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Dive into the research topics where Terrell Caffery is active.

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Featured researches published by Terrell Caffery.


Resuscitation | 2016

Emergency department point-of-care ultrasound in out-of-hospital and in-ED cardiac arrest

Romolo J. Gaspari; Anthony J. Weekes; Srikar Adhikari; Vicki E. Noble; Jason T. Nomura; Daniel Theodoro; Michael Woo; Paul Atkinson; David Blehar; Samuel M. Brown; Terrell Caffery; Emily Douglass; Jacqueline Fraser; Christine Haines; Samuel Lam; Michael J. Lanspa; Margaret Lewis; Otto Liebmann; Alexander T. Limkakeng; Fernando Lopez; Elke Platz; Michelle Mendoza; Hal Minnigan; Christopher L. Moore; Joseph Novik; Louise Rang; Will Scruggs; Christopher Raio

BACKGROUND Point-of-care ultrasound has been suggested to improve outcomes from advanced cardiac life support (ACLS), but no large studies have explored how it should be incorporated into ACLS. Our aim was to determine whether cardiac activity on ultrasound during ACLS is associated with improved survival. METHODS We conducted a non-randomized, prospective, protocol-driven observational study at 20 hospitals across United States and Canada. Patients presenting with out-of-hospital arrest or in-ED arrest with pulseless electrical activity or asystole were included. An ultrasound was performed at the beginning and end of ACLS. The primary outcome was survival to hospital admission. Secondary outcomes included survival to hospital discharge and return of spontaneous circulation. FINDINGS 793 patients were enrolled, 208 (26.2%) survived the initial resuscitation, 114 (14.4%) survived to hospital admission, and 13 (1.6%) survived to hospital discharge. Cardiac activity on US was the variable most associated with survival at all time points. On multivariate regression modeling, cardiac activity was associated with increased survival to hospital admission (OR 3.6, 2.2-5.9) and hospital discharge (OR 5.7, 1.5-21.9). No cardiac activity on US was associated with non-survival, but 0.6% (95% CI 0.3-2.3) survived to discharge. Ultrasound identified findings that responded to non-ACLS interventions. Patients with pericardial effusion and pericardiocentesis demonstrated higher survival rates (15.4%) compared to all others (1.3%). CONCLUSION Cardiac activity on ultrasound was the variable most associated with survival following cardiac arrest. Ultrasound during cardiac arrest identifies interventions outside of the standard ACLS algorithm.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Optic nerve sheath diameter and lumbar puncture opening pressure in nontrauma patients suspected of elevated intracranial pressure

Terrell Caffery; J. Nelson Perret; Mandi W. Musso; Glenn N. Jones

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine if patients with nontraumatic causes of elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) could be identified by ultrasound measurement of optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD). It was hypothesized that an ONSD greater than or equal to 5 mm would identify patients with elevated ICP. METHOD This was a prospective observational trial comparing ONSD with ICP measured by opening pressure manometry on lumbar puncture (LP). The cohort consisted of a convenience sample of adult patients presenting to the emergency department, requiring LP. The ONSD measurement was performed before computed tomography and LP. The physician performing the LP was blinded to the result of the ONSD measurement. An opening pressure on manometry of greater than or equal to 20 cm H2O and an ONSD greater than or equal to 5 mm were considered elevated. RESULTS Fifty-one patients were included in our study, 24 (47%) with ICP greater than or equal to 20 cm H2O and 27 (53%) with ICP less than 20 cm H2O. The sensitivity of ONSD greater than or equal to 5 for identifying elevated ICP was 75% (95% confidence interval, 53%-90%) with specificity of 44% (25%-65%). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve was 0.69 (0.54-0.84), suggesting a relationship between ONSD and ICP. CONCLUSION An ONSD greater than or equal to 5 mm was associated with elevated ICP in nontraumatic causes of elevated ICP. Although a relationship exists, a sensitivity of 75% does not make ONSD measurement an adequate screening examination for elevated ICP in this patient population.


