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Dive into the research topics where Scott A. Engum is active.

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Featured researches published by Scott A. Engum.


American Journal of Surgery | 2003

Intravenous catheter training system: Computer-based education versus traditional learning methods

Scott A. Engum; Pamela Jeffries; Lisa Fisher

BACKGROUND Virtual reality simulators allow trainees to practice techniques without consequences, reduce potential risk associated with training, minimize animal use, and help to develop standards and optimize procedures. Current intravenous (IV) catheter placement training methods utilize plastic arms, however, the lack of variability can diminish the educational stimulus for the student. This study compares the effectiveness of an interactive, multimedia, virtual reality computer IV catheter simulator with a traditional laboratory experience of teaching IV venipuncture skills to both nursing and medical students. METHODS A randomized, pretest-posttest experimental design was employed. A total of 163 participants, 70 baccalaureate nursing students and 93 third-year medical students beginning their fundamental skills training were recruited. The students ranged in age from 20 to 55 years (mean 25). Fifty-eight percent were female and 68% percent perceived themselves as having average computer skills (25% declaring excellence). The methods of IV catheter education compared included a traditional method of instruction involving a scripted self-study module which involved a 10-minute videotape, instructor demonstration, and hands-on-experience using plastic mannequin arms. The second method involved an interactive multimedia, commercially made computer catheter simulator program utilizing virtual reality (CathSim). RESULTS The pretest scores were similar between the computer and the traditional laboratory group. There was a significant improvement in cognitive gains, student satisfaction, and documentation of the procedure with the traditional laboratory group compared with the computer catheter simulator group. Both groups were similar in their ability to demonstrate the skill correctly. CONCLUSIONS; This evaluation and assessment was an initial effort to assess new teaching methodologies related to intravenous catheter placement and their effects on student learning outcomes and behaviors. Technology alone is not a solution for stand alone IV catheter placement education. A traditional learning method was preferred by students. The combination of these two methods of education may further enhance the trainees satisfaction and skill acquisition level.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2003

Long-term analysis of children with esophageal atresia and tracheoesophageal fistula

D.C Little; F.J. Rescorla; Jay L. Grosfeld; Karen W. West; L.R. Scherer; Scott A. Engum

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE For children with esophageal atresia (EA) or tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF), the first years of life can be associated with many problems. Little is known about the long-term function of children who underwent repair as neonates. This study evaluates outcome and late sequelae of children with EA/TEF. METHODS Medical records of infants with esophageal anomalies (May 1972 through December 1990) were reviewed. Study parameters included demographics, dysphagia, frequent respiratory infections (> 3/yr), gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), frequent choking, leak, stricture, and developmental delays (weight, height < 25%, < 5%, respectively). RESULTS Over 224 months, 69 infants (37 boys, 32 girls) were identified: type A, 10 infants; type B, 1; type C, 53; type D, 4; type E, 1. Mean follow-up was 125 months. During the first 5 years of follow-up, dysphagia (45%), respiratory infections (29%), and GERD (48%) were common as were growth delays. These problems improved as the children matured. CONCLUSIONS Children with esophageal anomalies face many difficulties during initial repair and frequently encounter problems years later. Support groups can foster child development and alleviate parent isolationism. Despite growth retardation, esophageal motility disorders, and frequent respiratory infections, children with EA/TEF continue to have a favorable long-term outcome.


Annals of Surgery | 1996

Increased risk of necrotizing enterocolitis in premature infants with patent ductus arteriosus treated with indomethacin

Jay L. Grosfeld; Mark Chaet; Francine Molinari; William A. Engle; Scott A. Engum; Karen W. West; Frederick J. Rescorla; L.R. Scherer

OBJECTIVE The authors evaluated the risk of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in very low birth weight infants receiving indomethacin (INDO) to close patent ductus arteriosus (PDA). BACKGROUND DATA Controversy exists regarding the best method of managing very low birth weight infants with PDA and whether to employ medical management using INDO or surgical ligation of the ductus. METHODS Two hundred fifty-two premature infants with symptomatic PDA were given intravenously INDO 0.2 mg/kg every 12 hours x 3 in an attempt to close the ductus. Patients were evaluated for sex, birth weight, gestational age, ductus closure, occurrence of NEC, bowel perforation, and mortality. RESULTS There were 135 boys and 117 girls. The PDA closed or became asymptomatic in 224 cases (89%), whereas 28 (11%) required surgical ligation. Ninety infants (35%) developed evidence of NEC after INDO therapy. Fifty-six were managed medically; surgical intervention was required in 34 of 90 cases (37.8%) or 13% of the entire PDA/INDO study group. Bowel perforation was noted in 27 cases (30%). Factors associated with the onset of NEC included gestational age < 28 weeks, birth weight < 1 kg, and prolonged ventilator support. The overall mortality rate was 25.5%, but was higher in infants with NEC versus those without. The highest mortality was noted in perforated NEC cases. The PDA/INDO patients were compared with a control group of 764 infants with similar sex distribution, birth weights, and gestational ages without PDA who did not receive INDO. Necrotizing enterocolitis occurred in 105 of 764 control patients (13.7%), including 13 (12.3%) with perforation. The overall mortality rate of controls was 25%, which was similar to the overall 25.5% mortality rate in the PDA/INDO study group. CONCLUSION These data indicate that there is increased risk of NEC and bowel perforation in premature infants with PDA receiving INDO. Mortality was higher in the PDA/INDO group with NEC than those PDA/INDO infants without NEC.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2000

