Paul J. Dougherty
William Beaumont Army Medical Center
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Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1999
Paul J. Dougherty
BACKGROUND Because caring for patients who have combat-related amputations is a discontinuous practice, military surgeons must relearn treatment techniques during each conflict. METHODS The purpose of the present long-term study (average duration of follow-up, 27.5 years) was to document the status of patients who had sustained a bilateral above-the-knee amputation in Vietnam and had been managed by the only separate amputee service in the United States Army. A review of the records of 484 battle amputees identified thirty individuals (6 percent) who had a bilateral above-the-knee amputation. Twenty-six (87 percent) of the thirty patients had been injured by a land mine or a booby trap. Fifty-three (88 percent) of the sixty limbs were amputated because of trauma, and the other seven (12 percent) were amputated secondarily because of infection. Data regarding education, employment, marriage and family life, prosthetic use, and psychological care were collected by mail or telephone for twenty-three (85 percent) of the twenty-seven surviving patients. Respondents also completed the Short Form-36 (SF-36) Health Survey. RESULTS At the time of the study, five (22 percent) of the twenty-three respondents used prostheses for walking; the devices were used for an average of 7.7 hours per day. Sixteen respondents (70 percent) were or had been employed outside of the home since the time of discharge. The physical functioning score on the SF-36 questionnaire was significantly lower for the study group than it was for a group of age and gender-matched controls (p < 0.001; Student two-tailed t test). With the numbers available, no significant differences could be detected between the groups with regard to physical role functioning (p = 0.377), bodily pain (p = 0.603), general health (p = 0.407), vitality (p = 0.949), social functioning (p = 0.460), emotional role functioning (p = 0.029), or mental health (p = 0.102). CONCLUSIONS The patients in the present study have led relatively normal, productive lives within the context of their physical limitations.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2003
Seth S. Leopold; Michael T. Casnellie; Winston J. Warme; Paul J. Dougherty; Susan T. Wingo; Susan Shott
BACKGROUND There is controversy about whether patients who take exogenous glucocorticoids, such as prednisone, require supplemental (exogenous) glucocorticoids in order to meet the physiological demands of surgery. In this study, we sought to define the magnitude of the surgical stress response in normal patients undergoing major and minor elective orthopaedic surgery. METHODS A prospective, observational study of thirty patients who had not taken exogenous glucocorticoids and who underwent either elective knee arthroscopy or elective unilateral total knee arthroplasty was performed. Regional anesthesia was used for all patients, and all patients treated with total knee arthroplasty had continuous epidural anesthesia for forty-eight hours after the surgery. The stress response was assessed on the basis of serum and twenty-four-hour urine cortisol levels; comparisons of the urine values were made after correcting for renal function by calculating the cortisol-to-creatinine clearance ratio. RESULTS Preoperatively, patients undergoing arthroscopy and total knee arthroplasty had similar cortisol-to-creatinine clearance ratios. Patients treated with total knee arthroplasty had a significant (p < 0.001) surgical stress response on the day of the surgery, compared with baseline, whereas patients treated with arthroscopy did not. The mean cortisol-to-creatinine clearance ratio in patients treated with total knee arthroplasty was highest on the day of the surgery and decreased on the third postoperative day. However, on the third postoperative day, the cortisol-to-creatinine clearance ratio still was significantly higher than the baseline value (p < 0.001). Significant differences in the serum cortisol levels also were detected between the patients treated with arthroscopy and those treated with total knee replacement. CONCLUSIONS Patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty had a significant surgical stress response (a seventeenfold increase in the cortisol-to-creatinine clearance ratio); patients treated with arthroscopy did not. Additional studies, including a prospective trial of patients taking exogenous glucocorticoids, are warranted. Until they are performed, the significantly increased cortisol production observed in non-steroid-dependent patients following total knee arthroplasty leaves open the possibility that steroid-dependent patients undergoing this procedure could benefit from perioperative glucocorticoid supplementation. Since the non-steroid-dependent patients in the present series did not mount a substantial stress response to knee arthroscopy, our results do not support the use of supplemental steroids for that less-invasive procedure.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2016
Paul J. Dougherty; Douglas G. Smith
No perfect transfemoral prosthesis exists. The ideal of having a prosthesis that closely duplicates the lost limb has been the goal of all prosthetic and surgical developments since before the American Civil War. The prosthesis-residual limb interface has always been problematic for the transfemoral amputee. Traditional sockets often fail in load transfer and skeletal control because of the large soft-tissue envelope surrounding the femur. To gain control and stability, sockets often extend up onto the ischial and pelvic area, which can be very uncomfortable. Research on direct skeletal attachment of prosthetic limbs dates back to the 1940s. Patients who have had early-prototype osseointegrated implants have been very enthusiastic, self-reporting improvements in proprioception, walking ability, comfort, and quality of life. This …
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2004
Paul J. Dougherty; Peter R. Carter; David Seligson; Daniel R. Benson; John M. Purvis
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2009
Paul J. Dougherty; Soheil Najibi; Craig D. Silverton; Rahul Vaidya
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2013
Cannada Lk; Vaidya R; Covey Dc; Hanna K; Paul J. Dougherty
Archive | 2005
Donald H. Jenkins; Paul J. Dougherty; James M. Ryan
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2018
Paul J. Dougherty; Lisa K. Cannada; Peter M. Murray; Patrick M. Osborn
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2018
Paul J. Dougherty; Douglas G. Smith
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2018
Paul J. Dougherty