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Dive into the research topics where Sharmila Dissanaike is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharmila Dissanaike.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2009

Epidemiology of burn injuries: Highlighting cultural and socio-demographic aspects

Sharmila Dissanaike; Maham Rahimi

Burns are devastating injuries that disproportionately affect people in developing countries, including children. In addition to a high mortality rate, survivors are burdened with life-long physical and emotional scars. The etiology and nature of burn injuries varies significantly by country, and this chapter explores the predominant causes and patterns of burn injury in both the developing and industrialized worlds. Gender differences play a significant role in the risk of burn injuries, across a spectrum with a predominance of women injured in fires from cooking and heating fuels in the developing world and industrial accidents primarily affecting men in developed nations. Children are particularly vulnerable to burn injuries, accounting for almost 50% of all burn patients in some studies. A majority of pediatric burns are scald injuries usually affecting very young children below the age of 5 years, and we discuss the behavioral patterns underlying this finding. Finally, the elderly form a rapidly increasing proportion of the population in many countries, and are often burdened with comorbidities that are likely to pose significant challenges in burn care.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2009

Variation in the TLR4 gene influences the risk of organ failure and shock posttrauma: a cohort study.

Sherene Shalhub; Christopher E. Junker; Scott D. Imahara; Michael N. Mindrinos; Sharmila Dissanaike; Grant E. O'Keefe

BACKGROUND Genetic variation contributes to risk and outcomes of sepsis. We sought to determine whether variation in inflammation related genes is associated with severity of sepsis in trauma patients. METHODS A cohort of severely injured Caucasian patients was studied and genotyped for candidate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). These were toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) A896G, tumor necrosis factor-alpha G-308A, interleukin-6 G-174C, interleukin-1beta C-31T, and cluster of differentiation marker 14C-159T. SNP genotypes among patients with sepsis and complicated sepsis were analyzed by chi2 and logistic regression. Six haplotype-tagging SNPs in the TLR4 gene were subsequently examined to analyze their influence on TLR4 A896G SNPs relationship to sepsis severity. RESULTS We enrolled 598 patients. Complicated sepsis developed in 147 (25%). Adjusting for independent risk factors, carriage of the variant TLR4 896 G allele was associated with decreased risk of complicated sepsis (odds ratio = 0.3, 95% confidence interval, 0.1-0.7, p = 0.008). Furthermore, two haplotypes seemed to better characterize this risk than the variant TLR4 896G allele. The variant TLR4 896G allele is linked to one common haplotype, which seems to confer a considerably reduced risk of complicated sepsis. (aOR = 0.2 95% confidence interval, 0.05-0.7, p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Variation within TLR4 gene is associated with severity of posttraumatic sepsis. This risk may not be solely related to TLR4 A896G SNP. It is likely that other, uncharacterized variations in the TLR4 gene contribute to sepsis severity. A thorough evaluation of variability within the TLR4 gene is needed to characterize sepsis risk.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2009

Epidemiology of burn injuries II: Psychiatric and behavioural perspectives

Jodi B. A. McKibben; Lisa Ekselius; Deborah C. Girasek; Neda F. Gould; C. Holzer; Michael Rosenberg; Sharmila Dissanaike; Andrea Carlson Gielen

Modern technological advances have decreased the incidence and severity of burn injuries, and medical care improvements of burn injuries have significantly increased survival rates, particularly in developed countries. Still, fire-related burn injuries are responsible for 300,000 deaths and 10 million disability-adjusted life years lost annually worldwide. The extent to which psychiatric and behavioural factors contribute to the incidence and outcomes of these tragedies has not been systematically documented, and the available data is often insufficient to reach definitive conclusions. Accordingly, this article reviews the evidence of psychiatric and behavioural risk factors and prevention opportunities for burn injuries worldwide. Psychiatric prevalence rates and risk factors for burn injuries, prevalence and risks associated with ‘intentional’ burn injuries (self-immolation, assault, and child maltreatment), and prevention activities targeting the general population and those with known psychiatric and behavioural risk factors are discussed. These issues are substantially interwoven with many co-occurring risk factors. While success in teasing apart the roles and contributions of these factors rests upon improving the methodology employed in future research, the nature of this entanglement increases the likelihood that successful interventions in one problem area will reap benefits in others.


American Journal of Surgery | 2013

Is magnetic resonance imaging in addition to a computed tomographic scan necessary to identify clinically significant cervical spine injuries in obtunded blunt trauma patients

Brian M. Fisher; Steven Cowles; Jennifer Matulich; Bradley G. Evanson; Diana Vega; Sharmila Dissanaike

BACKGROUND Guidelines are in place directing the clearance of the cervical spine in patients who are awake, alert, and oriented, but a gold standard has not been recognized for patients who are obtunded. Our study is designed to determine if magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detects clinically significant injuries not seen on computed tomographic (CT) scans. METHODS The trauma registry was used to identify and retrospectively review medical records of blunt trauma patients from January 1, 2005, to March 30, 2012. Only obtunded patients with a CT scan and MRI of the cervical spine were included. RESULTS The study cohort consisted of 277 patients. In 13 (5%) patients, MRI detected clinically significant cervical spine injuries that were missed by CT scans, and in 7 (3%) these injuries required intervention. The number needed to screen with MRI to prevent 1 missed injury was 21. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that the routine use of MRI in clearing the cervical spine in the obtunded blunt trauma patient.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2009