Prehospital triage in the injured pediatric patient

Scott A. Engum; M.K. Mitchell; L.R. Scherer; G. Gomez; Lewis E. Jacobson; Kathleen C. Solotkin; Jay L. Grosfeld

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE Identifying major trauma patients in the prehospital setting is essential in determining management, destination, and best utilization of emergency department resources. Few methods of trauma triage have been accepted unanimously. This study prospectively evaluates the efficacy of comprehensive field triage using 12 criteria (simplified version of the American College of Surgeons guidelines) in 1,285 pediatric trauma patients. METHODS Major trauma was defined as occurring in those who died in the emergency room, had major surgery (penetrating injury involving surgery of the head, neck, chest, abdomen, or groin), or were admitted directly to the intensive care unit. The correlation between trauma triage criteria, hospital disposition, and triage accuracy were determined prospectively and compared in the pediatric patients (36 months) with an adult cohort of patients (12 months). RESULTS A total of 1,285 pediatric trauma patients were evaluated and compared with 1,326 adult trauma patients. The most accurate trauma triage criterion for major injury was a blood pressure < or = 90 mmHg (systolic) with an accuracy of 86%. This was followed by burn greater than 15% total body surface area (79%), Glasgow Coma Scale score < or = 12 (78%), respiratory rate less than 10/min or greater than 29/min (73%), and paralysis (50%). Less accurate criteria included a fall from greater than 20 feet (33%); penetrating injury to head, neck, chest, abdomen, or groin (29%); ejection from vehicle (24%); pedestrian struck at greater than 20 mph (16%); paramedic judgement (12%); rollover (3%); and extrication (0%). The Glasgow Coma Scale score was a more accurate indicator of major injury in children than adults, and paramedic judgement was less accurate in children when compared with adults. Of the 379 major pediatric trauma victims, the Revised Trauma Score and Pediatric Trauma Score missed 36% and 45% of these major trauma victims, respectively. The overtriage rate for children was 71% with a sensitivity of 100% (no missed major trauma patients). CONCLUSIONS Physiological variables, anatomic site, and mechanism of injury provide a sensitive and safe system of triage. Continued education of prehospital personnel regarding pediatric trauma and stratification of the current triage tools are necessary to minimize overtriage in an era of shrinking resources.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2000

Is the Grass Greener? Early Results of the Nuss Procedure

Scott A. Engum; Fred Rescorla; Karen W. West; Thomas M. Rouse; L. R. Tres Scherer; Jay L. Grosfeld

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE Minimal access surgery (MIS, Nuss Procedure) is gaining acceptance rapidly as the preferred method for pectus excavatum repair. This shift in operative management has followed a single institutions evaluation of the procedure. This report describes an additional experience with the Nuss procedure. METHODS Twenty-one patients with pectus excavatum underwent repair by the Nuss Procedure. The patients ranged in age from 5 to 15 years (average, 8.2 years). There were 19 boys and 2 girls. RESULTS In 1 patient (age 5 years) the MIS procedure was aborted because of persistence of chest wall asymmetry. The other 20 patients had completion of their procedure without intraoperative complication. The operating times ranged from 45 to 90 minutes; however, there was an additional anesthetic set-up time (average, 45 minutes). All cases utilized a single support bar (11 to 17 inches). Patients underwent extubation in the operating room and were admitted to a ward bed with an epidural catheter in place for pain control and received intravenous analgesia. The hospital stay ranged from 4 to 11 days and averaged 4.9 days. Early postoperative complications included ileus (n = 1), bilateral pleural effusion (n = 2), atelectasis (n = 1), fungal dermatitis (n = 1), pneumothorax (n = 1), and flipped pectus bar (n = 2). Delayed complications included flipped pectus bar (n = 2), marked pectus carinatum requiring bar removal (n = 1), mild carinatum (n = 1), mild bar deviation (n = 1), progressive chest wall asymmetry (n = 3) with 1 requiring bar removal and open pectus repair, pleural effusion (n = 1), and chronic persistent pain requiring bar removal (n = 1). The length of follow-up is 3 to 20 months with an average of 12.3 months. CONCLUSIONS The Nuss Procedure is quick, minimally invasive, and a technically easy method to learn; however, our data indicate there is a significant learning curve. Although previous reports suggest that few complications occur, we believe further assessment of patient selection regarding age, presence of connective tissue disorder, and severe chest wall asymmetry are still needed. Long-term follow-up also will be required to assure both health professionals and the public that this is the procedure of choice for patients with pectus excavatum.


