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Dive into the research topics where Michael G. Corneille is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael G. Corneille.


American Journal of Surgery | 2010

The use of laparoscopic surgery in pregnancy: evaluation of safety and efficacy

Michael G. Corneille; Theresa M. Gallup; Thomas Bening; Steven E. Wolf; Caitlin Brougher; John G. Myers; Daniel L. Dent; Gabriel Medrano; Elly Marie-Jeanne Xenakis; Ronald M. Stewart

BACKGROUND Laparoscopic surgery in pregnant women has become increasingly more common since the 1990s; however, the safety of laparoscopy in this population has been widely debated, particularly in emergent and urgent situations. METHODS A retrospective chart review of all pregnant women following a nonobstetric abdominal operation at a University hospital between 1993 and 2007. Perioperative morbidity and mortality for the mother and fetus were evaluated. RESULTS Ninety-four subjects were identified; 53 underwent laparoscopic procedures and 41 underwent open procedures. Cholecystectomy and appendectomy were performed in both groups with salpingectomy/ovarian cystectomy only in the laparoscopic group. No maternal deaths occurred, while fetal loss occurred in 3 cases within 7 days of the operation and in 1 case 7 weeks postoperatively. This and other perinatal complications occurred in 36.7% of the laparoscopic group and 41.7% of the open group. CONCLUSION Laparoscopic appendectomy and cholecystectomy appear to be as safe as the respective open procedures in pregnant patients; however, this population in particular remains at risk for perinatal complications regardless of the method of abdominal access.


American Journal of Surgery | 2011

Local variations in the epidemiology, microbiology, and outcome of necrotizing soft-tissue infections: a multicenter study.

Lillian S. Kao; Debbie F. Lew; Samer N. Arab; S. Rob Todd; Samir S. Awad; Matthew M. Carrick; Michael G. Corneille; Kevin P. Lally

BACKGROUND Necrotizing soft-tissue infections (NSTIs) are rare and highly lethal. METHODS A retrospective chart review of patients with NSTIs treated at 6 academic hospitals in Texas between January 1, 2004 and December 31, 2007. Patient demographics, presentation, microbiology, treatment, and outcome were recorded. Analysis of variance, chi-square test, and logistic regression analysis were performed. RESULTS Mortality rates varied between hospitals from 9% to 25% (n = 296). There was significant interhospital variation in patient characteristics, microbiology, and etiology of NSTIs. Despite hospital differences in treatment, primarily in critical care interventions, patient age and severity of disease (reflected by shock requiring vasopressors and renal failure postoperatively) were the main predictors of mortality. CONCLUSIONS Significant center differences occur in patient populations, etiology, and microbiology of NSTIs, even within a concentrated region. Management should be based on these characteristics given that adjunctive treatments are unproven and variations in outcome are likely because of patient disease at presentation.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Pediatric radiation exposure during the initial evaluation for blunt trauma.

Deborah L Mueller; Mustapha R. Hatab; Rani Al-Senan; Stephen M. Cohn; Michael G. Corneille; Daniel L. Dent; Joel E. Michalek; John G. Myers; Steven E. Wolf; Ronald M. Stewart

BACKGROUND Increased utilization of computed tomography (CT) scans for evaluation of blunt trauma patients has resulted in increased doses of radiation to patients. Radiation dose is relatively amplified in children secondary to body size, and children are more susceptible to long-term carcinogenic effects of radiation. Our aim was to measure radiation dose received in pediatric blunt trauma patients during initial CT evaluation and to determine whether doses exceed doses historically correlated with an increased risk of thyroid cancer. METHODS A prospective cohort study of patients aged 0 years to 17 years was conducted over 6 months. Dosimeters were placed on the neck, chest, and groin before CT scanning to measure surface radiation. Patient measurements and scanning parameters were collected prospectively along with diagnostic findings on CT imaging. Cumulative effective whole body dose and organ doses were calculated. RESULTS The mean number of scans per patient was 3.1 ± 1.3. Mean whole body effective dose was 17.43 mSv. Mean organ doses were thyroid 32.18 mGy, breast 10.89 mGy, and gonads 13.15 mGy. Patients with selective CT scanning defined as ≤2 scans had a statistically significant decrease in radiation dose compared with patients with >2 scans. CONCLUSIONS Thyroid doses in 71% of study patients fell within the dose range historically correlated with an increased risk of thyroid cancer and whole body effective doses fell within the range of historical doses correlated with an increased risk of all solid cancers and leukemia. Selective scanning of body areas as compared with whole body scanning results in a statistically significant decrease in all doses.


