the need for therapeutic antimicrobial therapy in patients with peritoneal contamination following abdominal trauma. The quality of these prospective trials was highly variable. Many did not limit enrollment to patients with complicated intra-abdominal infections, lacked blinding of treatment assignment, did not provide a complete description of the criteria used to determine therapeutic success or failure, failed to identify the reasons why patients were excluded from analysis, or did not include an intention-to-treat analysis. For many issues, no prospective randomized controlled trials were encountered, and guidelines had to be formulated using evidence from studies with historical controls or uncontrolled data, or on the basis of expert opinion


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2006

Effects of oxandrolone on outcome measures in the severely burned: a multicenter prospective randomized double-blind trial.

Steven E. Wolf; Linda S. Edelman; Nathan Kemalyan; Lorraine Donison; James M. Cross; Marcia Underwood; Robert J. Spence; Dene Noppenberger; Tina L. Palmieri; David G. Greenhalgh; MaryBeth Lawless; D. Voigt; Paul Edwards; Petra Warner; Richard J. Kagan; Susan Hatfield; James C. Jeng; Daria Crean; John Hunt; Gary F. Purdue; Agnes Burris; Bruce A. Cairns; Mary Kessler; Robert L. Klein; Rose Baker; Charles J. Yowler; Wendy Tutulo; Kevin N. Foster; Daniel M. Caruso; Brian Hildebrand

Severe burns induce pathophysiologic problems, among them catabolism of lean mass, leading to protracted hospitalization and prolonged recovery. Oxandrolone is an anabolic agent shown to decrease lean mass catabolism and improve wound healing in the severely burned patients. We enrolled 81 adult subjects with burns 20% to 60% TBSA in a multicenter trial testing the effects of oxandrolone on length of hospital stay. Subjects were randomized between oxandrolone 10 mg every 12 hours or placebo. The study was stopped halfway through projected enrollment because of a significant difference between groups found on planned interim analysis. We found that length of stay was shorter in the oxandrolone group (31.6 ± 3.1 days) than placebo (43.3 ± 5.3 days; P < .05). This difference strengthened when deaths were excluded and hospital stay was indexed to burn size (1.24 ± 0.15 days/% TBSA burned vs 0.87 ± 0.05 days/% TBSA burned, P < .05). We conclude that treatment using oxandrolone should be considered for use in the severely burned while hepatic transaminases are monitored.


Surgery | 1999

Optimizing the management of blunt splenic injury in adults and children

Anastasios K. Konstantakos; Anita L. Barnoski; Brian R. Plaisier; Charles J. Yowler; William F. Fallon; Mark A. Malangoni

BACKGROUND The treatment for splenic injury is evolving to an increased use of nonoperative management. We studied patients with blunt injury to the spleen to determine the overall success with splenic salvage and the reason that adults and children have different outcomes. METHODS Patient records were reviewed retrospectively for information and parameters that may influence outcome. Patients were categorized by age and type of management. RESULTS Two hundred sixty-seven patients (222 adults; 45 children < 16 years old) with blunt splenic trauma were treated over a 7.5-year period. Adults had a significantly higher injury severity score (ISS; 27.2 +/- 0.9 vs 19.9 +/- 2.0; P < .05), splenic injury score (SIS; 2.8 +/- 0.1 vs 2.3 +/- 0.1; P < .01), and mortality rate (11.7% vs 2.2%; P < .05) compared with children. Eighty-six adults and 3 children had emergent operation; 23 patients had splenorrhaphy. Nonoperative management was selected initially in 178 patients; 83% (105 adults and 42 children) were treated successfully. The ISS and SIS of patients in whom nonoperative management failed were different from those patients in whom treatment was successful (ISS, 27.5 +/- 2.1 vs 20.6 +/- 1.0; SIS, 3.6 +/- 0.2 vs 2.1 +/- 0.1; P < .05) but were similar to those patients who needed initial emergent operation. Adults and children who had successful nonoperative management had similar ISSs (21.4 +/- 1.1 vs 18.4 +/- 2.0) and SISs (2.0 +/- 0.1 vs 2.3 +/- 0.1). Overall splenic salvage was achieved in 64% of patients (57% of adults and 96 % of children). Salvage increased from 50% to 85% during the study period. CONCLUSIONS Splenic preservation is possible in most adults and children with blunt injury with the appropriate use of both operative salvage and nonoperative treatment. The higher salvage rate and decreased need for operation in children is due to their lower severity of overall injury and splenic injury. Operative salvage has become less common in adults because more patients are selected for nonoperative management.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2001