Annals of Surgery | 2007

Laparoscopic splenic procedures in children: experience in 231 children.

Frederick J. Rescorla; Karen W. West; Scott A. Engum; Jay L. Grosfeld

Objectives:The purpose of this report is to evaluate the efficacy of and complications observed after laparoscopic splenic procedures in children. Methods:Review of a prospective database at a single institution (1995–2006) identified 231 children (129 boys; 102 girls; average age 7.69 years) undergoing laparoscopic splenic procedures. Results:Two hundred twenty-three children underwent laparoscopic splenectomy (211 total; 12 partial) by the lateral approach. Indication for splenectomy was hereditary spherocytosis (111), immune thrombocytopenic purpura (36), sickle cell disease (SCD) (51), and other (25). Four (2%) required conversion to an open procedure. Eight additional laparoscopic splenic procedures were performed: splenic cystectomy for epithelial (4) or traumatic (2) cyst, and splenopexy for wandering spleen (2). Average length of stay was 1.5 days. Complications (11% overall, 22% in SCD patients) included ileus (5), bleeding (4), acute chest syndrome (5), pneumonia (2), portal vein thrombosis (1), priapism (1), hemolytic uremic syndrome (1), diaphragm perforation (2), colonic injury (1), missed accessory spleen (1), trocar site hernia (1), subsequent total splenectomy after an initial partial (1), and recurrent cyst (1). Subsequent operations were open in 3 (colon repair, hernia, and missed accessory spleen) and laparoscopic in 2 (completion splenectomy, and cyst excision). There were no deaths, wound infections, or instances of pancreatitis. Conclusions:Laparoscopic splenic procedures are safe and effective in children and are associated with low morbidity, higher complication rate in SCD, low conversion rate, zero mortality, and short length of stay. Laparoscopic splenectomy has become the procedure of choice for most children requiring a splenic procedure.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1999

Evaluation of small intestine submucosa and acellular dermis as diaphragmatic prostheses

Laura K. Dalla Vecchia; Scott A. Engum; Brian Kogon; Eric M. Jensen; Mary M. Davis; Jay L. Grosfeld

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE The repair of large congenital diaphragmatic defects in the neonate continues to be a challenge. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) is the synthetic material most widely used for reconstruction in instances of partial and complete diaphragmatic agenesis. Recurrent hernia is a frequent complication, because this material does not grow with the infant. This study evaluates two novel materials; small intestine submucosa (SIS; Cook Biotech, Lafayette, IN), and acellular dermis (AlloDerm; Lifecell Corp, The Woodland, TX) for diaphragm reconstruction in growing animals. METHODS Sprague-Dawley rats (100 g, n = 87) were anesthetized and underwent laparotomy. The control group (n = 18) underwent a sham laparotomy with a left subcostal incision and closure. The other two groups underwent central excision of the left hemidiaphragm (50% loss) and reconstruction with either a SIS (n = 35) or AlloDerm (n = 19) patch sutured circumferentially with 6-0 prolene. Seventy-two animals survived the operation, and were killed at five separate time intervals (2 weeks, 1, 2, 3, and 4 months). Chest radiographs were performed monthly and before death. Radiographs were reviewed in a blinded fashion by two observers as were the necropsies, and rib deformity was noted if present. Histological examination of the diaphragm patch was performed in each animal. RESULTS There was no evidence of rib deformity noted on gross examination at necropsy or on chest radiograph in either experimental group. At necropsy, all patches were intact without hernia, eventration, or contraction. Histology findings initially showed acute and chronic inflammatory changes in both patch materials that lessened at the 2-month time interval. Both prosthetic patches began to thin at 3 months and was most prominent in the SIS rats. At 4 months, both SIS and AlloDerm remained viable without evidence of necrosis. Each patch showed evidence of fibroblastic incorporation and small capillary ingrowth. These changes were more prominent in the AlloDerm group. There was no evidence of skeletal muscle ingrowth. CONCLUSIONS These data indicate SIS and AlloDerm may be useful materials for prosthetic repair in instances of partial or total agenesis of the diaphragm. Further investigation in a large animal model over a longer duration is indicated.


Annals of Surgery | 1997

Reoperation after Nissen fundoplication in children with gastroesophageal reflux: experience with 130 patients.

