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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. Buckley is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. Buckley.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2001

Pathology of fatal human infection associated with avian influenza A H5N1 virus

Ka Fai To; Paul K.S. Chan; Kui-Fat Chan; Wai‐Ki Lee; Kit-Fai Wong; Nelson L.S. Tang; D.N. Tsang; Rita Y.T. Sung; Thomas A. Buckley; John S. Tam; A. F. B. Cheng

Eighteen cases of human influenza A H5N1 infection were identified in Hong Kong from May to December 1997. Two of the six fatal cases had undergone a full post‐mortem which showed reactive hemophagocytic syndrome as the most prominent feature. Other findings included organizing diffuse alveolar damage with interstitial fibrosis, extensive hepatic central lobular necrosis, acute renal tubular necrosis and lymphoid depletion. Elevation of soluble interleukin‐2 receptor, interleukin‐6 and interferon‐γ was demonstrated in both patients, whereas secondary bacterial pneumonia was not observed. Virus detection using isolation, reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction and immunostaining were all negative. It is postulated that in fatal human infections with this avian subtype, initial virus replication in the respiratory tract triggers hypercytokinemia complicated by the reactive hemophagocytic syndrome. These findings suggest that the pathogenesis of influenza A H5N1 infection might be different from that of the usual human subtypes H1‐H3. J. Med. Virol. 63:242–246, 2001.


Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Resuscitation of critically ill patients based on the results of gastric tonometry: a prospective, randomized, controlled trial.

Charles D. Gomersall; Gavin M. Joynt; Ross Freebairn; Veronica Hung; Thomas A. Buckley; T. E. Oh

Objective: To determine whether additional therapy aimed at correcting low gastric intramucosal pH (pHi) improves outcome in conventionally resuscitated, critically ill patients. Design: Prospective, randomized, controlled study. Setting: General intensive care unit (ICU) of a university teaching hospital. Patients: A total of 210 adult patients, with a median Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score of 24 (range, 8‐51). Interventions: All patients were resuscitated according to standard guidelines. After resuscitation, those patients in the intervention group with a pHi of <7.35 were treated with additional colloid and then dobutamine (5 μg/kg/min then 10 μg/kg/min) until 24 hrs after enrollment. Measurements and Main Results: There were no significant differences (p > .05) in ICU mortality (39.6% in the control group vs. 38.5% in the intervention group), hospital mortality (45.3% in the control group vs. 42.3% in the intervention group), and 30‐day mortality (43.7% in the control group vs. 40.2 in the intervention group); survival curves; median modified maximal multiorgan dysfunction score (10 points in the control group vs. 13 points in the intervention group); median modified duration of ICU stay (12 days in the control group vs. 11.5 days in the intervention group); or median modified duration of hospital stay (60 days in the control group vs. 42 days in the intervention group). A subgroup analysis of those patients with gastric mucosal pH of ≥7.35 at admission revealed no difference in ICU mortality (10.3% in the control group vs. 14.8% in the intervention group), hospital mortality (13.8% in the control group vs. 29.6% in the intervention group), or 30‐day mortality (10.3% in the control group vs. 26.9% in the intervention group). Conclusions: The routine use of treatment titrated against pHi in the management of critically ill patients cannot be supported. Failure to improve outcome may be caused by an inability to produce a clinically significant change in pHi or because pHi is simply a marker of disease rather than a factor in the pathogenesis of multiorgan failure.


Anaesthesia | 1997

Critical incident reporting in the intensive care unit

Thomas A. Buckley; T. G. Short; Y. M. Rowbottom; T. E. Oh

Critical incident reporting was introduced into the intensive care unit (ICU) as part of the development of a quality assurance programme within our department. Over a 3‐year period 281 critical incidents were reported. Factors relating to causation, detection and prevention of critical incidents were sought. Detection of a critical incident in over 50% of cases resulted from direct observation of the patient while monitoring systems accounted for a further 27%. No physiological changes were observed in 54% of critical incidents. The most common incidents reported concerned airway management and invasive lines, tubes and drains. Human error was a factor in 55% of incidents while violations of standard practice contributed to 28%. Critical incident reporting was effective in revealing latent errors in our ‘system’ and clarifying the role of human error in the generation of incidents. It has proven to be a useful technique to highlight problems previously undetected in our quality assurance programme. Improvements in quality of care following implementation of preventative strategies await further assessment.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