Music Therapy for Assistance with Pain and Anxiety Management in Burn Treatment

Jennifer D. Prensner; Charles J. Yowler; Lori F. Smith; A. Louise Steele; Richard B. Fratianne

The management of pain is one of the primary issues in burn care. Pain is not only a physiologic experience, but a psychological one as well. With this in mind, the treatment of burned patients must incorporate a holistic view of pain management and healing. Cognitive, behavioral, and pharmacologic interventions all have a role in pain management. Studies, as well as clinical experience, have shown that musical intervention has been helpful in assisting patients with pain management in a variety of medical settings. Music is an element of normal life that can be easily adapted for the needs of individual patients and their current environment while providing a means for self expression and for normalizing the environment. This article examines the rationale for using music therapy with burned patients, describes several protocols that have been adapted to meet the specific needs of burned patients, and summarizes our preliminary findings, which demonstrate significant response to music therapy protocols employed on our patients.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2005

Life after 80 Hours: The Impact of Resident Work Hours Mandates on Trauma and Emergency Experience and Work Effort for Senior Residents and Faculty

Mark A. Malangoni; John J. Como; Charlene Mancuso; Charles J. Yowler

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of work hours mandates on (1) senior resident patient exposure and operating experience in trauma and emergency surgery and (2) faculty work effort. METHODS We measured resident and faculty work on the trauma and emergency surgery services at our Level I trauma center during two comparable 6-month periods. Period 1 (July 1-December 31, 2002) had no call restrictions, separate trauma and emergency service resident call, and some overlap of faculty call responsibilities. Period 2 (July 1-December 31, 2003) had resident work hours compliance and complete integration of resident and faculty trauma and emergency call. Work hours were measured by surveys for faculty and residents. All data were collected prospectively. RESULTS Resident exposure to trauma patients was similar during both time periods. Emergency surgery admissions declined during period 2; however, intensive care unit admissions increased. The number of operations performed by senior residents did not change; however, there was a shift in the median number of emergency surgery cases to more senior residents. Faculty work hours increased slightly despite a decrease in faculty call. CONCLUSION Work hours compliance resulted in a 50% reduction in senior resident call and a 19% decrease in their work hours with no significant change in trauma/emergency patient care exposure or operative case load. Service call amalgamation reduced faculty call by 21% but did not result in a corresponding change in work hours or productivity.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1998

Factors contributing to delayed extremity amputation in burn patients.

Charles J. Yowler; David W. Mozingo; John B. Ryan; Basil A. Pruitt

BACKGROUND Previous series of traumatic amputations have noted that delay in amputation results in prolonged hospital stay and delayed rehabilitation. A series of major extremity amputations after burn injury was analyzed to identify the frequency of delayed amputation and to identify factors resulting in the delay. METHODS Chart review of burn admissions between January of 1991 and December of 1995. RESULTS Twenty-eight patients underwent a total of 44 major extremity amputations. Thirty-five amputations in 22 patients were performed by postburn day 16 (mean 4.3). Nine amputations in six patients were delayed beyond postburn day 26 (mean, 48.3). Delayed amputations occurred in the subgroups of deep thermal burns with extensive necrosis and thermal burns complicated by infections. Early amputation was associated with a 13.6% mortality rate, delayed amputation with a 50% mortality rate. CONCLUSION There is a bimodal distribution of time to amputation determined by mechanism of injury, severity of burn, and infectious complications. Earlier identification of nonsalvageable limbs may decrease infectious complications and improve the chances of patient survival.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2008

Isolated cervical spine fractures in the elderly: a deadly injury.

