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Dive into the research topics where Frederick W. Clevenger is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederick W. Clevenger.


Spinal Cord | 1997

The metabolic response to spinal cord injury.

Donna J. Rodriguez; Edward C. Benzel; Frederick W. Clevenger

The metabolic response to trauma, including neurotrauma in general, has been studied extensively, but the acute metabolic response to spinal cord injury (SCI) has not. Therefore, 12 patients with SCI are presented in whom intensive nutrition assessment and management were instituted immediately after injury. Nitrogen balance (NB), predicted energy expenditure (PEE), and actual energy expenditure (MEE) were calculated or measured in each patient. A persistent negative NB was observed in all but one of the 12 patients. The single patient who did not exhibit persistent negative NB (no positive NB from week 2 to week 4 in the face of appropriate feeding) had an incomplete myelopathy, thus implying that the degree of motor dysfunction correlates with the obligatory nature of the negative NB. The negative NB observed in several of the patients did not occur until the second or third post-injury week. In addition, calculations of PEE by successively multiplying the Harris-Benedict equation by an activity factor of 1.2 and then by a stress factor of 1.6, resulted in excessive feeding (as assessed by metabolic cart measurements; ie indirect calorimetry) in the majority of the patients. In all of the 11 patients with persistent negative NBs, protein administration in the amount of 2 g/k of ideal body weight and aggressive caloric delivery did not alter the negative pattern of the NBs. Therefore, it is concluded that the negative NB following SCI is obligatory. Furthermore, the extent of SCI (extent of myelopathy or of neurological injury) correlates with the obligatory nature of the negative NB. In addition, the results from using the above method for estimating caloric requirements and the delayed manifestation of the negative NB may cause an additional tendency to acutely overfeed SCI patients. Therefore, eliminating the activity factor of 1.2 (due to the diminished activity arising from paralysis) and a diminution of the stress factor is recommended for initial PEE calculations. Serial metabolic cart (indirect calorimetry) measurements are recommended to accurately assess the patients subsequent metabolic requirements.


Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition | 1991

Obligatory negative nitrogen balance following spinal cord injury

Donna J. Rodriguez; Frederick W. Clevenger; Turner M. Osler; Gerald B. Demarest; Donald E. Fry

Obligatory nitrogen losses due to paralysis in the spinal cord-injured (SCI) patient prevent positive nitrogen balance (NB) regardless of the calorie and protein intakes. Ten patients with SCI and 20 controls with nonspinal cord injury (NSCI) matched for time, sex, age, and injury severity score (ISS) were admitted to our Level I trauma center. In both groups, total nutritional support was delivered within 72 hours of admission based on predicted energy expenditures (PEE = Harris-Benedict equation x 1.2 x 1.6) and 2 g of protein/kg of ideal body weight (IBW). Subsequent changes in nutrient delivery were based on NB. No SCI patient established positive NB during the 7-week period following injury despite an average delivery of 2.4 g of protein/kg IBW and 120% of the PEE at the time of peak negative NB (-10.5). In six SCI patients, an average increase of 25% in delivered protein and 12% in delivered calories over a 1-week period effected no change in average NB (-7.4 vs -6.8). Indirect calorimetry in five SCI patients showed that calorie intakes were 110% more than average measured energy expenditures. In contrast, 17 of 20 NCSI patients achieved positive NB within 3 weeks of admission. They required an average delivery of 2.3 g of protein/kg IBW and 110% of PEE to reach positive NB. These data demonstrate the phenomenon of obligatory negative NB acutely following SCI. Aggressive attempts to achieve positive NB in these patients will fail and result in overfeeding.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1997

Throughput analysis of trauma resuscitations with financial impact

Emran R. Imami; Frederick W. Clevenger; Simon D. Lampard; Celeste Kallenborn; Joseph J. Tepas

