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Dive into the research topics where Oscar D. Guillamondegui is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar D. Guillamondegui.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

Selective Nonoperative Management of Blunt Splenic Injury: An Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma Practice Management Guideline

Nicole A. Stassen; Indermeet S. Bhullar; Julius D. Cheng; Marie Crandall; Randall S. Friese; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Randeep S. Jawa; Adrian A. Maung; Thomas Rohs; Ayodele T. Sangosanya; Kevin M. Schuster; Mark Seamon; Kathryn M. Tchorz; Ben L. Zarzuar; Andrew J. Kerwin

BACKGROUND During the last century, the management of blunt force trauma to the spleen has changed from observation and expectant management in the early part of the 1900s to mainly operative intervention, to the current practice of selective operative and nonoperative management. These issues were first addressed by the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST) in the Practice Management Guidelines for Non-operative Management of Blunt Injury to the Liver and Spleen published online in 2003. Since that time, a large volume of literature on these topics has been published requiring a reevaluation of the current EAST guideline. METHODS The National Library of Medicine and the National Institute of Health MEDLINE database was searched using Pub Med (www.pubmed.gov). The search was designed to identify English-language citations published after 1996 (the last year included in the previous guideline) using the keywords splenic injury and blunt abdominal trauma. RESULTS One hundred seventy-six articles were reviewed, of which 125 were used to create the current practice management guideline for the selective nonoperative management of blunt splenic injury. CONCLUSION There has been a plethora of literature regarding nonoperative management of blunt splenic injuries published since the original EAST practice management guideline was written. Nonoperative management of blunt splenic injuries is now the treatment modality of choice in hemodynamically stable patients, irrespective of the grade of injury, patient age, or the presence of associated injuries. Its use is associated with a low overall morbidity and mortality when applied to an appropriate patient population. Nonoperative management of blunt splenic injuries should only be considered in an environment that provides capabilities for monitoring, serial clinical evaluations, and has an operating room available for urgent laparotomy. Patients presenting with hemodynamic instability and peritonitis still warrant emergent operative intervention. Intravenous contrast enhanced computed tomographic scan is the diagnostic modality of choice for evaluating blunt splenic injuries. Repeat imaging should be guided by a patient’s clinical status. Adjunctive therapies like angiography with embolization are increasingly important adjuncts to nonoperative management of splenic injuries. Despite the explosion of literature on this topic, many questions regarding nonoperative management of blunt splenic injuries remain without conclusive answers in the literature.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

Nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injury: An Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma practice management guideline

Nicole A. Stassen; Indermeet S. Bhullar; Julius D. Cheng; Marie Crandall; Randall S. Friese; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Randeep S. Jawa; Adrian A. Maung; Thomas Rohs; Ayodele T. Sangosanya; Kevin M. Schuster; Mark Seamon; Kathryn M. Tchorz; Ben L. Zarzuar; Andrew J. Kerwin

Background During the last century, the management of blunt force trauma to the liver has changed from observation and expectant management in the early part of the 1900s to mainly operative intervention, to the current practice of selective operative and nonoperative management. These issues were first addressed by the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma in the Practice Management Guidelines for Nonoperative Management of Blunt Injury to the Liver and Spleen published online in 2003. Since that time, a large volume of literature on these topics has been published requiring a reevaluation of the previous Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma guideline. Methods The National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health MEDLINE database were searched using PubMed (www.pubmed.gov). The search was designed to identify English-language citations published after 1996 (the last year included in the previous guideline) using the keywords liver injury and blunt abdominal trauma. Results One hundred seventy-six articles were reviewed, of which 94 were used to create the current practice management guideline for the selective nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injury. Conclusion Most original hepatic guidelines remained valid and were incorporated into the greatly expanded current guidelines as appropriate. Nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injuries currently is the treatment modality of choice in hemodynamically stable patients, irrespective of the grade of injury or patient age. Nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injuries should only be considered in an environment that provides capabilities for monitoring, serial clinical evaluations, and an operating room available for urgent laparotomy. Patients presenting with hemodynamic instability and peritonitis still warrant emergent operative intervention. Intravenous contrast enhanced computed tomographic scan is the diagnostic modality of choice for evaluating blunt hepatic injuries. Repeated imaging should be guided by a patient’s clinical status. Adjunctive therapies like angiography, percutaneous drainage, endoscopy/endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography and laparoscopy remain important adjuncts to nonoperative management of hepatic injuries. Despite the explosion of literature on this topic, many questions regarding nonoperative management of blunt hepatic injuries remain without conclusive answers in the literature.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2012