Joseph F. Golob; Jeffrey A. Claridge; Charles J. Yowler; John J. Como; Joel R. Peerless

BACKGROUND Traumatic injury in the elderly is an increasing problem and studies have shown that elderly patients (>/=65 years old) with cervical spine fractures and spinal cord injury (SCI) carry a mortality rate of 21% to 30%. However, little has been described with regard to outcomes for elderly patients with isolated cervical spine fractures (ICSF). HYPOTHESIS Outcomes for elderly patients with ICSF will be similar to elderly patients with cervical fractures and associated traumatic injuries (ATI) or SCI. METHODS A 9-year retrospective analysis was performed on all patients >/=65 years old admitted to a level I trauma center with any cervical spine fracture. Primary outcomes were defined as favorable (discharge to home or rehabilitation hospital) or unfavorable (death, discharge to a long-term acute care facility, or a skilled nursing facility). ICSF was defined as those fractures without ATI or SCI. Long-term mortality data were gathered using the Social Security Death Index. RESULTS A total of 177 patients with mean age of 78 +/- 1 and Injury Severity Score of 17 +/- 1 were evaluated. Fifty-six percent were men and falls were the most common mechanism (62%). An unfavorable outcome was seen in 56% of the study population with a mortality rate of 25%. ATIs were seen in 57% of the population and 22% had SCI. Patients with SCI had a significantly higher mortality compared with patients without SCI (38% vs. 22%, p = 0.032). However, there was no difference in unfavorable outcomes. Patients with ICSF had no differences in unfavorable outcomes compared with patients with SCI or ATI. Long-term survival analysis after discharge (mean = 2.8 years) demonstrated that patients with a favorable outcome had a significantly improved survival compared with patients with unfavorable outcomes (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION ICSFs were associated with an unfavorable outcome in the elderly population regardless of ATI or SCI. These unfavorable outcomes were also associated with long-term mortality. Strategies to reduce morbidity and mortality in this devastating injury will be essential to improve outcomes and maximize resource utilization.


American Surgeon | 2008

Fever and Leukocytosis in Critically Ill Trauma Patients: It's Not the Urine*

Joseph F. Golob; Jeffrey A. Claridge; Mark J. Sando; William R. Phipps; Charles J. Yowler; Adam Fadlalla; Mark A. Malangoni

BACKGROUND Infectious complications are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill trauma patients. Therefore, fever and leukocytosis often trigger an extensive laboratory workup that includes a urine culture (UCx). The purposes of this study were to: 1) Define the current practice for obtaining UCxs in trauma patients admitted to the surgical and trauma intensive care unit (STICU); and 2) determine if there is an association between fever or leukocytosis and urinary tract infections (UTIs) during the initial 14 hospital days. METHODS An 18-month retrospective cohort analysis was performed on consecutive trauma patients admitted for at least two days to the STICU at a level I trauma center. Data collected included demographics, injuries, and daily maximal temperature (T(max)), leukocyte count, and UCx results for the first 14 days. Fever and leukocytosis were defined as T(max) > or =38.5 degrees C and leukocyte count > or =12,000/mm(3), respectively. Urinary tract infections were diagnosed with a positive UCx (> or =10(5) organisms/mL of urine). RESULTS Five hundred ten patients were evaluated for a total of 3,839 patient-days. Their mean age and Injury Severity Score were 49 +/- 1 years and 19 +/- 1 points, respectively. Seventy-two percent were men, and 91% had sustained blunt injuries. Four hundred seven UCxs were obtained; 42 patients (8%) had 60 UTIs. The cohort had an indwelling urinary catheter for 97% of the patient-days, yielding an infection density of 16 UTIs/1,000 urinary catheter-days. There was a significant association between obtaining a UCx and fever and between fever and leukocytosis (both, p < 0.001), but no association of UTI with fever, leukocytosis, or the combination of fever and leukocytosis. Analysis using temperature and leukocyte count as continuous variables identified no temperature or leukocyte range associated with UTIs. Independent risk factors for UTI calculated by logistic regression were female sex, older age, low Injury Severity Score, and no antibiotics within 24 h before the UCx was obtained. CONCLUSIONS The practice of obtaining a UCx from the STICU trauma patient was related to fever and fever with leukocytosis. However, neither fever nor leukocytosis nor both were associated with UTIs. These data suggest that there is an unnecessary emphasis on UTI as a source of fever and leukocytosis in injured patients during their first 14 STICU days. Our results suggest that the paradigm for evaluating UTI as a cause of fever needs to be reevaluated in critically ill trauma patients.

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Christopher P. Brandt

Case Western Reserve University

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Jeffrey A. Claridge

Case Western Reserve University

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Tammy Coffee

Case Western Reserve University

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Joseph F. Golob

Case Western Reserve University

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John J. Como

Case Western Reserve University

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Adam Fadlalla

Cleveland State University

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Dennis M. Super

Case Western Reserve University

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Joel R. Peerless

Case Western Reserve University

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