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Dive into the research topics where Marlin Wayne Causey is active.

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Featured researches published by Marlin Wayne Causey.


American Journal of Surgery | 2011

Validation of noninvasive hemoglobin measurements using the Masimo Radical-7 SpHb Station

Marlin Wayne Causey; Seth Miller; Andrew Foster; Alec C. Beekley; David Zenger; Matthew J. Martin

BACKGROUND Hemoglobin levels must be obtained through blood draws, which are invasive, time-consuming, and provide only 1 data point at a time rather than continuous measurements. The Masimo Radical-7 SpHb Station (Masimo Corporation, Irvine, CA) has been shown by its manufacturers to provide accurate noninvasive hemoglobin measurements in physiologically normal patients. The objective of this study was to validate noninvasive hemoglobin measurements using the Masimo Radical-7 device. METHODS Data were prospectively collected in 2 cohorts of patients: major operations requiring hemodynamic monitoring (operating room [OR]) and critically ill patients (intensive care unit [ICU]). Noninvasive hemoglobin measurements (SpHb) were recorded and were then compared with laboratory hemoglobin measurements. RESULTS Data were collected on 60 patients (OR = 25 and ICU = 45). The overall correlation of the Masimo SpHb and the laboratory Hb was .77 (P < .001) in the OR group with a mean difference of .29 g/dL (95% confidence interval [CI], .08-.49). The overall correlation in the ICU group was .67 (P < .001) with a mean difference of .05 g/dL (95% CI, -.22 to -.31). CONCLUSIONS Noninvasive hemoglobin monitoring is a new technology that correlated with laboratory values and supports the continued study of noninvasive hemoglobin monitoring.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2011

The impact of obesity on outcomes following major surgery for Crohn's disease: an American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program assessment.

Marlin Wayne Causey; Eric K. Johnson; Seth Miller; Matthew J. Martin; Justin A. Maykel; Scott R. Steele

BACKGROUND: Whereas Crohns disease is traditionally thought to represent a wasting disease, little is currently known about the incidence and impact of obesity in this patient cohort. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the perioperative outcomes in patients with Crohns disease who were obese vs those who were not obese undergoing major abdominal surgery. DESIGN: This study is a retrospective review of the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database (2005–2008). Risk-adjusted 30-day outcomes were assessed by the use of regression modeling accounting for patient characteristics, comorbidities, and surgical procedures. PATIENTS: Included were all patients with Crohns disease who were undergoing abdominal operations. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The primary outcomes measured were short-term perioperative outcomes. Obesity was defined as a BMI of 30 or greater. RESULTS: We identified 2319 patients (mean age, 41.6 y; 55% female). Of these patients, 379 (16%) met obesity criteria, 2% were morbidly obese, and 0.3% were super obese. Rates of obesity significantly increased each year over the study period. Twenty-five percent of the surgeries were performed laparoscopically (obese 21% vs nonobese 26%). Six percent were emergent, with no difference in patients with obesity. Operative times were significantly longer among patients with obesity (177 min) compared with patients who were not obese (164 min). After adjusting for differences in comorbidities and steroid use, overall perioperative morbidity was significantly higher in the obese cohort (32% vs 22% nonobese; OR 1.9). In addition, the rates of postoperative complications increased directly with rising BMI. Irrespective of procedure type, the patients who were obese were significantly more likely to experience wound infections (OR 1.7), which increased even further in patients who were morbidly obese (BMI >40; OR 7.1). By specific operation, postoperative morbidity was increased in patients with obesity following colectomies with primary anastomosis for both open and laparoscopic approaches (OR 2.9 and OR 3.8). Cardiac, pulmonary, and renal complications as well as overall mortality did not differ significantly based on BMI. LIMITATIONS: This study was limited by being a retrospective review, and by using data limited to the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. CONCLUSION: Increasing BMI adversely affects perioperative morbidity in patients with Crohns disease.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Identifying Risk Factors for Renal Failure and Myocardial Infarction Following Colorectal Surgery

Marlin Wayne Causey; Justin A. Maykel; Quinton Hatch; Seth Miller; Scott R. Steele