Using the national surgical quality improvement program and the tennessee surgical quality collaborative to improve surgical outcomes

Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Oliver L. Gunter; Leonard Hines; Barbara J. Martin; William Gibson; P. Chris Clarke; William Cecil; Joseph B. Cofer

BACKGROUND Led by the Tennessee Chapter of the American College of Surgeons, in May 2008 a 10-hospital collaborative was formed between the Tennessee Chapter of ACS, the Tennessee Hospital Association, and the BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee Health Foundation. We hypothesized that by forming the Tennessee Surgical Quality Collaborative using the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) system to share surgical process and outcomes data, overall patient surgical outcomes would improve. STUDY DESIGN All NSQIP data from the 10-hospital collaborative for the time periods January to December 2009 (period 1) and January to December 2010 (period 2) were collected. Data on 20 categories of postoperative complications and 30-day mortality were compared between periods. Complication comparisons and hospital costs associated with complications were calculated per 10,000 procedures. Statistical analysis was performed by Z-test. RESULTS There were 14,205 total surgical cases in period 1 and 14,901 surgical cases in period 2. Between periods (per 10,000 cases) there were significant improvements in superficial surgical site infections (-19%, p = 0.0005), on ventilator longer than 48 hours (-15%, p = 0.012), graft/prosthesis/flap failure (-60%, p < 0.0001), acute renal failure (-25%, p = 0.023), and wound disruption (-34%, p = 0.011). Although mortality (per 10,000) was higher in period 2 (237.6 vs 232.3), no statistical difference was noted. Net costs avoided between these periods were calculated as


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2013

Emergency general surgery: definition and estimated burden of disease.

Shahid Shafi; Michel B. Aboutanos; Suresh Agarwal; Carlos Brown; Marie Crandall; David V. Feliciano; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Adil H. Haider; Kenji Inaba; Turner M. Osler; Steven E. Ross; Grace S. Rozycki; Gail T. Tominaga

2,197,543 per 10,000 general and vascular surgery cases. CONCLUSIONS Data organization and scrutiny are the initial steps of process improvement. Participation in our regional surgical quality collaborative resulted in improved outcomes and reduced costs. Although the mechanisms for these changes are likely multifactorial, the collaborative establishes communication, process improvement, and frank discussion among the members as best practices are identified and shared and standardized processes are adopted.


Surgical Infections | 2009

Treatment of Complicated Skin and Soft Tissue Infections

Addison K. May; Renae E. Stafford; Eileen M. Bulger; Daithi S. Heffernan; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Grant V. Bochicchio; Soumitra R. Eachempati

BACKGROUND Acute care surgery encompasses trauma, surgical critical care, and emergency general surgery (EGS). While the first two components are well defined, the scope of EGS practice remains unclear. This article describes the work of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma to define EGS. METHODS A total of 621 unique International Classification of Diseases—9th Rev. (ICD-9) diagnosis codes were identified using billing data (calendar year 2011) from seven large academic medical centers that practice EGS. A modified Delphi methodology was used by the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Committee on Severity Assessment and Patient Outcomes to review these codes and achieve consensus on the definition of primary EGS diagnosis codes. National Inpatient Sample data from 2009 were used to develop a national estimate of EGS burden of disease. RESULTS Several unique ICD-9 codes were identified as primary EGS diagnoses. These encompass a wide spectrum of general surgery practice, including upper and lower gastrointestinal tract, hepatobiliary and pancreatic disease, soft tissue infections, and hernias. National Inpatient Sample estimates revealed over 4 million inpatient encounters nationally in 2009 for EGS diseases. CONCLUSION This article provides the first list of ICD-9 diagnoses codes that define the scope of EGS based on current clinical practices. These findings have wide implications for EGS workforce training, access to care, and research.


