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Dive into the research topics where Daniel F. Danzl is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel F. Danzl.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1988

Emergency department violence in United States teaching hospitals

Frank W Lavoie; Gary L Carter; Daniel F. Danzl; Robert L Berg

Violence in the emergency department is a common concern. However, most aspects of this problem remain unstudied because no organization or government agency tracks such data and no regulatory or administrative guidelines adequately address its management. We surveyed 170 US teaching hospital ED medical directors with respect to violence and security issues and received responses from 127 (74.7%). Among other findings, 41 institutions report at least one verbal threat each day, and 23 report at least one threat with a weapon each month. Four-point physical restraint is used by 125 of the 127 facilities. Personnel in 32 of these facilities restrain at least one patient each day. Seventeen institutions report having significantly injured a patient during restraint in the last five years, resulting in one death. Twenty institutions report involvement with litigation with respect to restraint. Only 51 institutions provide ED nurses with formal training in recognition and management of aggression and violence, and only 79 institutions have security personnel present in the ED 24 hours a day. A sizable number of facilities receiving frequent threats and batteries are not among those with 24-hour-a-day security personnel. A preventative, risk-management approach that addresses environmental factors, training policies, restraint, security arrangements, and legal precedents is suggested.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1980

Urban accidental hypothermia: 135 cases

Jon W. Miller; Daniel F. Danzl; Donald M. Thomas

We retrospectively reviewed 135 presentations (114 patients) of urban hypothermia treated at the discretion of the emergency department staff over a nine-year period from February 1971 to March 1980. Rewarming treatment options included passive external, active external, and heated oxygen aerosol administered by mask or intubation. The rates of rewarming were statistically similar for passive external (0.71 C/hr) and heated aerosol via mask (0.74 C/hr). The rate of rewarming for active external methods was 0.90 C/hr. Heated oxygen aerosol using intubation rewarmed the patient at a significantly greater rate than the passive external method (1.22 C/hr) (P < 0.01). The overall mortality rate for the series was 11.9%, but 47.9% when serious underlying disease was present. Individual mortality rates were 64.3% for active external (9/14), 7.67% for active core with a mask (1/13), 5.2% for passive external (4/68), and 5.0% for active core with a nasotracheal tube (2/40). Active core rewarming using intubation was selected more frequently with moderate and severe hypothermia (P < 0.001). The group of survivors had a higher mean arrival temperature (31.33 C) than did the non-survivors (27.55 C) (P = 0.01). Active core rewarming with heated aerosolized oygen via nasotraheal tube is a safe technique for the rapid rewarming of selected hypothermic patients. The arrival temperature and the presence of serious underlying disease, in addition to the method of rewarming, appear to be major determinants of prognosis.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1989

Prehospital blind nasotracheal intubation by paramedics

Daniel J. O'Brien; Daniel F. Danzl; Edmond A. Hooker; Lisa M Daniel; Michael C Dolan

Blind nasotracheal intubation attempts by paramedics in the field were prospectively reviewed. In particular, we analyzed the frequency, success rate, complication rate, frequency of performance by each paramedic, indications, and patient outcome. Blind nasotracheal intubation was attempted in 324 patients and successful in 231. The average success rate for medical patients was 72.2% (195 of 270 attempts) and for trauma patients was 66.7% (36 of 54 attempts). This difference was not significant (P greater than .05). Even with 59.8% of the 82 participating paramedics attempting blind nasotracheal intubation less than four times over the 19-month study period, the average success rate was 71.3%. There was a significant increase in success when blind nasotracheal intubation was attempted more than three times during the study period (P less than .005). Major complications occurred in 0.9% (three) of the patients. The overall complication rate was 13% (42). The incidence of complications tended to decline with increasing paramedic frequency but did not reach statistical significance (P greater than .05). Blind nasotracheal intubation is a safe initial field airway approach in spontaneously breathing patients in whom there are no contraindications. Even with a low frequency of performance, success and complication rates are acceptable.