Annals of Surgery | 2005

Trauma Surgery Malpractice Risk: Perception Versus Reality

Ronald M. Stewart; Joe Johnston; Kathy Geoghegan; Tiffany Anthony; John G. Myers; Daniel L. Dent; Michael G. Corneille; Daren Danielson; H. David Root; Basil A. Pruitt; Stephen M. Cohn

Objective:We set out to compare the malpractice lawsuit risk and incidence in trauma surgery, emergency surgery, and elective surgery at a single academic medical center. Summary and Background Data:The perceived increased malpractice risk attributed to trauma patients discourages participation in trauma call panels and may influence career choice of surgeons. When questioned, surgeons cite malpractice risk as a rationale for not providing trauma care. Little data substantiate or refute the perceived high trauma malpractice risk. We hypothesized that the malpractice risk was equivalent between an elective surgical practice and a trauma/emergency practice. Methods:Three prospectively maintained institutional databases were used to calculate and characterize malpractice incidence and risk: a surgical operation database, a trauma registry, and a risk management/malpractice database. Risk groups were divided into elective general surgery (ELECTIVE), urgent/emergent, nontrauma general surgery (URGENT), and trauma surgery (TRAUMA). Malpractice claims incidence was calculated by dividing the total number of filed lawsuits by the total number of operative procedures over a 12-year period. Results:Over the study period, 62,350 operations were performed. A total of 21 lawsuits were served. Seven were dismissed. Three were granted summary judgments to the defendants. Ten were settled with payments to the plaintiffs. One went to trial and resulted in a jury verdict in favor of the defendants. Total paid liability was


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Pediatric vascular injuries: acute management and early outcomes.

Michael G. Corneille; Theresa M. Gallup; Celina Villa; Jacqueline Richa; Steven E. Wolf; John G. Myers; Daniel L. Dent; Ronald M. Stewart

4.7 million (


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2011

Malpractice risk and cost are significantly reduced after tort reform

Ronald M. Stewart; Kathy Geoghegan; John G. Myers; Kenneth R. Sirinek; Michael G. Corneille; Deborah L Mueller; Daniel L. Dent; Steven E. Wolf; Basil A. Pruitt

391,667/year). Total legal defense costs were


American Journal of Surgery | 2008

Screening cervical spine MRI after normal cervical spine CT scans in patients in whom cervical spine injury cannot be excluded by physical examination

Megan B. Steigelman; Peter P. Lopez; Daniel L. Dent; John G. Myers; Michael G. Corneille; Ronald M. Stewart; Stephen M. Cohn

1.3 million (


Seminars in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2008

Common complications following thoracic trauma: their prevention and treatment.

Ronald M. Stewart; Michael G. Corneille

108,333/year). The ratio of lawsuits filed/operations performed and incidence in the 3 groups is as follows: ELECTIVE 14/39,080 (3.0 lawsuits/100,000 procedures/year), URGENT 5/17,958, (2.3 lawsuits/100,000 procedures/year), and TRAUMA 2/5312 (3.1/100,000 procedures/year). During the study period, there were an estimated 49,435 trauma patients evaluated. The incidence of malpractice lawsuits using this denominator is 0.34 lawsuits/100,000 patients/year. Conclusions:These data demonstrate no increased risk of lawsuit when caring for trauma patients, and the actual risk of a malpractice lawsuit was low.


Annals of Surgery | 2006

Transparent and open discussion of errors does not increase malpractice risk in trauma patients.

Ronald M. Stewart; Michael G. Corneille; Joe Johnston; Kathy Geoghegan; John G. Myers; Daniel L. Dent; Marilyn J. McFarland; Joshua Alley; Basil A. Pruitt; Stephen M. Cohn

BACKGROUND Although uncommon in children, traumatic vascular injuries have the potential for lifelong disability. We reviewed these injuries, their acute management, and early outcomes at a Level I trauma center. METHODS Retrospective review of patients identified through trauma registry was query of all noniatrogenic vascular injuries in a pediatric population during a 13-year period. Demographics, injury type and management, concomitant injuries, and inpatient outcomes were analyzed. RESULTS From 1995 to 2008, 8,247 children with traumatic injuries were admitted. Of which 116 (1.4%) sustained 138 significant vascular injuries; 111 arterial and 27 venous. Mean age was 12.7 years ± 4.1 years. Penetrating mechanism was more frequent (57.8%; 67 of 116) than blunt (42.2%; 49 of 116). The overall mean injury severity score was 17.3, of which 12.3 ± 11.7 was for penetrating trauma and 24.1 ± 19.3 for blunt trauma. Thirteen of the 36 patients with torso injuries and one with carotid/jugular injury died. The surviving 102 patients sustained 118 vascular injuries (102 arterial and 16 venous). Of this group, 15 (14.6%) had multiple vascular injuries. There were 23 (22.5%) with torso injuries, 72 (70.6%) with extremity injuries, and 7 (6.9%) with cerebrovascular injuries. Primary repair was the most common arterial repair technique for survivors (25.5%, 26 of 102) and was used more frequently in penetrating trauma (35.0%, 21 of 60) than blunt trauma (12.0%, 5 of 42). Limb salvage was 97.4% (113 of 116). CONCLUSIONS Pediatric vascular trauma is uncommon. Penetrating mechanism is more common than blunt. Injuries to the torso carry a high mortality. Limb salvage is almost universal.


American Journal of Surgery | 2011

Autotransfusion of hemothorax blood in trauma patients: Is it the same as fresh whole blood?

Marc A. Salhanick; Michael G. Corneille; Russell A. Higgins; John D. Olson; Joel E. Michalek; Chantal R. Harrison; Ronald M. Stewart; Daniel L. Dent

BACKGROUND Rising medical malpractice premiums have reached a crisis point in many areas of the United States. In 2003 the Texas legislature passed a comprehensive package of tort reform laws that included a cap at

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Ronald M. Stewart

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Daniel L. Dent

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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John G. Myers

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Stephen M. Cohn

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Joel E. Michalek

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Steven E. Wolf

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Peter P. Lopez

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Deborah L Mueller

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Joe Johnston

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Salvador Sordo

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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