Archives of Surgery | 2008

Increased Risk of Adrenal Insufficiency Following Etomidate Exposure in Critically Injured Patients

Bryan A. Cotton; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Sloan B. Fleming; Robert O. Carpenter; Shivani Patel; John A. Morris; Patrick G. Arbogast

BACKGROUND Skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs) may produce substantial morbidity and mortality rates, particularly those classified as complicated or necrotizing. OBJECTIVE To weigh the strength of recommendations using the Grades of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology and to provide evidence-based recommendations for diagnosis and management for SSTIs. DATA SOURCES Computerized identification of published research and review of relevant articles. STUDY SELECTION All published reports on the management of complicated and necrotizing SSTIs were evaluated by an expert panel of members of the Surgical Infection Society according to published guidelines for evidence-based medicine. The quality of the evidence was judged by the GRADE methodology and criteria. Practice surveys, pharmacokinetic studies, and reviews or duplicative publications presenting primary data already considered were excluded from analysis. DATA EXTRACTION Information on demographics, study dates, microbiology findings, antibiotic type, surgical interventions, infection-related outcomes, and the methodologic quality of the studies was extracted. Results were submitted to the Therapeutic Agents Committee of the Surgical Infection Society for review prior to creation of the final consensus document. DATA SYNTHESIS Current surgical and antibiotic management of complicated SSTIs is based on a small number of studies that often have insufficient power to draw well-supported conclusions, with the exception of antimicrobial therapy for non-necrotizing soft tissue infections, for which ample data are available.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2002

Hepatic angiography in patients undergoing damage control laparotomy.

Jon W. Johnson; Vicente H. Gracias; Rajan Gupta; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Patrick M. Reilly; Michael Shapiro; Donald R. Kauder; C. William Schwab

BACKGROUND Timely diagnosis and treatment of adrenal insufficiency (AI) dramatically reduces mortality in trauma patients. We sought to identify risk factors and populations with a high risk of developing AI. DESIGN Retrospective registry study. SETTING Academic level I trauma center. PATIENTS All trauma patients in the intensive care unit who underwent cosyntropin stimulation testing (CST) for presumed AI from January 1, 2002, through December 31, 2004. INTERVENTIONS Cosyntropin stimulation testing, in which response was defined as an increase of 9 mug/dL (248 nmol/L) or more in cortisol level. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Risk factors for developing AI in critically ill trauma patients. RESULTS In 137 patients, CST was performed; 83 (60.6%) were nonresponders and 54 (39.4%) were responders. Age, sex, race, trauma mechanism, Injury Severity Score, and Revised Trauma Score were not statistically different between the groups. Rates of sepsis/septic shock, mechanical ventilation, and mortality were also similar between the 2 groups. However, rates of hemorrhagic shock on admission (45 [54%] vs 16 [30%]), requirement of vasopressor support (65 [78%] vs 28 [52%]), and etomidate exposure (59 [71%] vs 28 [52%]) were all significantly higher in the nonresponder group (P < .01). The increased risk of AI remained after controlling for potential confounding covariates (age, mechanism, Injury Severity Score, and Revised Trauma Score). CONCLUSIONS Exposure to etomidate is a modifiable risk factor for the development of AI in this sample of critically injured patients. The use of etomidate for procedural sedation and rapid-sequence intubation in this patient population should be reevaluated.


Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition | 2007

Feeding the Open Abdomen

Bryan R. Collier; Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Bryan A. Cotton; Rafe Donahue; Andrew Conrad; Kate Groh; Jill Richman; Todd R. Vogel; Richard S. Miller; Jose J. Diaz

OBJECTIVE Patients undergoing damage control (DC) laparotomy require intensive and aggressive resuscitation, and may require additional maneuvers to control parenchymal bleeding. Those patients suffering significant liver injury are at high risk for arterial bleeding deep within the liver, and many require hepatic angiography in addition to hepatic packing. We reviewed our experience with hepatic angiography, and sought to determine its safety in the DC population of penetrating and blunt trauma patients. METHODS A 3-year (June 1997-May 2000) retrospective review generated 37 DC patients. Patients sustaining hepatic trauma constituted the study group. Patients undergoing angiography in addition to DC laparotomy were compared with the group of patients not undergoing angiography. Data regarding mechanism of injury, patient demographics, extent of hepatic injury, and presence of associated injuries were collected. Physiologic parameters including vital signs at admission, lowest pH and base excess in the operating room, and lactate levels in the intensive care unit, as well as volumes of fluid resuscitation throughout all phases of DC were examined. Complications including death, intra-abdominal processes, acute respiratory distress syndrome and/or multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, and acute renal failure were reviewed. RESULTS Nineteen patients (51%) had hepatic trauma and underwent perihepatic packing as a part of DC laparotomy. Eleven had sustained penetrating injury and 8 had blunt injury. There was 1 American Association for the Surgery of Trauma grade I, 5 grade II, 3 grade III, and 10 grade IV injuries. Nine patients in the study population underwent angiography, and eight of these were hepatic artery angiograms. One hepatic angiogram was obtained before operation and seven were obtained in the immediate postoperative period. Six underwent embolization of bleeding hepatic vessels, for a therapeutic liver angiography rate of 75%. There was no statistical difference in physiologic parameters or fluid requirements between the patients who underwent angiography and those who did not. There were no mishaps or complications from angiography or while in the angiography suite. CONCLUSION Hepatic angiography is a safe adjunct to the principles of damage control. It has a high therapeutic ratio, with no significant untoward effect in this small study population.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Is early venous thromboembolism prophylaxis safe in trauma patients with intracranial hemorrhage.

Daniel M. Koehler; Jason Shipman; Mario A. Davidson; Oscar D. Guillamondegui

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to determine if early enteral nutrition improves outcome for trauma patients with an open abdomen (OA). METHODS Retrospective review was used to identify 78 patients who required an OA for >or=4 hospital days, survived, and had available nutrition data. Demographic data and nutrition data comprising enteral nutrition initiation day and daily % target goal were collected. Patients were divided into 2 groups: early enteral feeding (EEN), initiated <or=4 days within celiotomy; and late enteral feeding (LEN; >4 days). Outcomes included infectious complications, early closure of the abdominal cavity (<8 days from original celiotomy), and fistula formation. RESULTS Fifty-three of 78 (68%) patients were men, with a mean age of 35 years; 74% had blunt trauma. Forty-three of 78 (55%) patients had EEN, whereas 35 of 78 (45%) had LEN. There was no difference with respect to demographics, injury severity, or infectious complication rates. Thirty-two of 43 (74%) patients with EEN had early closure of the abdominal cavity, whereas 17 of 35 (49%) patients with late feeding had early closure (p = .02). Four of 43 (9%) patients with EEN demonstrated fistula formation, whereas 9 of 35 (26%) patients with late feeding formed fistulae (p = .05). The EEN group had lower hospital charges (p = .04) by more than


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2003

The utility of the pelvic radiograph in the assessment of pediatric pelvic fractures.

Oscar D. Guillamondegui; Soroosh Mahboubi; Perry W. Stafford; Michael L. Nance

50,000. CONCLUSIONS EEN in the OA was associated with (1) earlier primary abdominal closure, (2) lower fistula rate, (3) lower hospital charges.

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Addison K. May

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Oliver L. Gunter

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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John A. Morris

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Bradley M. Dennis

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Jesse M. Ehrenfeld

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Richard S. Miller

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Susan Hamblin

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Roger R. Dmochowski

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Bryan A. Cotton

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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