Wilderness & Environmental Medicine | 2014

Wilderness Medical Society Practice Guidelines for the Out-of-Hospital Evaluation and Treatment of Accidental Hypothermia: 2014 Update

Ken Zafren; Gordon G. Giesbrecht; Daniel F. Danzl; Hermann Brugger; Emily B. Sagalyn; Beat H. Walpoth; Eric A. Weiss; Paul S. Auerbach; Scott E. McIntosh; Mária Némethy; Marion McDevitt; Jennifer Dow; Robert B. Schoene; George W. Rodway; Peter H. Hackett; Brad L. Bennett; Colin K. Grissom

To provide guidance to clinicians, the Wilderness Medical Society (WMS) convened an expert panel to develop evidence-based guidelines for the out-of-hospital evaluation and treatment of victims of accidental hypothermia. The guidelines present the main diagnostic and therapeutic modalities and provide recommendations for the management of hypothermic patients. The panel graded the recommendations based on the quality of supporting evidence and the balance between benefits and risks/burdens according the criteria published by the American College of Chest Physicians. The guidelines also provide suggested general approaches to the evaluation and treatment of accidental hypothermia that incorporate specific recommendations.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1989

Infrared tympanic thermography in the emergency department

Mary M. Green; Daniel F. Danzl; Herman Praszkier

The failure to diagnose hypothermic and hyperthermic states can have profound clinical implications. Thus, accurately determining body temperature is an integral component of the evaluation of all emergency department (ED) patients. Oral measurements are most commonly obtained but may not reflect core temperatures. Rectal temperatures are considered more reliable but may not reflect fluctuating core temperatures, and are dependent on site placement. The objective of this study was to determine the practicality and comparative accuracy of tympanic thermographic measurements in the ED. Oral, rectal and tympanic readings were compared in 411 patients. There were significant differences when comparing tympanic to oral (R2 = 0.599, P = 0.0001) and rectal to oral (R2 = 0.554, P = 0.0001) temperatures. In contrast, the correlation between tympanic and rectal measurements was R2 = 0.805, with no significant difference between the two, (P = 0.7077). No complications associated with the use of the tympanic probe were detected. Infrared tympanic thermography is an efficient and noninvasive technique for accurately measuring the temperature of ED patients.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1989

Duration of antagonistic effects of nalmefene and naloxone in opiate-induced sedation for emergency department procedures

William G. Barsan; Donna Seger; Daniel F. Danzl; Louis J. Ling; Robert L Bartlett; Ralph Buncher; Candace Bryan

Naloxone is an effective opiate antagonist, but its short half-life limits its usefulness. For outpatient procedures, a longer acting opiate antagonist could eliminate two to four hours of nursing observation in patients postoperatively. A controlled, randomized, double-blind trial comparing the effects of nalmefene, naloxone, and placebo in reversing opiate-induced sedation was carried out to determine efficacy, duration of action, and adverse effects in patients undergoing outpatient procedures. Each patient received 1.5 to 3.0 mg/kg meperidine intravenously before the procedure. After the procedure, each patient received either nalmefene, 1.0 mg; naloxone, 1.0 mg; or saline, 1.0 mL intravenously. Vital signs and assessments for alertness were performed for four hours. Naloxone significantly reversed sedation for only 15 minutes, whereas nalmefene was significantly effective (P less than .05) for up to 210 minutes. Nalmefene was significantly more effective than naloxone in reversing sedation at 60, 90, and 120 minutes. Nalmefene is an effective agent for the reversal of opiate-induced sedation after outpatient procedures.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1988