HUMAN METAPNEUMOVIRUS DETECTION IN PATIENTS WITH SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME

Paul K.S. Chan; John S. Tam; Ching-Wan Lam; Elaine Chan; Alan K. L. Wu; Chi K. Li; Thomas A. Buckley; King-Cheung Ng; Gavin M. Joynt; Frankie Wai Tsoi Cheng; Ka Fai To; Nelson Lee; David Hui; Jo L.K. Cheung; Ida M.T. Chu; Esther C Liu; Sydney Chung; Joseph J.Y. Sung

We used a combination approach of conventional virus isolation and molecular techniques to detect human metapneumovirus (HMPV) in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Of the 48 study patients, 25 (52.1%) were infected with HMPV; 6 of these 25 patients were also infected with coronavirus, and another 5 patients (10.4%) were infected with coronavirus alone. Using this combination approach, we found that human laryngeal carcinoma (HEp-2) cells were superior to rhesus monkey kidney (LLC-MK2) cells commonly used in previous studies for isolation of HMPV. These widely available HEp-2 cells should be included in conjunction with a molecular method for cell culture followup to detect HMPV, particularly in patients with SARS.


Anaesthesia | 1996

Improvements in anaesthetic care resulting from a critical incident reporting programme

T. G. Short; A. O'regan; J. P. Jayasuriya; M. Rowbottom; Thomas A. Buckley; T. E. Oh

The rôle of an anaesthetic incident reporting programme in improving anaesthetic safety was studied. The programme had been running for 4 to 5 years in three large hospitals in Hong Kong and more than 1000 incidents have been reported. The number of reports being made and frequency of the various categories of incident reported, did not alter during the study period. Sixty nine percent of incidents were considered to be preventable. Human error contributed to 76% of incidents and violations of standard practice to 30% of incidents. The programme was effective in its ability to detect latent errors in the anaesthesia system and when these were corrected, incidents did not recur. The frequency with which various contributing factors were cited did not decrease with time. With the exception of problems dealt with by specific protocol development, the study found no evidence that an increasing awareness of the problem of human error was effective in reducing this kind of problem.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2006

Expanding ICU facilities in an epidemic: recommendations based on experience from the SARS epidemic in Hong Kong and Singapore

Charles D. Gomersall; Dessmon Y.H. Tai; Shi Loo; James L. Derrick; Mia Siang Goh; Thomas A. Buckley; Catherine Chua; Ka Man Ho; Geeta P. Raghavan; Oi Man Ho; Lay Beng Lee; Gavin M. Joynt

AbstractEpidemics have the potential to severely strain intensive care resources and may require an increase in intensive care capability. Few intensivists have direct experience of rapidly expanding intensive care services in response to an epidemic. This contribution presents the recommendations of an expert group from Hong Kong and Singapore who had direct experience of expanding intensive care services in response to the epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome. These recommendations cover training, infection control, staffing, communication and ethical issues. The issue of what equipment to purchase is not addressed. Early preparations should include fit testing of negative pressure respirators, training of reserve staff, sourcing of material for physical modifications to the ICU, development of infection control policies and training programmes, and discussion of triage and quarantine issues.


Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Limitation of life support: Frequency and practice in a Hong Kong intensive care unit

Thomas A. Buckley; Gavin M. Joynt; Peggy Tan; Claudia A. Y. Cheng; Florence Yap

ObjectiveTo examine the frequency and the decision-making processes involved in limiting (withdrawing and withholding) life support therapy in critically ill Chinese patients in the intensive care unit. DesignProspective survey of patients who had life support limited between April 1997 and March 1999. SettingMedical and surgical intensive care unit of a teaching hospital. PatientsAll patients admitted to the intensive care unit of the Prince of Wales Hospital who subsequently died and/or had life support limited. Brain-dead patients were excluded from analysis. InterventionsNone. Measurements and Main ResultsOf 490 patients who died in the intensive care unit, limitation of life support occurred in 288 (58.8%). Relatives or patients requested limitation of life support in 32 cases (11%). The family and/or patient concurred with limitation of life support in 273 occasions (95%). Therapy was withheld in 30.8% and withdrawn in 28.0% of deaths. Therapy limited included inotropes, additional oxygen, and renal replacement therapy. ConclusionsLimitation of therapy in dying Chinese patients occurs frequently in intensive care patients, and both patients and relatives concur with medical decisions to limit therapy in these patients. Withholding therapy rather than withdrawing therapy occurs more frequently than in Western populations.