BACKGROUND The development of acute renal failure and myocardial infarction (MI) following colectomy prolongs recovery and is associated with worse outcomes. The purpose of this study is to identify perioperative factors that predispose patients to an adverse cardiac or renal complication. MATERIALS AND METHODS We conducted a retrospective review of colectomies from 2001 to 2009. Patients were evaluated based upon the electronic inpatient record and followed to determine the incidence of acute renal failure (creatinine elevation over 50% of baseline) and myocardial injury. RESULTS A total of 339 inpatient records were reviewed, of which 134 were female (40%) and 205 male (60%). The mean age was 61.96 ± 16.2 years with 39.5% right hemicolectomies, 22.7% sigmoidectomy, 13.9% Left hemicolectomy, 11.5% total abdominal colectomy, and 6.2% for ileocectomy and transverse colectomy. Within the cohort, 13.9% had baseline renal insufficiency (Cr > 1.4), 7.1% sustained anastomotic leak, 23.9% required postoperative intubation, 15% sustained postoperative sepsis, 11.2% postoperative MI, and 5% clinically significant acidosis. Excluding patients with an anastomotic leak, postoperative intubation, and sepsis, we found that the need for blood product transfusion was associated with postoperative acute renal failure (OR= 7.15 [2.4-20.7]). Preoperative creatinine > 1.5, limited functional capacity, and preoperative systolic blood pressure < 90 mm Hg were all associated with increased MI rates (OR= 15.7 [3.6-66.8], 9.5 [2.1-42.2], 12.0 [5.523-26.072], and 40.6 [1.7-968], respectively). CONCLUSION This study demonstrates that several potentially modifiable preoperative and intraoperative factors exist that predispose patients to postoperative cardiac and renal dysfunction in the absence of major surgical complications.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2014

The impact of age on colorectal cancer incidence, treatment, and outcomes in an equal-access health care system.

Steele; Park Ge; Eric K. Johnson; Matthew J. Martin; Alexander Stojadinovic; Justin A. Maykel; Marlin Wayne Causey

BACKGROUND: Inferior outcomes in younger patients with colorectal cancer may be associated with multiple factors, including tumor biology, delayed diagnosis, disparities such as access to care, and/or treatment differences. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to examine age-based colorectal cancer outcomes in an equal-access health care system. DESIGN: This study is a retrospective large multi-institutional database analysis. PATIENTS: Patients with colorectal cancer included in the Department of Defense Automated Central Tumor Registry (January 1993 to December 2008) were stratified by age <40, 40 to 49, 50 to 79, and ≥80 years to determine the effect of age on incidence, treatment, and outcomes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcomes measured were the stage at presentation, adjuvant therapy use, 3- and 5-year disease-free survival, and overall survival. RESULTS: Some 7948 patients were identified; most (77%) patients were in the 50- to 79-year age group. Overall, 25% presented with stage III disease. Compared with patients aged 50 to 79 and ≥80 years, patients aged <40 and 40 to 49 years presented more frequently with advanced disease (stage III (35% and 35% vs 28% and 26%) and stage IV (24% and 21% vs 18% and 15%); all p < 0.001). Adjuvant chemotherapy use in stage III patients was 62%; those patients ≥80 and 50 to 79 years had decreased use (p < 0.001). Overall recurrence was 8.1% at 3 years and 9.7% at 5 years, with the highest rates in patients <40 years (11.8%; p = 0.007). Overall survival was worse in patients ≥80 years, whereas the remaining cohorts were similar. For stage III disease, patients 40 to 49 years had the highest survival among all cohorts (p < 0.001). LIMITATIONS: This study was limited by the lack of specific comorbid information and the limitations inherent to large database reviews. CONCLUSIONS: In an equal-access system, young age at presentation (<50 years) was associated with advanced stage and higher recurrence of colorectal cancer, but similar survival in comparison with older patients. Although increased adjuvant therapy use in younger patients may partially account for stage-specific increases in survival, the relative decreased chemotherapy use overall requires further evaluation.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2010

Gallbladder duplication: evaluation, treatment, and classification ☆ ☆☆

Marlin Wayne Causey; Seth Miller; Colby A. Fernelius; Jeanette R. Burgess; Tommy A. Brown; Christopher R. Newton

Duplicate gallbladder is a rare congenital anomaly resulting from abnormalities in embryogenesis during the fifth and sixth weeks of gestation. Approximately 210 cases have been described. Variations include duplicate, triplicate, and septated gallbladder. We encountered a 15-year-old girl with both a duplicated gallbladder and a duplicated cystic duct who underwent successful laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This combination is extremely unusual, and based upon our findings in this case and a review of the literature, we propose the Unified Classification of Multiple Gallbladders.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2012

Valproic acid reversed pathologic endothelial cell gene expression profile associated with ischemia–reperfusion injury in a swine hemorrhagic shock model

Marlin Wayne Causey; Shashikumar Salgar; Niten Singh; Matthew J. Martin; Jonathan D. Stallings

