John B. Herrmann
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
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Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1996
Michael J. Rohrer; Bruce S. Cutler; Elizabeth MacDougall; John B. Herrmann; Frederick A. Anderson; H. Brownell Wheeler
PURPOSE It is commonly believed that the incidence of deep venous thrombosis (DVT) in hospitalized children is less than in adults. However, it is possible that the disease is significantly underdiagnosed in children because the index of suspicion of pediatric practitioners is low, a substantial number of patients may have no symptoms, and DVT screening is not routinely performed. We therefore undertook a prospective study to define the incidence of DVT in hospitalized children with no symptoms. METHODS Patients included in the study were those younger than 18 years of age who were hospitalized for more than 72 hours and were identified to have two or more risk factors for the development of DVT and had at least one screening duplex scan. Risk factors for the development of DVT considered were a history of DVT or pulmonary embolism, recent operation, immobilization, trauma, stroke or acute neurologic deficit, the presence of cancer, sepsis, greater than 150% ideal body weight, a hypercoagulable state, and the presence of a femoral venous catheter. RESULTS Over the 9-month period ending December 1994, 1997 patients 17 years of age and younger were admitted to the hospital, and 59 patients including 19 girls and 40 boys were enrolled in the study. The one patient with DVT was a 17-year-old boy hospitalized after a motor vehicle accident with blunt head trauma and a neurologic deficit who underwent multiple orthopedic and neurosurgical procedures. CONCLUSIONS The development of acute DVT in children is unusual. As a result, DVT prophylaxis and screening is unnecessary in young children with only two risk factors for the development of the disease. Young age appears to be an important protective risk factor for the prevention of DVT.
American Journal of Surgery | 1964
Costan W. Berard; John B. Herrmann; Stephen C. Woodward; Edwin J. Pulaski
Abstract 1. 1. Dorsal skin incisions in two groups of guinea pigs were closed with tape and with stainless steel sutures. Animals were sacrificed at fourteen days and wounds studied grossly, histologically and physically. 2. 2. Technical problems of evaluating tapeclosure in animals compromise the decisiveness of any such study. In seventeen of thirty incisions closed with tape, tape-loss and wound disruption occurred within the first forty-eight hours. 3. 3. Thirteen of thirty tape-closed wounds displayed primary healing. In such wounds there were no significant differences between the two groups in wound thickness, breaking strength or tensile strength. Wounds closed with tape or suture were grossly indistinguishable from each other at fourteen days.
Archives of Surgery | 1970
John B. Herrmann; Richard J. Kelly; George A. Higgins
Annals of Surgery | 1965
Stephen C. Woodward; John B. Herrmann; John L. Cameron; George Brandes; Edwin J. Pulaski; Fred Leonard
Archives of Surgery | 1986
Richard G. Fiddian-Green; Patricia M. Amelin; John B. Herrmann; Elias J. Arous; Bruce S. Cutler; Michael Schiedler; H. Brownell Wheeler; Stephen P. Baker
Archives of Surgery | 1981
Nancy L. Cantelmo; Bruce S. Cutler; H. Brownell Wheeler; John B. Herrmann; Paul A. Cardullo
Archives of Surgery | 1973
John B. Herrmann
Archives of Surgery | 1964
John L. Cameron; Stephen C. Woodward; John B. Herrmann
Annals of Surgery | 1964
Costan W. Berard; Stephen C. Woodward; John B. Herrmann; Edwin J. Pulaski
Archives of Surgery | 1979
John B. Herrmann; Mohan Korgaonkar; Bruce S. Cutler