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Dive into the research topics where Jeffery C. Metzger is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffery C. Metzger.


Prehospital Emergency Care | 2009

The Lifesaving Potential of Specialized On-Scene Medical Support for Urban Tactical Operations

Jeffery C. Metzger; Alexander L. Eastman; Fernando L. Benitez; Paul E. Pepe

Since the 1980s, the specialized field of tactical medicine has evolved with growing support from numerous law-enforcement and medical organizations. On-scene backup from tactical emergency medical support (TEMS) providers has not only permitted more immediate advanced medical aid to injured officers, victims, bystanders, and suspects, but also allows for rapid after-incident medical screening or minor treatments that can obviate an unnecessary transport to an emergency department. The purpose of this report is to document one very explicit benefit of TEMS deployment, namely, a situation in which a police officers life was saved by the routine on-scene presence of specialized TEMS physicians. In this specific case, a police officer was shot in the anterior neck during a law-enforcement operation and became moribund with massive hemorrhage and compromised airway. Two TEMS physicians, who had been integrated into the tactical law-enforcement team, were on scene, controlled the hemorrhage, and provided a surgical airway. By the time of arrival at the hospital, the patient had begun purposeful movements and, within 12 hours, was alert and oriented. Considering the rapid decline in the patients condition, it was later deemed by quality assurance reviewers that the on-scene presence of these TEMS providers was lifesaving.


Critical Care | 2012

Year in review 2011: Critical Care - Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and trauma

Scott A. Goldberg; Jeffery C. Metzger; Paul E. Pepe

In 2011, numerous studies were published in Critical Care focusing on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, trauma, and some related airway, respiratory, and response time factors. In this review, we summarize several of these studies, including those that brought forth advances in therapies for the post-resuscitative period. These advances involved hypothesis-generating concepts in therapeutic hypothermia as well as the impact of early percutaneous coronary artery interventions and the potential utility of extracorporeal life support after cardiac arrest. There were also articles pertaining to the importance of timing in prehospital airway management, the outcome impact of hyperoxia, and the timing of end-tidal carbon dioxide measurements to predict futility in cardiac arrest resuscitation. In other articles, additional perspectives were provided on the classic correlations between emergency medical service response intervals and outcomes.


Critical Care | 2009

Year in review 2008: Critical Care - trauma

Jeffery C. Metzger; Alexander L. Eastman; Paul E. Pepe

Eleven papers on trauma published in Critical Care during 2008 addressed traumatic brain injury (TBI), burns, diagnostic concerns and immunosuppression. In regard to TBI, preliminary results indicate the utility of either magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or ultrasound in measuring optic nerve sheath diameter to identify elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) as well as the potential benefit of thiopental for refractory ICP. Another investigaticc7960on demonstrated that early extubation of TBI patients whose Glasgow Coma Scale score was 8 or less did not result in additional incidence of nosocomial pneumonia. Another study indicated that strict glucose control resulted in worse outcomes during the first week after TBI, but improved outcomes after the second week. Another paper showed the prolonged neuroprotective advantages of proges-terone administration in TBI patients. There was also guidance on improved classifications of renal complications in burn patients. Another study found that patients with inhalation injuries and increased interleukin-6 (IL-6) and IL-10 and decreased IL-7 had increased mortality rates. One literature review described the disadvantages of prolonged immobilization or additional use of MRI for ruling out cervical spine injuries in obtunded TBI patients already cleared by computerized tomography scans. Other investigators found that higher N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels may be useful markers for post-traumatic cardiac impairment. Finally, an experimental model showed that both splenic apoptosis and lymphocytopenia may occur shortly after severe hemorrhage, thus increasing the threat of immunosuppression in those with severe blood loss.


Critical Care | 2011

Year in review 2010: Critical Care - cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Jeffery C. Metzger; Alexander L. Eastman; Paul E. Pepe

This review will summarize some of the data published in 2010 and focus on papers published in Critical Care in regard to cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. In particular, we discuss the latest research in therapeutic hypothermia after cardiac arrest, including methods of inducing hypothermia, potential protective mechanisms, spontaneous hypothermia versus therapeutic hypothermia, and several predictors of outcome. Furthermore, we will discuss the effects of bystander-initiated cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in patients with physician-assisted advanced cardiac life support, the role of hypercapnea in near-death experiences during cardiac arrest, markers of endothelial injury and endothelial repair after CPR, and the prognostic value of cell-free plasma DNA as a marker of poor outcome after cardiac arrest.


Critical Care | 2010

Year in review 2009: Critical Care - cardiac arrest, trauma and disasters

Jeffery C. Metzger; Alexander L. Eastman; Paul E. Pepe

During 2009, Critical Care published nine papers on various aspects of resuscitation, prehospital medicine, trauma care and disaster response. One article demonstrated that children as young as 9 years of age can learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) effectively, although, depending on their size, some may have difficulty performing it. Another paper showed that while there was a trend toward mild therapeutic hypothermia reducing S-100 levels, there was no statistically significant change. Another predictor study also showed a strong link between acute kidney injury and neurologic outcome while another article described a program in which kidneys were harvested from cardiac arrest patients and showed an 89% graft survival rate. One experimental investigation indicated that when a pump-less interventional lung assist device is present, leaving the device open (unclamped) while performing CPR has no harmful effects on mean arterial pressures and it may have positive effects on blood oxygenation and CO2 clearance. One other study, conducted in the prehospital environment, found that end-tidal CO2 could be useful in diagnosing pulmonary embolism. Three articles addressed disaster medicine, the first of which described a triage system for use during pandemic influenza that demonstrated high reliability in delineating patients with a good chance of survival from those likely to die. The other two studies, both drawn from the 2008 Sichuan earthquake experience, showed success in treating crush injured patients in an on-site tent ICU and, in the second case, how the epidemiology of earthquake injuries and related factors predicted mortality.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2012

Excited Delirium Syndrome (ExDS): Defining Based on a Review of the Literature

Gary M. Vilke; Mark L. DeBard; Theodore C. Chan; Jeffrey D. Ho; Donald M. Dawes; Christine Hall; Michael Curtis; Melissa Wysong Costello; Deborah C. Mash; Stewart R. Coffman; Mary Jo McMullen; Jeffery C. Metzger; James R. Roberts; Sean O. Henderson; Jason D. Adler; Fabrice Czarnecki; Joseph J. Heck; William P. Bozeman


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2008

Conductive electrical devices: a prospective, population-based study of the medical safety of law enforcement use.

Alexander L. Eastman; Jeffery C. Metzger; Paul E. Pepe; Fernando L. Benitez; James Decker; Kathy J. Rinnert; Craig A. Field; Randall S. Friese


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2007

Civil sector tactical ems.

Jeffery C. Metzger


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011

Emergency Physician Watchdogs for Law Enforcement: If We Are the Hammer, Everything Will Look Like a Nail

Jeffrey D. Ho; Donald M. Dawes; Jeffery C. Metzger


Archive | 2012

Tactical training and continuous education for the tactical provider

Raymond L. Fowler; Alexander L. Eastman; Brian Krakover; Jeffery C. Metzger; Troy Johnson

Collaboration


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Paul E. Pepe

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Alexander L. Eastman

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Fernando L. Benitez

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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K Delaney

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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M Wainscott

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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P Maher

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Craig A. Field

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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