Cooking-Related Pediatric Burns: Risk Factors and the Role of Differential Cooling Rates Among Commonly Implicated Substances

Sharmila Dissanaike; Kimberly Boshart; Alan Coleman; Jenna Wishnew; Cynthia Hester

Cooking-related injuries are a common problem worldwide, resulting in more pediatric burns than any other cause. We identified risk factors-associated mechanisms and determined cooling curves for common substances. A retrospective review of children admitted to a Level I burn center between 2001 and 2006 was performed. Variables including injury mechanism, age, sex, race, burn area, length of stay, and outcome were recorded. Commonly implicated substances were identified, and cooling curves for each were measured at room temperature. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify risk factors for cooking injury. A total of 541 pediatric burn patients were admitted, of whom 123 had cooking-related injuries. Common substances involved included soup (27%), grease (26%), coffee (18%), beans (9%), and menudo (2.3%), a traditional Mexican soup based on tripe, hominy, and chile. Children with cooking injuries were significantly younger than other groups, with a mean age of 2.7 years. The most common mechanism was the child pulling the substance down from a height, accounting for nearly half of all injuries. This resulted in a characteristic scald pattern involving a wide area across chest and shoulders narrowing to a point near the pelvis. The average burn area was 7%, associated with a hospital stay of 4 days and mortality below 1%. Analysis of cooling curves revealed surprising variation in heat retention, with semisolid or high-density liquids posing a markedly increased burn risk. Cooking injuries predominantly affect toddlers, with clearly recognized mechanisms and risk factors. Injury prevention measures should be targeted accordingly.


Journal of pathogens | 2014

Prevalence of Multiple Antibiotic Resistant Infections in Diabetic versus Nondiabetic Wounds

Urvish Trivedi; Shamini Parameswaran; Andrew Armstrong; Diana Burgueno-Vega; John A. Griswold; Sharmila Dissanaike; Kendra P. Rumbaugh

Diabetes mellitus (DM) affects 23.6 million people in the USA and approximately 20–25% of diabetic patients will develop foot ulceration during the course of their disease. Up to a quarter of these patients will develop infections that will necessitate amputation. Although many studies report that the rates of antibiotic resistant infections have increased dramatically in the DM population over the last decade, to our knowledge there have been no reports directly comparing the rates of antibiotic resistant infections in DM versus non-DM wounds. We performed a retrospective study comparing the wound infections of 41 DM patients to those of 74 non-DM patients to test the hypothesis that infections with multidrug resistant organisms (MDRO) were more prevalent in the DM population. We found that 63.4% of DM and 50% of non-DM patients had MDRO infections, which was not statistically different. However, 61% of the DM patients had Pseudomonas infections compared to only 18.9% of non-DM patients. Furthermore, DM patients had significantly more coinfections with both Pseudomonas and Staphylococcus aureus. Though our initial hypothesis was incorrect, we demonstrated a significant correlation between Pseudomonas and Pseudomonas/S. aureus coinfections within DM wounds.


Surgical Oncology-oxford | 2015

Metastatic lymph node ratio successfully predicts prognosis in western gastric cancer patients

Onur C. Kutlu; Mitchell Watchell; Sharmila Dissanaike

BACKGROUND Lymph node positivity is a strong prognostic indicator in many cancers including gastric cancer. The extent of surgical resection directly influences the number of lymph nodes available for staging, with the lesser D1 resection that is standard practice in non-Asian countries typically providing fewer nodes for analysis. The widely used AJCC TNM staging system has been criticized for under-staging and stage migration where fewer than 15 nodes are resected, which is often the case in these populations. The ratio of positive to total nodes harvested--Lymph Node Ration (LNR)--has been proposed as an improved and more widely applicable prognostic indicator. HYPOTHESIS The LNR is a reliable and accurate prognostic indicator of survival in a Western gastric cancer population. METHODS 9357 patients were acquired via a SEER case listing session with 2004-2011 gastric adenocarcinoma diagnoses. AJCC 7th edition nodal staging (N0: 0, N1:1-2, N2:3-6, N3:≥7 positive lymph nodes) and LNR positive nodal staging (PN0: 0%, PN1: 1-20%, PN2: 21-50%, PN3: 51-100% of examined nodes positive) were compared as respects seven year survivorship. RESULTS Adjusted survival time ratios for AJCC nodal curves were less evenly distributed than were the percent positive nodal curves. Results of multiple regression reflected that survival time ratios of the percent positive nodal schema being more evenly spaced than those of the AJCC schema. Because BIC for AJCC, 41071.48, was larger than that for percent positive nodes, 41024.25, the LNR nodal system better explained survival than the AJCC nodal classification system. CONCLUSION LNR produced reliable and internally consistent survival curves for this population. LNR is an effective tool to predict survival in a western gastric cancer patient population, where the majority of the patients have limited lymph node dissection.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2011

Nottingham grades of lobular carcinoma lack the prognostic implications they bear for ductal carcinoma.

