Ralph L. Warren
Harvard University
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Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1999
Juan A. Asensio; Santiago Chahwan; Walter Forno; Robert C. Mackersie; Matthew J. Wall; Jeffrey Lake; Gayle Minard; Orlando C. Kirton; Kimberly Nagy; Riyad Karmy-Jones; Susan I. Brundage; David B. Hoyt; Robert J. Winchell; Kurt A. Kralovich; Marc J. Shapiro; Robert E. Falcone; Emmett McGuire; Rao R. Ivatury; Michael C. Stoner; Jay A. Yelon; Anna M. Ledgerwood; Fred A. Luchette; C. William Schwab; Heidi L. Frankel; Bobby Chang; Robert Coscia; Kimball I. Maull; Dennis Wang; Erwin F. Hirsch; Jorge I. Cue
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to define the period of time after which delays in management incurred by investigations cause increased morbidity and mortality. The outcome study is intended to correlate time with death from esophageal causes, overall complications, esophageal related complications, and surgical intensive care unit length of stay. METHODS This was a retrospective multicenter study involving 34 trauma centers in the United States, under the auspices of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Multi-institutional Trials Committee over a span of 10.5 years. Patients surviving to reach the operating room (OR) were divided into two groups: those that underwent diagnostic studies to identify their injuries (preoperative evaluation group) and those that went immediately to the OR (no preoperative evaluation group). Statistical methods included Fishers exact test, Students T test, and logistic regression analysis. RESULTS The study involved 405 patients: 355 male patients (86.5%) and 50 female patients (13.5%). The mean Revised Trauma Score was 6.3, the mean Injury Severity Score was 28, and the mean time interval to the OR was 6.5 hours. There were associated injuries in 356 patients (88%), and an overall complication rate of 53.5%. Overall mortality was 78 of 405 (19%). Three hundred forty-six patients survived to reach the OR: 171 in the preoperative evaluation group and 175 in the no preoperative evaluation group. No statistically significant differences were noted in the two groups in the following parameters: number of patients, age, Injury Severity Score, admission blood pressure, anatomic location of injury (cervical or thoracic), surgical management (primary repair, resection and anastomosis, resection and diversion, flaps), number of associated injuries, and mortality. Average length of time to the OR was 13 hours in the preoperative evaluation group versus 1 hour in the no preoperative evaluation group (p < 0.001). Overall complications occurred in 134 in the preoperative evaluation group versus 87 in the no preoperative evaluation group (p < 0.001), and 74 (41%) esophageal related complications occurred in the preoperative evaluation group versus 32 (19%) in the no preoperative evaluation group (p = 0.003). Mean surgical intensive care unit length of stay was 11 days in the preoperative evaluation group versus 7 days in the no preoperative evaluation group (p = 0.012). Logistic regression analysis identified as independent risk factors for the development of esophageal related complications included time delays in preoperative evaluation (odds ratio, 3.13), American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Organ Injury Scale grade >2 (odds ratio, 2.62), and resection and diversion (odds ratio, 4.47). CONCLUSION Esophageal injuries carry a high morbidity and mortality. Increased esophageal related morbidity occurs with the diagnostic workup and its inherent delay in operative repair of these injuries. For centers practicing selective management of penetrating neck injuries and transmediastinal gunshot wounds, rapid diagnosis and definitive repair should be made a high priority.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1992
Ralph L. Warren; Cary W. Akins; Alasdair Conn; Alan D. Hilgenberg; Charles J. McCabe
STUDY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of temporary IV antihypertensive therapy in patients with acute traumatic thoracic aortic disruption. DESIGN Retrospective chart review of all patients treated for proven traumatic aortic disruption during the ten-year period of 1980 through 1989. SETTING Emergency department of a large, urban, Level I trauma center. INTERVENTIONS Preoperative IV beta-blockade and nitroprusside after initial resuscitation in hemodynamically stable patients. RESULTS Thirty-seven patients with angiographically proven aortic disruption were separated retrospectively into one of three groups. Group 1 (15 patients without preoperative antihypertensive therapy) had two deaths. Group 2 (15 patients treated for two to seven hours [mean, 3.8 hours] before surgery with antihypertensives) had one death. Group 3 (seven patients treated with antihypertensives for 24 hours to four months before surgery to allow recovery from associated severe injuries) had one death. There were no complications resulting from antihypertensive therapy. CONCLUSION Temporary antihypertensive therapy appears to be safe and effective in patients with aortic disruption.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1995
Charles D. Godley; Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren; William S. Rosenberg
Traumatic subarachnoid-pleural fistula was recently diagnosed in an 18-year-old male after a gunshot wound in the chest and spinal column. The diagnosis was suggested by persistent pleural drainage and headache in the setting of signs of spinal injury at the thoracic level. Computed tomographic myelography delineated the dural injury. The fistulous connection was defined and repaired at operation. This paper describes the diagnostic and therapeutic features encountered in the management of this rare disorder.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1997
Thomas E. Clancy; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 1997
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2002
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2006
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2005
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2004
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2003
Charles J. McCabe; Ralph L. Warren