BACKGROUND Vascular endothelial cells serve as the first line of defense for end organs after ischemia and reperfusion injuries. The full etiology of this dysfunction is poorly understood, and valproic acid (VPA) has proven to be beneficial after traumatic injury. The purpose of this study was to determine the mechanism of action through which VPA exerts its beneficial effects. METHODS Sixteen Yorkshire swine underwent a standardized protocol for an ischemia-reperfusion injury through hemorrhage and a supraceliac cross-clamp with ensuing 6-hour resuscitation. The experimental swine (n = 6), received VPA at cross-clamp application and were compared with a sham (n = 5) and injury-control models (n = 5). Aortic endothelium was harvested, and microarray analysis was performed along with a functional clustering analysis with gene transcript validation using relative quantitative polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS Clinical comparison of experimental swine matched for sex, weight, and length demonstrated that VPA significantly decreased resuscitative requirements, with improved hemodynamics and physiologic laboratory measurements. Six transcript profiles from the VPA treatment were compared with the 1536 gene transcripts (529 up and 1007 down) from sham and injury-control swine. Microarray analysis and a Database for Annotation, Visualization and Integrated Discovery functional pathway analysis approach identified biologic processes associated with pathologic vascular endothelial function, specifically through functional cluster pathways involving apoptosis/cell death and angiogenesis/vascular development, with five specific genes (THBS1, TNFRSF12A, ANGPTL4, RHOB, and RTN4) identified as members of both functional clusters. This study also examined gene expression of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β (TGF-β1, TGF-β2, and TGF-β-releasing thrombospondin 1 [THBS1]) and genes expressing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) C, VEGFD, and VEGFR1 and found that these genes were involved in the endothelial functional preservation associated with VPA administration. CONCLUSIONS VPA minimized pathologic endothelial cell function through the TGF-β and VEGF functional pathways. This study also implicates that integrated functional modeling and analysis will enable advancements in endothelial dysfunction using a systems biology approach.


American Journal of Surgery | 2012

An assessment of different scoring systems in cirrhotic patients undergoing nontransplant surgery.

Marlin Wayne Causey; Scott R. Steele; Zachary Farris; David S. Lyle; Alan L Beitler

BACKGROUND Determining surgical risk in cirrhotic patients is difficult and multiple scoring systems have sought to quantify this risk. The purpose of our study was to assess the impact of Childs-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP), Model of End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD), and MELD-Sodium (MELD-Na) scores on postoperative morbidity and mortality for cirrhotic patients undergoing nontransplant surgery. METHODS We performed a single-center retrospective review of all cirrhotic patients who underwent nontransplant surgery under general anesthesia over a 6-year period of time to analyze outcomes using the 3 scoring systems. RESULTS Sixty-four cirrhotic patients (mean age, 57 y; 62 men) underwent nontransplant surgery under general anesthesia. A CTP score of ≥ 7.5 was associated with an 8.3-fold increased risk of 30-day morbidity, a MELD score of ≥ 14.5 was associated with a 5.4-fold increased risk of 3-month mortality, and a MELD-Na score ≥ 14.5 was associated with a 4.5-fold increased risk of 1-year mortality. Emergent surgery, the presence of ascites, and low serum sodium level were associated significantly with morbidity and 1-year mortality. CONCLUSIONS The major strengths of the 3 scoring systems are for CTP in estimating 30-day morbidity, MELD for estimating 3-month mortality, and MELD-Na for estimating 1-year mortality.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Transcriptional Analysis of Novel Hormone Receptors PGRMC1 and PGRMC2 as Potential Biomarkers of Breast Adenocarcinoma Staging

Marlin Wayne Causey; Laurel J. Huston; Dawn M. Harold; Cameron J. Charaba; Danielle L. Ippolito; Zachary S. Hoffer; Tommy A. Brown; Jonathan D. Stallings