Journal of Medical Systems | 2015

Smartphones in Medicine: Emerging Practices in an Academic Medical Center

Angela C. Johnson; Stephanie C. El Hajj; J. Nelson Perret; Terrell Caffery; Glenn N. Jones; Mandi W. Musso

Advances in mobile phone technology now provide a myriad of resources to physicians’ fingertips. However, the medical profession continues to struggle with potential for misuse of these devices. There is a need for better understanding of physicians’ uses of smartphones in order to establish guidelines for appropriate and professional behavior. The purpose of the current study was to survey physicians’ and medical students’ practices concerning smartphone use in the healthcare setting. Physicians and medical students were asked to complete anonymous surveys regarding uses of smartphones within the past month in various healthcare settings. Overall, the participants reported distinctly different patterns in the uses they made of their phones in different settings (P < .001), with most individuals engaging in most behaviors while on break but few using their smartphones while with patients or during procedures. It appears that physicians and medical students make decisions about using their smartphones according to some combination of three considerations: degree of relevance to patient care, the appropriateness of the behavior in front of patients, and the issue of how disruptive that behavior may be.


Resuscitation | 2017

A retrospective study of pulseless electrical activity, bedside ultrasound identifies interventions during resuscitation associated with improved survival to hospital admission. A REASON Study

Romolo J. Gaspari; Anthony J. Weekes; Srikar Adhikari; Vicki E. Noble; Jason T. Nomura; Daniel Theodoro; Michael Woo; Paul Atkinson; David Blehar; Samuel M. Brown; Terrell Caffery; Emily Douglass; Jacqueline Fraser; Christine Haines; Samuel Lam; Michael J. Lanspa; Margaret Lewis; Otto Liebmann; Alexander T. Limkakeng; Fernando Lopez; Elke Platz; Michelle Mendoza; Hal Minnigan; Christopher L. Moore; Joseph Novik; Louise Rang; Will Scruggs; Christopher Raio

OBJECTIVE Our objective was to determine whether organized or disorganized cardiac activity is associated with increased survival in patients who present in pulseless electrical activity (PEA) treated with either 1) standard advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) medications or 2) other interventions. METHODS This was a secondary analysis of a prospective, multi-center observational study utilizing ultrasound in out-of-hospital or inemergency department PEA arrest. Bedside ultrasound was performed as ACLS protocol started and during pulse checks. Only cases with visible cardiac activity on ultrasound were included in the present analysis. Cardiac activity was categorized as disorganized (agonal twitching) or organized (contractions with changes in ventricular dimensions). Patients were categorized as receiving either standard bolus ACLS medications or alternative medications during the resuscitation (continuous adrenergic agents, thrombolytics, others). The primary outcome was survival to hospital admission. The secondary outcome was return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Multivariate modeling was performed to assess association between survival to hospital admission in patients with intravenous adrenergic agents and cardiac activity. RESULTS In our cohort of 225 patients in PEA cardiac arrest with cardiac activity on ultrasound, the overall survival rate was higher in patients with organized cardiac activity than with disorganized cardiac activity. PEA cardiac arrest patients with organized cardiac activity treated with standard ACLS interventions demonstrated improved survival to hospital admission compared to those with disorganized activity (37.7% (95%CI 24.8-50.2%) versus 17.9% (95%CI 10.9-28%). PEA cardiac arrest patients with organized cardiac activity who received continuous adrenergic agents during the resuscitation and prior to ROSC demonstrated higher survival to hospital admission 45.5% (95%CI 26.9-65.4%) and ROSC 90.9% (95%CI 71.0-98.7%) compared to those with disorganized cardiac activity who received continuous adrenergic agents during the resuscitation 0% (95%CI 0-23.0%) and 47.1% (95%CI 26-69%). Regression analysis demonstrates an association between increased survival in patients receiving intravenous adrenergic agents and organized cardiac activity. CONCLUSION Survival in patients following PEA arrest is higher in patients with organized cardiac activity. The initiation of continuous adrenergic agents during PEA was associated with improved survival to hospital admission in patients with organized cardiac activity on bedside ultrasound, but this improvement was not seen in patients in PEA with disorganized cardiac activity. Bedside ultrasound may identify a subset of patients that respond differently to ACLS interventions.


