Joe Young
Allegheny General Hospital
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Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1993
Barry L. Riemer; Spencer L. Butterfield; Daniel L. Diamond; Joe Young; John J. Raves; Eric Cottington; Kira Kislan
PURPOSE To analyze the effect on mortality of a protocol for early mobilization with external fixation of patients with pelvic ring injuries. METHODS From 1981 through 1988, 605 patients with pelvic ring fractures and dislocations were treated. In 1982, a protocol for early external fixation of hemodynamically unstable patients and those with structurally unstable pelvic fracture patterns to achieve early mobilization to an upright chest position was initiated. Mortality rates were compared between 1981 (pre-protocol), 1982 (transitional), and 1983 through 1988, after initiation of a protocol of care that included external fixation of the pelvic injury. No statistical changes occurred from 1983 through 1988. RESULTS Mortality rates in pelvic ring injury patients fell from 26% in 1981, to 6% in 1983 through 1988 (p < 0.001), whereas during the study period the mean injury Severity Score (ISS), 23, did not change. The mortality rate of a group of consecutive patients with comparable ISSs, but without pelvic ring injuries did not change. The mortality rate in patients with systolic blood pressure < 100 mm Hg at admission fell from 41% in 1981 to 21% 1983 through 1988 (p = 0.0001). Mortality in patients with closed head injuries associated with pelvic ring injuries fell from 43% in 1981 to 7% from 1983 through 1988 (p = 0.0001). The proportion of patients undergoing external fixation rose from 3% in 1981 to 31% in 1983 through 1988 (p = 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS An organized protocol including external fixation and early patient mobilization to an upright chest position reduced mortality associated with injuries of the pelvic ring. Orthopedic stabilization of major skeletal injuries should be viewed as part of patient resuscitation, not reconstruction.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1991
Stephen W. Brooks; Joe Young; Brian L. Cmolik; Michael J. Schina; Sinda Dianzumba; Ricard N. Townsend; Daniel L. Diamond
Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) has been used over the last 10 years (1982-1992) to study the heart and thoracic aorta. We set out to evaluate the diagnostic applications of TEE in patients with thoracic trauma. Specifically, TEE was performed on patients suspected of having either a cardiac contusion or an injury of the thoracic aorta. Fifty-eight patients admitted with thoracic trauma underwent TEE. Fifty of those patients suspected of having a cardiac contusion also underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TTE). The two diagnostic modalities were compared. In 21 of these patients a wide mediastinum was apparent on admission chest x-ray films. Nineteen of this latter group underwent thoracic angiography in addition to TEE. Two patients underwent post-mortem examination. Of the 50 patients undergoing both TEE and TTE, a cardiac contusion was detected by TEE in 26 patients. Transthoracic echocardiography detected only six contusions in this group. Of the 21 patients with a wide mediastinum, TEE detected three obvious aortic disruptions. These findings were confirmed in each case by angiography. In 16 cases TEE showed the aorta to be normal. This was confirmed on the angiogram in 14 cases and by autopsy in two cases. Transesophageal echocardiography revealed an aortic intimal irregularity distal to the left subclavian artery in two cases. The results of aortography were normal in these last two cases. As a diagnostic modality, TEE more accurately detected cardiac contusions than TTE (p less than 0.001) and was a very sensitive screening tool in the early evaluation of patients with a wide mediastinum.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1988
Eric Cottington; Joe Young; Charles Shufflebarger; Ford N. Kyes; Frederick V. Peterson; Daniel L. Diamond
It has been suggested that if triage criteria are to identify accurately patients with major trauma, not only physiologic status, but also anatomic site and injury mechanism must be assessed. This study examined the influence of physiologic, injury site, and injury mechanism criteria on the diagnosis of major trauma in 2,057 trauma patients. Because the Trauma Score was found to be a highly specific indicator of major trauma (98.7%), the strategy adopted for isolating the factors that minimize inappropriate triage was to determine which, alone or in combination, are the most effective in identifying patients with major trauma among those with high Trauma Scores (greater than 12). Based on this analysis, a set of triage guidelines was developed. The application of these guidelines to the study population indicated an undertriage rate of 4.1 to 6.3% and an overtriage rate of 16.8 to 21.3%, depending on the definition of major trauma.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1989
Glenn W. Laub; Damian Banaszak; John P. Kupferschmid; George J. Magovern; Joe Young
Environmentally induced hypothermia has a very high mortality. Cardiopulmonary bypass affords the best chance of survival from hypothermia but can be time-consuming to institute. We have utilized percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass with recently developed bypass catheters to resuscitate a patient with profound hypothermia complicated by circulatory collapse. Percutaneous cardiopulmonary bypass appears to be the treatment of choice for profound hypothermia.
