Robert L. McCauley
Shriners Hospitals for Children
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Featured researches published by Robert L. McCauley.
The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995
Gordon L. Klein; David N. Herndon; Craig B. Langman; Thomas C. Rutan; William E. Young; Gregory Pembleton; Martin L. Nusynowitz; Joseph L. Barnett; Lyle D. Broemeling; Dawn E. Sailer; Robert L. McCauley
OBJECTIVE Because burn victims are at risk of having bone loss, a cross-sectional study was undertaken to determine whether severe burn injury had acute and long-term effects on bone mass or on the incidence of fractures in children. METHODS Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry of the lumbar portion of the spine was performed on 68 children: 16 moderately burned (15% to 36% of total body surface area) and 52 age-matched severely burned (> or = 40% of total body surface area). Twenty-two severely burned children were hospitalized and studied within 8 weeks of their burn, and 30 others were studied approximately 5 years after discharge. In the severely burned group, both hospitalized and discharged, serum and urine were analyzed for calcium, phosphorus, intact parathyroid hormone, osteocalcin, and type I collagen telopeptide. RESULTS Sixty percent of severely burned patients had age-related z scores for bone density less than -1, and 27% of severely burned patients had age-related z scores for bone density less than -2 (p < 0.005, for each). In the moderately burned group, 31% of patients had z scores less than -1 (p < 0.005 vs normal distribution), but only 6% had z scores less than -2 (p value not significant). There was evidence of increased incidence of fractures after discharge in the severely burned patients. Biochemical studies were compatible with a reduction in bone formation and an increase in resorption initially, and with a long-term persistence of low formation. CONCLUSION We conclude that acute burn injury leads to profound and long-term bone loss, which may adversely affect peak bone mass accumulation.
Journal of Clinical Immunology | 1992
Robert L. McCauley; Vimlarani Chopra; Ying Yue Li; David N. Herndon; Martin C. Robson
The treatment of keloids in black patients remains a medical dilemma. Previous studies have focused on primary alterations in the metabolism of fibroblasts as the key in the etiology of this condition. Yet alterations in the production of various cytokines which may alter fibroblast responses secondarily have received little attention. Twelve black patients with clinical and histological diagnosis of keloids and eight black control volunteers were studied. Peripheral blood mononuclear-cell (PBMC) fractions from both groups were assayed for production of interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-2 (IL-2), interleukin-6 (IL-6), alpha-interferon (IFN-α), beta-interferon (IFN-β), gamma-interferon (IFN-γ), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), and tumor necrosis factor-beta (TNF-β). The production of IFN-α, IFN-γ, and TNF-β were markedly depressed in keloid patients compared to normal controls. However, IL-1 and IL-2 production was not significantly different between the two groups. In contradistinction, keloid patients produce greater amounts of IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-β. Altered levels of immunoregulatory cytokines may play a significant role in the net increase in collagen which characterizes keloid formation.
Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 1993
Melva Kravitz; Beverly McCoy; Denise M. Tompkins; Wendy Daly; Janet Mulligan; Robert L. McCauley; Martin C. Robson; David N. Herndon
Eighty-two children and adolescents between the ages of 30 months and 20 years (mean, 11.8 years) who were admitted to one of two pediatric burn units with a mean initial burn injury of 43.8% total body surface area and a mean age at time of injury of 4.2 years were studied 1 year or more after burn injury (mean, 7.3 years). Subjects were found to have profound at-home sleep disorders, which were manifested as nightmares in 30 subjects (37%), bed-wetting in 20 (24%), and sleep-walking in 6 (18%). Dream content related to normal childhood topics in 45 patients (55%), burn injury in 6 (7%), and burn treatment in 5 (6%). No relationship exists between age at time of burn, length of time after burn injury, cause of burn injury, family history of nightmares, or patient history of bed-wetting and the incidence of nightmares. Daytime naps were reported in 50 subjects (63%), although 46 (mean age, 11.7 years) were well beyond the normal age for napping.
Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2000
Lawren H. Daltroy; Matthew H. Liang; Charlotte B. Phillips; Mary Beth Daugherty; Michelle I. Hinson; Marilyn Jenkins; Robert L. McCauley; Walter J. Meyer; Andrew M. Munster; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; William P. Tunell; Glenn D. Warden; David Wood; Ronald G. Tompkins
To develop a standardized, practical, self-administered questionnaire to monitor pediatric patients with burns and to evaluate the effectiveness of comprehensive pediatric burn management treatments, a group of experts generated a set of items to measure relevant burn outcomes. Children between the ages of 5 and 18 years were assessed in a cross-sectional study. Both parent and adolescent responses were obtained from children 11 to 18 years old. The internal reliability of final scales ranged from 0.82 to 0.93 among parents and from 0.75 to 0.92 among adolescents. Mean differences between parent and adolescent were small; the greatest difference occurred in the appearance subscale. Parental scales showed evidence of validity and potential for sensitivity to change. In an effort to support the construct validity of the new scales, they were compared with the Child Health Questionnaire and related to each other in clinically sensible ways. These burn outcomes scales reliably and validly assess function in patients with burns, and the scales have been developed in such a way that they are likely to be sensitive to change over time.
Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2002
Lewis E. Kazis; Matthew H. Liang; Austin Lee; Xinhua S. Ren; Charlotte B. Phillips; Michelle I. Hinson; Catherine Calvert; Marc L. Cullen; Mary Beth Daugherty; Cleon W. Goodwin; Marilyn Jenkins; Robert L. McCauley; Walter J. Meyer; Tina Palmieri; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Glenn D. Warden; David Wood; Ronald G. Tompkins
The 12-member American Burn Association/Shriners Hospitals for Children Outcomes Task Force was charged with developing a health outcomes questionnaire for use in children 5 years of age and younger that was clinically based and valid. A 55-item form was tested using a cross-sectional design on the basis of a range of 184 infants and children between 0 and 5 years of age at 8 burn centers, nationally. A total of 131 subjects completed a follow-up health outcomes questionnaire 6 months after the baseline assessment. A comparison group of 285 normal nonburn children was also obtained. Internal consistency reliability of the scales ranged from 0.74 to 0.94. Tests of clinical validity were significant in the hypothesized direction for the majority of scales for length of hospital stay, duration since the burn, percent of body surface area burned, overall clinician assessment of severity of burn injury, and number of comorbidities. The criterion validity of the instrument was supported using the Child Developmental Inventories for Burn Children in early childhood and preschool stages of development comparing normal vs abnormal children. The instrument was sensitive to changes over time following a clinical course observed by physicians in practice. The Health Outcomes Burn Questionnaire for Infants and Children 5 years of age and younger is a clinically based reliable and valid assessment tool that is sensitive to change over time for assessing burn outcomes in this age group.
Postgraduate Medicine | 1990
Robert L. McCauley; John P. Heggers; Martin C. Robson
If frostbite is to be treated successfully, direct and indirect effects of injury must be understood. Rapid rewarming helps to preserve tissue by limiting the amount of direct cellular injury. Selective management of blisters helps protect the subdermal plexus, and application of Aloe vera cream (eg, Dermaide Aloe Cream) combats the local vasoconstrictive effects of thromboxane. Oral administration of ibuprofen decreases systemic levels of thromboxane.
Annals of Plastic Surgery | 1990
Robert L. McCauley; John R. Oliphant; Martin C. Robson
Correction of burn alopecia using tissue expansion has recently gained acceptance. Yet, the technical approach to correction of this problem remains one of trial and error. Between January 1985 and December 1988, 102 children underwent placement of tissue expanders for correction of burn alopecia. Two hundred twenty-two expanders were placed during the 178 operative settings. Mean age was 9.1 ± 4.3 years (range, 3—17 years). Forty-two patients previously underwent partial excisions or rotation of flaps to reduce or camouflage the initial burn alopecia. A review of our experience has dictated that proper classification of burn alopecia can influence operative planning and is essential for establishing guidelines for the correction of this problem. We have developed a classification scheme that addresses this problem. Patients are classified as type I, uniform alopecia; type II, segmental alopecia; type III, patchy alopecia; and type IV, total alopecia. The role of tissue expansion is reviewed in each group.
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1989
Robert L. McCauley; Victor Beraja; Randi L. Rutan; Ted T. Huang; Sally Abston; Thomas C. Rutan; Martin C. Robson
Long-term follow-up of breast development in adolescent female patients with burns of the anterior chest wall is poorly documented. Between 1971 and 1976, 28 female patients with photographic documentation of burns to the anterior chest wall involving the nipple-areolar complex were reviewed. All patients were followed at least until their early teens. The mean age at the time of thermal injury was 5.9 +/- 2.5 years, with a mean follow-up time of 8.9 +/- 2.6 years. Thirteen patients (46 percent) were admitted to the Shriners Burns Institute in Galveston for acute care of their burns. Fifteen patients (54 percent) were referred for long-term follow-up or specific reconstructive procedures following care of the acute burns. In spite of significant thermal injury to the anterior chest wall with involvement of the nipple-areolar complex, no patient failed to develop breasts. Twenty patients (71 percent) required releases of the anterior chest wall to assist breast development. All anterior chest wall releases were accomplished with the use of skin grafts or local skin flaps.
Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 1993
Manu H. Desai; Ronald P. Mlcak; Elizabeth Robinson; Robert L. McCauley; Steven S. Carp; Martin C. Robson; David N. Herndon
The cardiopulmonary performance levels in children who are convalescing from thermal injury are unknown. This investigation was designed to evaluate cardiopulmonary function in children with and without inhalation injury. Forty children with a mean time since burn injury of 2.6 +/- 1.9 years and a mean burn size of 44% +/- 22% total body surface area were selected for the study and divided into two groups: inhalation injury (group 1) and non-inhalation injury (group 2). Pulmonary function studies and cardiopulmonary stress testing were completed on all patients. Both groups reached the same endurance level on the treadmill; however, patients in group 1 did so with an increased expired volume, respiratory rate, and ratio of dead space ventilation to total ventilation which indicated that there were greater demands on the respiratory system. Spirometry and lung volumes at rest showed that 64% of patients in group 1 had abnormal lung function compared with only 27% of patients in group 2.
Hand Clinics | 2009
Robert L. McCauley
Though the hand constitutes only 3% of the total body surface area, a burned hand is a major injury. Reconstruction of the burned hand is key to the overall rehabilitation of the burned patient. Whether an isolated injury, or part of burns to a large overall body surface area, loss of the hand represents a major functional impairment. The American Burn Association recognizes the importance of the burned hand by designating it a major injury. In addition, loss of the hand constitutes a 57% loss of function for the whole person. Thus, successful management of the burned hand is important.