Anaesthesia | 1997

Gastric tonometry and prediction of outcome in the critically ill#Arterial to intramucosal pH gradient and carbon dioxide gradient

Charles D. Gomersall; Gavin M. Joynt; Kwok M. Ho; R. J. Young; Thomas A. Buckley; Teik E. Oh

Splanchnic ischaemia is thought to be of central importance in the development of multi‐organ failure and hence death in critically ill patients. It has been suggested that the arterial to gastric intramucosal pH gradient and the difference in partial pressure of carbon dioxide between gastric mucosa and arterial blood are more sensitive markers of splanchnic ischaemia than gastric intramucosal pH itself and thus should be predictors of mortality in the critically ill. We studied 62 critically ill patients within 6 h of admission to the intensive care unit and found no significant difference at 0, 12 or 24 h after admission to the study in either the arterial to gastric intramucosal pH gradient or the difference in partial pressure of carbon dioxide between gastric mucosa and arterial blood between survivors and nonsurvivors. We conclude that in contrast to gastric intramucosal pH neither the arterial to gastric intramucosal pH gradient nor the difference in partial pressure of carbon dioxide between gastric mucosa and arterial blood distinguish survivors from nonsurvivors.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2003

Validation of the multiple organ dysfunction (MOD) score in critically ill medical and surgical patients

Thomas A. Buckley; Charles D. Gomersall; Sj Ramsay

ObjectiveTo validate the Multiple Organ Dysfunction (MOD) score externally.DesignProspective observational cohort study.SettingMixed medical/surgical ICU in a tertiary referral university hospital.Patients and participantsThousand eight hundred and nine patients admitted to ICU for more than 24 h over a 3-year period.InterventionsNone.Measurements and resultsThe MOD score was calculated daily for all patients. The criterion validity of the individual organ scores, the maximal MOD score and the change in MOD score were assessed by examining the relationship between increasing scores and ICU mortality. Increased maximal MOD scores and each of the six individual organ scores, and change in MOD scores were associated with increased mortality.ConclusionsMaximal and individual organ scores have criterion validity when tested in a different ICU from that in which the scores were derived, indicating that the scoring systems are reproducible. The association of change in MOD score with mortality indicates that the score is responsive. These data, combined with previous data establishing concept and content validity, indicate that the MOD score is a valid measure of multi-organ dysfunction.


Anaesthesia | 1995

An adaptation of the objective structured clinical examination to a final year medical student course in anaesthesia and intensive care.

L. A. H. Critchley; T. G. Short; Thomas A. Buckley; Tony Gin; M.E. O'meara; T. E. Oh

The Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the Chinese University of Hong Kong provides a 4 week course in our specialty for final year medical students. Our curriculum covers basic concepts in anaesthesia and intensive care, management of common medical emergencies and the safe performance of basic practical skills. For the last 4 years we have used an adaptation of the Objective Structured Clinical Examination to assess learning. Question stations included the use of manikins to assess practical skills, such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation and airway management, identification and description of the use of equipment and interpretation of clinical scenarios and investigations. We believe that our adaptation of the Objective Structural Clinical Examination is better than traditional methods of examination and it has allowed us to identify deficiencies in our teaching methods. The Objective Structured Clinical Examination has been well received by our students and is perceived by them to be a fair reflection of their level of knowledge and skill attainment during the course.

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Gavin M. Joynt

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Charles D. Gomersall

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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T. E. Oh

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Teik E. Oh

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Sj Ramsay

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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T. G. Short

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Florence Yap

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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R. J. Young

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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David Hui

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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