Airway management of aeromedically transported trauma patients

Daniel J. O'Brien; Daniel F. Danzl; M. Barbara Sowers; Edmond A. Hooker

The airway management of 176 consecutive traumatized patients aeromedically transported from the scene of injury was reviewed. In particular, the frequency of performance and time requirements for both blind nasotracheal intubation and cricothyrotomy were analyzed. Airway control was attempted in 70 (39.5%) patients and successful in 67 (95.7%). The average scene Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score of these 70 patients was 7.16 (SD = 3.94) and ranged from 3 to 15. For the remaining 106 patients the average GCS was 14.3 (SD = 1.36) and ranged from 6 to 15 (P less than .0005). The scene trauma score (TS) of the two groups was 10.2 (SD = 3.11) and 15.2 (SD = 1.38), respectively (P less than .0005). In the field, blind nasotracheal intubation by an emergency physician (n = 59) or paramedic (n = 3) was successful in 62 of 65 cases (95.1%). The complication rate for this procedure was 4.6%. Cricothyrotomy was performed in two patients. Only three orotracheal intubations were performed. The remaining three patients were nasotracheally intubated in the emergency department. Neuromuscular blockade was not used in either setting. Despite the difference in patient acuity, there was no statistically significant difference in scene or transport times between those patients emergently intubated and those who were not (P greater than .05).


Critical Care Medicine | 1989

Hypothermia outcome score: development and implications

Daniel F. Danzl; Jerris R. Hedges; Robert S. Pozos

Multiple rewarming methods have been recommended for the treatment of hypothermia in the ED. Because the hypothermic patient population is heterogenous, a method for stratifying mortality risk when comparing therapies is desired. We used univariable and multivariable statistical analyses to identify variables which discriminated between patient death or survival in the 24 h after arrival in the ED. Prehospital cardiac arrest, a low or absent presenting BP, elevated BUN, and the need for either tracheal intubation or NG tube placement in the ED were found to be significant predictors of patient demise in a large database (n = 428). The likelihood ratio was used to develop and validate an empiric hypothermia outcome score that can be used in future hypothermia treatment studies to account for differences of patient presentation.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1989

Safety assessment of high-dose narcotic analgesia for emergency department procedures

William G. Barsan; Anthony J. Tomassoni; Donna Seger; Daniel F. Danzl; Louis J. Ling; Robert H. Bartlett

STUDY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the safety of high-dose IV narcotics in patients requiring analgesia for painful emergency department procedures. DESIGN Prospective multicenter clinical trial. SETTING Five adult urban EDs. METHODS AND MEASUREMENTS All patients received IV meperidine (1.5 to 3.0 mg/kg) titrated to analgesia followed by a painful procedure. Vital signs and alertness scale were recorded at regular intervals, and patients were observed for four hours. Adverse events were monitored and documented. Comparisons between baseline and postanalgesia intervals were made with a repeated measures ANOVA (Dunnetts test). RESULTS Although statistically significant changes in vital signs and alertness scale occurred, they were not clinically significant. Opiate reversal with naloxone was not needed in any patient, and no significant respiratory or circulatory compromise occurred. CONCLUSION This study of 72 patients demonstrates that high-dose narcotic analgesia is appropriate, well tolerated, and safe when used in selected patients before painful procedures in the ED. Narcotic antagonists and resuscitation equipment nonetheless should be available to maximize safety.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1982

Translaryngeal absorption of lidocaine

Stephen R. Boster; Daniel F. Danzl; Robert Madden; Charles H. Jarboe

Our study was conducted to determine the appropriate dose of lidocaine using the larynx and to characterize the onset and duration of therapeutic serum levels. A mean dose of 5.67 +/- 1.2 mg/kg was topically administered to the subglottic region of seven comatose patients through a cricothyroid membrane puncture. Serial serum lidocaine levels showed that therapeutic levels were attained in 5.1 +/- 3.2 minutes with a mean maximum level of 3.16 +/- 1.52 micrograms/ml and were reached at 18.71 +/- 8.71 minutes. Therapeutic serum levels were maintained for 68.4 +/- 29.7 minutes. Absorption of lidocaine via the airway yields sustained levels, although the duration of onset is less rapid and the maximum serum level is lower than that from an equivalent intravenous dose.

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Jon W. Miller

University of Louisville

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Brad L. Bennett

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Colin K. Grissom

Intermountain Medical Center

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