Laura K. Dalla Vecchia; Jay L. Grosfeld; Karen W. West; Frederick J. Rescorla; L.R. Scherer; Scott A. Engum

OBJECTIVE The authors evaluate reoperation for recurrent gastroesophageal reflux (GER) after a failed Nissen fundoplication. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Nissen fundoplication is an accepted treatment for GER refractory to medical therapy. Wrap failure and recurrence of GER are noted in 8% to 12%. METHODS Medical records of 130 children undergoing a second antireflux operation for recurrent GER from January 1985 to June 1996 retrospectively were reviewed. RESULTS One hundred one patients (78%) were neurologically impaired (NI), 74 (57%) had chronic pulmonary disease, and 8 had esophageal atresia. Recurrent symptoms included vomiting (78%), growth failure (62%), choking-coughing-gagging (38%), and pneumonia (25%). Gastroesophageal reflux was confirmed by barium swallow, gastric scintigraphy, and endoscopy. Operative findings showed wrap breakdown (42%), wrap-hiatal hernia (30%), or both (21%). A second Nissen fundoplication was performed in 128 children. Complications included bowel obstruction (18), wound infection (10), pneumonia (6) and tight wrap (9). There were two postoperative (<30 days) deaths (1.5%). Of 124 patients observed long term, 89 (72%) remain symptom free. Eight were converted to tube feedings. Twenty-seven required a third fundoplication, and 19 (70%) were successful outcome. Two with repetitive wrap failure due to gastric atony underwent gastric resection and esophagojejunostomy. CONCLUSION Nissen fundoplication was successful in 91% of patients. In 9% with wrap failure, a second Nissen fundoplication was successful in 72%. Reoperation is justified in properly selectedpatients. Conversion to jejunostomy feedings is suggested for neurologically impaired after two wrap failures and a partial wrap in those with esophageal atresia and severe esophageal dysmotility. Repeated wrap failure due to gastric atony requires gastric resection and esophagojejunostomy.


Surgery | 1996

Gastrointestinal perforation and peritonitis in infants and children: experience with 179 cases over ten years.

Jay L. Grosfeld; Francine Molinari; Mark Chaet; Scott A. Engum; Karen W. West; Frederick J. Rescorla; L. R. Tres Scherer

BACKGROUND Premature infants continue to have a high mortality after gastrointestinal perforation. This report describes 179 patients with gastrointestinal perforation and peritonitis and compares etiologic factors, mortality, and causes of death in premature infants and older children in an attempt to predict outcome. METHODS The 113 boys (63.1%) and 66 girls (36.9%) had an age range of newborn (n = 139, 77.6%) to 17 years. Site of perforation was gastric in 16, duodenal in 9, small bowel in 105, colon in 37, and undesignated in 12. Eighteen had multiple perforations. Etiologic factors in newborns (younger than 2 months) included necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) (75, 41.9%), isolated ileal perforations (30, 21.5%), malrotation/volvulus (8), iatrogenic causes (5), and others (6). Gestational age was 29.6 +/- 4.3 weeks for NEC versus 31.4 +/- 5.4 weeks for non-NEC. Birth weight for patients with NEC was 1.45 +/- 0.8 gm and 1.81 +/- 1.0 gm for non-NEC babies. Etiologic factors in 33 older children (older than 2 months to 17 years) were trauma (10), Meckels diverticulum (4), intussusception (2), pseudomembranous colitis (2), adhesions (2), stomal leak (2), others (4), and nondesignated (7). Gastric perforations (n = 16) were iatrogenic in 7, idiopathic in 5, and caused by an ulcer in 4. RESULTS Mortality for NEC was 36 of 75 (48%), 15 of 55 (27.2%) for non-NEC infants (p < 0.05 versus NEC), 15.1% (5 of 33) for older children (p < 0.05 versus NEC), and 4 of 16 (25%) for gastric perforation. Infant deaths were related to overwhelming sepsis, immaturity of systems, and multiorgan failure. Deaths for older children were a result of sepsis, multiorgan failure, and immunodeficiency. CONCLUSIONS Gastrointestinal perforation is more common in premature infants with the highest mortality (48%) noted in NEC. Despite surgical intervention and advances in neonatal intensive care unit care, premature low birth weight infants (especially NEC) continue to have a high mortality.


Seminars in Pediatric Surgery | 2008

Embryology, sternal clefts, ectopia cordis, and Cantrell's pentalogy

Scott A. Engum

Sternal clefts, ectopia cordis, and Cantrells pentalogy continue to be very rare congenital anomalies in pediatric surgery. Unfortunately, these conditions present as neonatal emergencies and demand early surgical intervention. This article reviews the embryological development of the chest wall, specific sternal defect anomalies, along with available methods of treatment.

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Mary M. Davis

Riley Hospital for Children

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