BACKGROUND The expression of progesterone receptor membrane component 1 (PGRMC1) in breast cancer has generated interest in this recently discovered protein because of its role in tumorigenesis. However, correlations between patient age, PGRMC1 gene expression, breast cancer morphology, and breast cancer stage have not been adequately studied. Furthermore, very little is known about possible roles for other PGRMC isoforms in breast cancer, like PGRMC2. Thus, we examined the expression of PGRMC1 and PGRMC2 mRNA by relative quantitative PCR (RelqPCR) and determined whether transcript levels correlate with age, breast cancer staging, estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) status, and other morphometric features routinely used during the pathological examination of breast ductal adenocarcinomas. METHODS Twenty-eight frozen or paraffin embedded breast cancer samples (ductal carcinoma in situ and stages I thru IV invasive ductal adenocarcinoma) and 10 control benign breast tissue samples were randomly selected and interrogated by RelqPCR to determine PGRMC1, 2, and ERα mRNA transcript levels. To control for slight variations in sample preparation, receptor transcript was normalized to the housekeeping gene phosphoglycerate kinase 1 (PGK1). Descriptive statistics and ANOVA of multiparametric datasets were used to correlate transcript levels with pathological staging parameters. RESULTS PGRMC1 mRNA levels decreased significantly with patient age (Pearsons correlation -0.369; P=0.035), whereas PGRMC2 levels did not. Although the mean relative expression of PGRMC1 significantly decreased in stage II breast cancer compared with controls (P=0.050), it was no longer significant when age was considered a covariance (P=0.371). On the other hand, PGRMC2 mRNA transcript was significantly decreased in stage II breast cancer when compared to stage III cancer (P=0.028) in a manner independent of age (corrected model Bonferroni pair wise comparison, P=0.036). Furthermore, PGRMC2 levels positively correlated with ERα mRNA transcripts in patients with ER positive tumors (Pearsons correlation 0.503, P=0.096). CONCLUSIONS Decreases in PGRMC1 mRNA are partially explained by increasing patient age. On the other hand, compared to stage III, PCRMC2 mRNA was significantly decreased in stage II adenocarcinoma of the breast in an age-independent manner. Additionally, PGRMC2 mRNA levels displayed a positive correlation with ERα transcripts. Thus, in addition to morphometric pathologic staging criteria, measurements of PGRMC2 mRNA may be useful for distinguishing low stage tumors from higher stages that require more aggressive clinical management, and may be a useful test when tumor ER IHC results are equivocal.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2012

The efficacy of Combat Gauze in extreme physiologic conditions

Marlin Wayne Causey; Derek P. McVay; Seth Miller; Alec C. Beekley; Matthew J. Martin

INTRODUCTION Combat Gauze (CG) is currently the most widely used hemostatic dressing in combat. The testing of CG was initially performed in healthy and physiologically normal animals. The goal this study was to assess the efficacy in a model of severe acidosis and coagulopathy. METHODS To obtain an acidotic and coagulopathic model, Yorkshire swine sustained 35% blood volume hemorrhage followed by a 50-min supraceliac aortic ischemia-reperfusion injury with 6-h resuscitation (epinephrine to keep mean arterial pressure >40 and intravenous fluids to keep central venous pressure >4). We created a femoral artery injury and randomized the animals to CG versus a standard gauze (SG) dressing. We performed rotational thromboelastography with both CG and SG. RESULTS Using our model, 17 anesthetized Yorkshire swine developed appropriately significant coagulopathy, acidosis, and anemia. The SG failure rate was 100% on the first application and worked once on the second application. Combat Gauze was successful in achieving hemostasis 93% of the time on the first application and had 100% success with the second application. Rotational thromboelastography demonstrated that the only difference was a decreased clotting time with CG compared with SG (P = 0.012). CONCLUSIONS Combat Gauze significantly outperforms standard gauze dressings in a model of major vascular hemorrhage in acidotic and coagulopathic conditions. This effect appears to result from a decreased time lag between activation and first detectable clotting. Combat Gauze appears to maintain its efficacy even in the setting of severe acidosis and coagulopathy for the control of hemorrhage from vascular injury.


American Journal of Surgery | 2011

The morbidity of Clostridium difficile infection after elective colonic resection—results from a national population database

Kelly Lesperance; Marlin Wayne Causey; Michael Spencer; Scott R. Steele

BACKGROUND Clostridium difficile (CD), a gram-positive rod bacterium, resides normally within the human colon. Antibiotic treatment alters normal colonic flora, potentiating abnormal overgrowth of CD. METHODS This study examined the 2004 to 2006 Nationwide Inpatient Sample to determine outcomes of CD colitis after 695,010 elective colonic resections. RESULTS CD infection, occurring in 1.4% of patients, was associated with higher pulmonary (12.1% vs 6.4%) and gastrointestinal (12.8% vs 10.5%) complications as well as an increased length of stay (22.6 vs 10.9 days) and mortality (16.2% vs 4.9%; all P < .001). CD colitis patients more frequently held Medicare insurance (68% vs 51%) and underwent small segmental colonic resection as opposed to a defined anatomic resection (20.0% vs 9.9%; P < .001). An underlying diagnosis of colon cancer was associated with a lower incidence of CD colitis (odds ratio, .71; 95% confidence interval, .59-.84; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS CD colitis is associated with worse outcomes after elective colonic resection.

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Scott R. Steele

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Seth Miller

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Matthew J. Martin

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Niten Singh

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Eric K. Johnson

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Justin A. Maykel

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Tommy A. Brown

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Daniel Nelson

Madigan Army Medical Center

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Derek P. McVay

Madigan Army Medical Center

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