OBJECTIVES In an era of diminishing reimbursement, efficient resource utilization is paramount. The effects of three parallel factors were tracked: (a) coordinated physician-hospital patient care, (b) increasing physician awareness of resources, and (c) in-house trauma attendings. DESIGN Observational study. METHODS A Windows-based database application was made to track all resuscitations at a Level I adult/pediatric trauma center. Time data were immediately entered upon discharge from the resuscitation bay, and further data (Injury Severity Score, length of stay, and mortality) were obtained by linking to a concurrent trauma registry. Group I was a 6-month control. Group II reflects factors a and b, and group III adds factor c, each contributing 3 months of additional data. Statistical comparisons were made using analysis of variance and Fishers exact test. RESULTS There were 2,546 resuscitations with 1,201, 636, and 709 in groups I, II, and III, respectively. The five most frequent dispositions, resuscitation times, and hospital costs were analyzed. CONCLUSIONS Given similar patient groups, factors a and b together and factor c improved throughput in the resuscitation bay by approximately 35% (5-133 min) each. Hospital costs concurrently decreased with no rise in mortality.


Journal of Surgical Research | 1992

Protein and energy tolerance by stressed geriatric patients

Frederick W. Clevenger; Donna J. Rodriguez; Gerald B. Demarest; Turner Osler; Stephen E. Olson; Donald E. Fry

Nutritional support of stressed geriatric patients remains empiric and has classically been limited by tolerance. Although the hypermetabolic response is known to increase protein and calorie demands, tolerance to increased loads of delivered nutrients in older patients has been questioned. We compared tolerance to nutrient delivery and nitrogen metabolism in 38 stressed surgical patients over age 65 to 38 Injury Severity Score or disease matched younger controls. Twenty-seven of the 31 geriatric patients (87%) who maintained normal renal function (serum creatinine less than 2.0 mg/dl) became azotemic (BUN greater than 30) while receiving 1.5 to 2.0 g of protein per kilogram of ideal body weight compared to only 21% of controls. This phenomenon led to inaccuracies in 17% of geriatric nitrogen balance studies because of unaccounted for serum accumulation of urea nitrogen (compared to only 6% in the control group). When calculated protein requirements were administered to the geriatric group, the mean nitrogen balance was -1.6. Resting energy expenditure as measured by indirect calorimetry demonstrated a strong correlation between actual calorie expenditures and calculated needs based on the Harris-Benedict basal energy expenditure (BEE) multiplied by an activity factor of 1.2 and a stress factor of 1.75 for trauma (r = 0.86, P less than 0.05) or 1.5 for general surgery patients (r = 0.72, P less than 0.05). In summary, energy requirements by stressed geriatric patients can be closely defined by calculation of the Harris-Benedict BEE in conjunction with appropriate activity and stress factors. However, attempts to deliver traditional levels of protein lead to azotemia and are frequently unsuccessful in achieving positive nitrogen balance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Surgical Clinics of North America | 1991

Reoperation for Intra-abdominal Abscess

Donald E. Fry; Frederick W. Clevenger

Reoperative procedures for patients with abscess and other septic complications remain among the most difficult management problems in general surgery. The diagnosis of intra-abdominal septic complications has been greatly enhanced within the last 10 years but remains imperfect and requires clinical judgment that transcends objective methods. Surgical drainage remains the mainstay of care for patients with postoperative intraabdominal abscess.


Nutrition in Clinical Practice | 1995

Decision-Making for Enteral Feeding Administration: The Why Behind Where and How

Frederick W. Clevenger; Donna J. Rodriguez

Enteral nutrition has become the preferred route of nutrient administration. Because of vigorous attempts to deliver nutrient enterally in expanded patient groups, many different locations for enteral access have been advocated along with a variety of methods related to rate and pattern of delivery. Because all modes of delivery are not compatible with all sites of access and both need to be tailored to specific subsets of patients, confusion can develop regarding where and how enteral nutrients are best delivered and why. In an era when such a high priority has been placed on feeding through the enteral route, a review of the methods and rationale behind the ever-expanding choices of enteral access is timely.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1994

Evaluation of pulmonary infections in patients with extremity fractures and blunt chest trauma.