Case Reports | 2014

A non-ischaemic cause of elevated troponin

Guy Lefort; Claude D'Antonio; Terrell Caffery

A 27-year-old woman with chest pain was admitted for elevated troponin levels. Troponin remained mildly elevated upon repeat testing, and a review of the medical record revealed that she had had an elevated troponin level in the past. She had a cardiac catheterisation that revealed angiographically normal coronary arteries. Repeat troponin testing with and without ethylene glycol revealed a negative troponin level after addition of ethylene glycol, suggesting antibodies were interfering with the assay.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2018

Rapid Biophysical Analysis of Host Immune Cell Variations Associated with Sepsis

Katherine Crawford; Aaron DeWitt; Stephen Brierre; Terrell Caffery; Tonya Jagneaux; Christopher Thomas; Mara Macdonald; Henry Tse; Ajay Shah; Dino Di Carlo; Hollis R. O’Neal

of the submission process. Authors tended to guess correctly the identity of reviewers from the same region of the world as themselves. Therefore, to improve anonymity, editors should continue to solicit reviewers from around the world. As previously reported (4), this study suggests that for a specialty journal, authors’ efforts to identify reviewers are largely unrewarding and that most reviewers remain anonymous to authors. However, if authors had recognized their reviewers, then the case could be made for changing to a more open peer review process in which the reviewer identity is revealed. The results suggest that author-blinded peer review remains anonymous and that moving to open peer review is unnecessary. n


Case Reports | 2017

Thoracic aortic transection resulting in a type B dissection following blunt trauma

Lance Fogleman; Terrell Caffery; Jeffrey Gruner; Danielle Tatum

A 39-year-old man sustained an acute grade III aortic injury resulting in a type B aortic dissection in the setting of severe traumatic brain injury, cervical spine injury and multiple orthopaedic injuries following a motorcycle crash. The patient underwent an emergent thoracic endovascular aortic repair, complicated by a thoracic pseudoaneurysm rupture and ongoing exsanguination from a persistent type 1 endoleak. Additional stent grafts were required to gain control of the endoleak. The patient ultimately progressed to brain death post procedure in the intensive care unit. This case reviews treatment considerations in the context of a blunt thoracic aortic transection and distal dissection with concomitant polytrauma.


Case Reports | 2015

Rapid diagnosis and treatment of severe tricyclic antidepressant toxicity

Simon Clark; Jerry W Catt; Terrell Caffery

A woman in her mid-50s contacted her social worker and expressed intent to commit suicide by ingesting prescription medications. On arrival of emergency responders, the patient was found unconscious with an empty bottle of amitriptyline. Time of ingestion was estimated using the social workers contact with local authorities. The patients presentation at the emergency department (ED) exemplified tricyclic antidepressant toxidrome with a poor prognosis, based on measurable criteria and physical findings. Respiratory and cardiovascular collapse was managed emergently. Haemodynamic status and EKG findings responded in a stepwise fashion with therapy in the ED and intensive care unit. Full clinical recovery took 7 days, and the patient was subsequently transferred to an in-patient psychiatric facility for further evaluation. Eight days later, she was discharged home with no neurological sequelae.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2017

Emergency Medicine Resident Assessment of the Emergency Ultrasound Milestones and Current Training Recommendations

Lori Stolz; Uwe Stolz; J. Matthew Fields; Turandot Saul; Michael Secko; Matthew J. Flannigan; Johnathan M. Sheele; Robert P. Rifenburg; Anthony J. Weekes; Elaine B. Josephson; John Bedolla; Dana M. Resop; Jonathan dela Cruz; Megan Boysen-Osborn; Terrell Caffery; Charlotte Derr; Rimon Bengiamin; Gerardo Chiricolo; Brandon H. Backlund; Jagdipak S. Heer; Robert J. Hyde; Srikar Adhikari


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2015

Questions Regarding the Utility of the 30-Degree Test in Measuring Optic Nerve Sheath Diameters in ED Patients

Terrell Caffery; Mandi W. Musso

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Mandi W. Musso

Louisiana State University

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Glenn N. Jones

Louisiana State University

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Christine Haines

North Shore-LIJ Health System

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Christopher Raio

North Shore University Hospital

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Daniel Theodoro

Washington University in St. Louis

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David Blehar

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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