Mitchell S. Wachtel; Ari Halldorsson; Sharmila Dissanaike

BACKGROUND Invasive lobular cancer (L) differs clinically and morphologically from invasive ductal cancer (D); differences notwithstanding, Nottingham grades are provided in both. This study compared 22,719 lobular carcinomas with 201,517 ductal carcinomas, dividing them into the grades: well differentiated (W), moderately differentiated (M), poorly differentiated (P), and ungraded to see if differences between comparable grades of lobular and ductal cancer were uniform, consistent with the notion the grading system provides similar information for both cancer subtypes. METHODS The Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database was used to limn relationships among grades, as respects proportions of patients with T3 tumors and nodal metastases, as well as cancer-specific survival. Taken into account were age, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, and the administration of radiotherapy. RESULTS More lobular than ductal carcinomas were T3; grades were not homogenous, with the incidence rate ratio (IRR) comparing lobular and ductal carcinomas being 8.2 for well differentiated, 4.1 for moderately differentiated, and 2.48 for poorly differentiated. With respect to nodal metastases, the 1.16 W L:W D IRR (P < 0.05) was not explicable by chance, but both the 0.97 M L:M D IRR (P > 0.05) and the 0.96 P L:P D IRR (P > 0.05) could have been due to chance. As respects survival, neither the 1.4 P L:P D time ratio (TR) (P < 0.05) nor the 1.23 M L:M D TR (P < 0.05) could have been explained by chance; the 1.05 W L: W D (P > 0.05) might have been due to chance. CONCLUSION Grades of lobular carcinoma imply different meanings than do grades of ductal carcinoma. Studies of breast cancer should not assume commonality with respect to grade.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2010

Burns as Child Abuse: Risk Factors and Legal Issues in West Texas and Eastern New Mexico

Sharmila Dissanaike; Jenna Wishnew; Maham Rahimi; Yunlong Zhang; Cynthia Hester; John A. Griswold

The purpose of this study were to describe risk factors for child abuse from burns and examine prosecution and conviction rates after case discussions at a multidisciplinary conference Retrospective cohort study of all pediatric burns admitted between 2001 and 2006 was performed. Registry data on age, sex, mechanism, location, and size of burn were recorded. Registry data were verified against nursing documentation for accuracy. All cases were reviewed at the multidisciplinary “care conference” to gather insight from various perspectives to make a final determination of abuse or neglect. Bivariate and multivariate analysis was used to identify factors associated with child abuse. Prosecution rates were determined by contacting child protective services and district attorneys offices. A total of 457 children were included in the analysis. Most of the children were boys (70%) and were of Hispanic origin (57%), with 30% white and 10% black. Hundred cases were suspicious for abuse after review at care conference. Younger age was a significant risk factor (OR: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.65–0.82), with the mean age of abused children being 1 ¾ years compared with 5 ½ years for accidental injuries. Girls were at higher risk for abuse (OR: 1.76, 95% CI: 1.06–2.91).Torso injuries were significantly more common in abused children, an unusual finding possibly reflecting a different abuse pattern in infants compared with toddlers. Suspected abuse resulted in longer hospital stays (OR: 1.03, 95% CI: 1.01–1.07). Prosecution rates and conviction rates in the authors region are low, at only 26 and 11% of suspicious cases, respectively. Young age and female sex were positively correlated with child abuse. Prosecution and conviction rates are remarkably low, despite using a multidisciplinary care conference to review all cases and obtaining early involvement of child protective services and law enforcement.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2015

The Effects of Intravenous Vitamin C on Point-of-Care Glucose Monitoring

Zach Sartor; Jenna Kesey; Sharmila Dissanaike

Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) decreases systemic inflammation and lowers fluid requirements after thermal injury; therefore it has been adopted in many burn centers as an adjunct to resuscitation. However, recent concerns have been expressed over clinically significant hypoglycemic events caused by vitamin C interference with the point-of-care (POC) glucose measurements. This case series presents a direct comparison of POC and laboratory reference glucose values in the patients receiving vitamin C infusion. Vitamin C was administered at 66 mg/kg/hour in seven patients with burns >30% TBSA. The baseline characteristics and burn characteristics were recorded. POC glucose measurements were made with a commonly used hand-held device, and the laboratory values were obtained using standard spectrophotometric methods. POC and laboratory glucose values drawn within the same hour were compared. Hemoglobin, which is known to cause interference in POC testing, was also recorded. All the patients demonstrated falsely elevated POC glucose values during and/or immediately after the infusion period, with discrepancies ranging from 10 to 200 mg/dl. These findings were irregular, unpredictable and unrelated to hemoglobin levels. The findings suggest an idiosyncratic reaction that cannot be easily corrected at the bedside using mathematical equations. POC glucose monitoring should be avoided during and after vitamin C therapy.

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John A. Griswold

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Ari Halldorsson

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Jennifer Kesey

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Kendra P. Rumbaugh

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Mitchell S. Wachtel

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Eldo E. Frezza

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Yana Puckett

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Hannah Zhao-Fleming

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Jenna Kesey

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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