D'Alise; Gerald B. Demarest; Donald E. Fry; Stephen E. Olson; Turner M. Osler; Frederick W. Clevenger

The use of preventive antibiotics has become the standard of care in the management of patients with multiple trauma who have injuries at risk for infection. In many areas of surgical practice, preventive antibiotic utilization has been restricted to the perioperative period only. In this study we reviewed a series of trauma patients with combined blunt chest injuries and extremity fractures to determine whether the duration of postoperative antibiotic administration would have adverse effects upon nosocomial pneumonia rates and severity.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1996

The Effects of Positive End-expiratory Pressure on Intrapulmonary Shunt and Ventilatory Deadspace in Nonhypoxic Trauma Patients

Anthony R. Vigil; Frederick W. Clevenger

Controversy exists regarding the routine use of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) in mechanically ventilated patients. We hypothesized that nonhypoxic patients receiving 5-cm H2O PEEP would have improved shunt and PaO2/F10(2) ratios (P/F), without an increased dead space to tidal volume ratio (VD/VT) versus patients receiving no PEEP. Forty-four trauma patients were randomized to receive 5-cm H2O PEEP (PEEP) or 0-cm H2O PEEP (ZEEP). Shunt VD/VT and P/F were measured at 0, 12, 24, 36, and 48 hours after intubation and after extubation. PEEP and ZEEP comparisons used Students t test and the General Linear Models procedure. Shunt was significantly increased at t = 0 and at extubation in the PEEP group. At extubation, the PEEP group demonstrated significantly higher VD/VT and poorer P/F ratios. After correction for baseline values, no statistically significant differences were noted in spite of a trend toward worsening pulmonary function in all measured parameters. These results suggest that routine use of 5-cm H2O PEEP in mechanical ventilated trauma patients is not necessary.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1991

Tear of the cervical esophagus following hyperextension from manual traction : case report

Earl A. Latimer; Frederick W. Clevenger; Turner M. Osler

Cervical esophageal disruption is a known complication of hyperextension injuries of the cervical spine. A patient was seen at our institution after nonprofessional manipulation of the cervical spine. There was no apparent cervical spine injury. Following diagnosis, the neck was explored and the esophageal tear repaired and drained. The patient recovered uneventfully.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1991

Falls and ejections from pickup trucks.

Pamela A. Bucklew; Turner M. Osler; Jeffery J. Eidson; Frederick W. Clevenger; Stephen E. Olson; Gerald B. Demarest

The medical records of 50 patients who sustained injuries during falls or ejections from pickup truck beds and were admitted to the University of New Mexico Level I Trauma Center between January 1985 and December 1989 were retrospectively examined. Falls and ejections commonly involve young adults, and usually occur in the summer months during the afternoon or evening. Twenty-three individuals were thrown from the pickup truck bed during a motor vehicle collision and 27 simply fell out, and this distinction was not related to age or ethanol use. Although those thrown from the pickup truck bed during a crash were less severely injured (average ISS 15.4) than those who simply fell from the bed (average ISS 17.4), this difference was not statistically significant. Mortality was equal in these two groups, with three deaths occurring in each group. Overall, injuries incurred during falls and ejections were more serious than those incurred in MVCs (average ISS 16.5 vs. 14.5, p = 0.06). The head was the most frequently injured body region following falls or ejections (68%), followed by the extremities (46%), the face (28%), the thorax (22%), and the abdomen (10%). Every death in this series was attributed to a head injury. The overall mortality for the series was 12%. Sixteen additional fatalities from falls and ejections during the study period were discovered in a review of the records of the State Medical Examiner. The average age of this cohort was 24 years. Fifteen of these deaths were the result of falls rather than ejections (94%), and 13 were attributed to head injuries (81%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Donald E. Fry

University of New Mexico

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Turner Osler

University of New Mexico

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David Gerding

University of New Mexico

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Emran R. Imami

University of Florida Health Science Center

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