American Journal of Nephrology | 1982
Richard Davis; Joe Young; Daniel L. Diamond; Edmund Bourke
This paper presents a modification of Tenckhoffs insertion procedure for chronic peritoneal dialysis catheters and reviews the results of a technique of management of catheter malfunction by manipulation which obviates the need for catheter replacement. 43 catheters in 33 patients were observed for no less than 1 year. Catheters which malfunctioned within 3 weeks benefited only marginally from manipulation. In those catheters which functioned for more than 3 weeks, manipulation extended mean survival time by 103% (8.5-17.3 months) and overall survival did not differ statistically from catheters not requiring manipulation. The technique is safe and simple and contributes to the effective management of patients undergoing chronic peritoneal dialysis.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1991
Stephen W. Brooks; Brian L. Cmolik; Joe Young; Ricard N. Townsend; Daniel L. Diamond
Traumatic aortic disruption is an injury associated with high mortality. Early recognition, diagnosis, and surgical repair are important in order to salvage patients with this injury. We report a case in which transesophageal echocardiography, a rapid, minimally invasive diagnostic technique, was used to identify an acute disruption of the proximal descending aorta in a patient with blunt chest trauma.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1994
Yoram Kluger; Gonze; Douglas B. Paul; DiChristina Dg; Ricard N. Townsend; John J. Raves; Joe Young; Daniel L. Diamond
During a period of six years, 765 consecutive patients were treated by the trauma service at Allegheny General Hospital for closed mid-shaft femur fractures that were a component of their injury complex. Thirty-one patients underwent angiography of the involved extremity for indications including loss of pulses in eleven and large hematomas or deformities of the thigh in the remainder. Ten patients (1.3%) were found to have acute vascular injuries. In nine patients there was an intimal flap of the superficial femoral artery (SFA), and in one, a pseudoaneurysm. Two patients had injuries of the femoral nerve. Three patients had no other associated major injuries (Injury Severity Score range, 10-19). Twelve months after the initial injury, one patient developed an arteriovenous fistula of the SFA. Detailed, repeated physical examinations, early utilization of angiography, and intensive follow-up by the trauma surgeon or orthopedic surgeon of patients with closed mid-shaft femur fractures should lead to early recognition of this potentially serious association.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1991
Wanda W. Young; Joe Young; Stanley J. Smith; Michael Rhodes
Criteria for defining the major trauma patient have been specified by physicians using Injury Patient Management Categories (PMCs), a computerized classification that can be used effectively with routinely collected discharge abstract data from non-trauma center hospitals as well as trauma centers.
Abdominal Imaging | 1985
Irwin Beckman; Nilima Dash; Robert J. Sefczek; Anthony R. Lupetin; Jeffrey S. Anderson; Daniel L. Diamond; Joe Young
Acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) is usually seen as a complication of major surgery or trauma. Although this entity is well-known in the surgical literature, little has been written about it in the radiologic literature. A review of patient records from 1975 through 1982 revealed 16 patients with pathologically confirmed AAC on whom at least 1 sonographic study had been performed. Thickening of the gallbladder wall, a subserosal “halo” of edema, pericholecystic abscess, and marked gallbladder distention were consistent findings in AAC. In the proper clinical setting, these otherwise nonspecific findings allow a prompt and accurate diagnosis.
American Journal of Surgery | 1986
John J. Ryan; Ford N. Kyes; William R. Homer; Joe Young; Daniel L. Diamond
Using the generally accepted paracentesis and lavage criteria for laparotomy for patients with blunt abdominal trauma, we found an accuracy rate of 97 percent but a nontherapeutic laparotomy rate of 27 percent. The 17 percent true false-positive rate of paracentesis and lavage is much higher than has been previously appreciated.