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Dive into the research topics where Tomasz Darocha is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tomasz Darocha.


European Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Severe Accidental Hypothermia Center.

Tomasz Darocha; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Anna Jarosz; Robert Gałązkowski; Jerzy Sadowski; Rafał Drwiła

Hypothermic patients may be rewarmed using passive or active techniques. In case of severe accidental hypothermia (temperature<28°C) and stage III/IV according to the Swiss Staging System, standard methods might not be effective and aggressive treatment is needed. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has proved to be both effective and safe in such cases. The Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, John Paul II Hospital, Cracow, Poland, established the Severe Accidental Hypothermia Center, which provides 24 h on-call to consult and accept patients who need ECMO implantation for profound hypothermia rewarming. Our center is so far the only one in Poland and can accept patients from south-east Poland. Most importantly, it collaborates with all prehospital medical services, namely, with 115 Ambulances, Polish Medical Air Rescue, Mountain Rescue Services, and all 28 Emergency Departments in the area. Severe Accidental Hypothermia Center is a solution for advanced treatment of patients with accidental hypothermia requiring ECMO implantation.


Asaio Journal | 2017

Profound accidental hypothermia - systematic approach to active recognition and treatment

Anna Jarosz; Tomasz Darocha; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Robert Gałązkowski; Piotr Mazur; Jacek Piątek; Janusz Konstanty-Kalandyk; Hubert Hymczak; Rafał Drwiła

We sought to organize a functional system of recognition and advanced treatment of hypothermic patients with extracorporeal rewarming as a treatment option. All patients with suspected hypothermia are consulted with the hypothermia coordinator (HC), whose role is to provide expertise on hypothermia recognition and treatment to all rescue and medical services. Patients with Swiss staging system of hypothermia class III and IV are subjected to extracorporeal rewarming. Patients with class I and II are managed in local hospitals, after the HC provides instructions. From program initiation (July 29, 2013) to November 1, 2015, HC consulted 104 hypothermic patients; 21 in hypothermia class III and IV were subjected to extracorporeal rewarming in the John Paul II Hospital in Cracow, Poland. The remaining people were rewarmed in the referring hospitals. Cardiac arrest upon referral was present in 10 cases (resuscitation times from arrest to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation implantation ranged 107–345 minutes). Seven patients died, and the remaining 14 have been rewarmed with the restoration of hemodynamic stability. Systematic approach to active recognition and treatment of profound accidental hypothermia patients, on the basis of HC cooperation with emergency medical services, enables advanced management with good outcomes, especially in patients with cardiac arrest.


Journal of Clinical Monitoring and Computing | 2017

Measuring core temperature using the proprietary application and thermo-smartphone adapter

Tomasz Darocha; Jacek Majkowski; Tomasz Sanak; Paweł Podsiadło; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Kinga Sałapa; Piotr Mazur; Mirosław Ziętkiewicz; Robert Gałązkowski; Łukasz J. Krzych; Rafał Drwiła

Fast and accurate measurement of core body temperature is crucial for accidental hypothermia treatment. We have developed a novel light and small adapter to the headset jack of a mobile phone based on Android. It has been applied to measure temperature and set up automatic notifications (e.g. Global Positioning System coordinates to emergency services dispatcher, ECMO coordinator). Its validity was confirmed in comparison with Vital Signs Monitor Spacelabs Healthcare Elance 93300 as a reference method, in a series of 260 measurements in the temperature range of 10–42 °C. Measurement repeatability was verified in a battery of 600 measurements (i.e. 100 readings at three points of 10, 25, 42 °C for both esophageal and tympanic catheters). Inter-method difference of ≤0.5 °C was found for 98.5% for esophageal catheter and 100% for tympanic catheter measurements, with concordance correlation coefficient of 0.99 for both. The readings were almost completely repeatable with water bath measurements (difference of ≤0.5 °C in 10 °C: 100% for both catheters; in 25 °C: 99% for esophageal catheter and 100% tympanic catheter; in 42 °C: 100% for both catheters). This lightweight adapter attached to smartphone and standard disposable probes is a promising tool to be applied on-site for temperature measurement in patients at risk of hypothermia.


Medicine | 2015

Extracorporeal Rewarming From Accidental Hypothermia of Patient With Suspected Trauma

Tomasz Darocha; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Anna Jarosz; Rafał Drwiła

AbstractThe use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation is a new approach to rewarming patients with severe hypothermia and hemodynamic instability. There are, however, many questions regarding qualification for this technique in case of suspected or confirmed trauma.A male with confirmed accidental hypothermia (25°C) and after successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation from in-hospital cardiac arrest was subjected to a protocol of extracorporeal rewarming from profound hypothermia. Because of unclear history, a full trauma computed tomography was performed that showed pericerebral hematoma and signs of previously undergone right craniotomy, multiple right-sided rib fractures and the presence of intraperitoneal fluid. Based on repeated imaging and specialist consultation, no life-threatening injuries were identified and rewarming with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation was safely performed. In a year follow-up, the patient was found to be alive, with no neurologic deficits.Although this case highlights the first successful utilization of extracorporeal rewarming in a trauma patient at our center there are several limitations to its widespread use


Journal of Ultrasonography | 2014

Point-of-care ultrasonography during rescue operations on board a Polish Medical Air Rescue helicopter

Tomasz Darocha; Robert Gałązkowski; Dorota Sobczyk; Zbigniew Żyła; Rafał Drwiła

Point-of-care ultrasound examination has been increasingly widely used in pre-hospital care. The use of ultrasound in rescue medicine allows for a quick differential diagnosis, identification of the most important medical emergencies and immediate introduction of targeted treatment. Performing and interpreting a pre-hospital ultrasound examination can improve the accuracy of diagnosis and thus reduce mortality. The authors’ own experiences are presented in this paper, which consist in using a portable, hand-held ultrasound apparatus during rescue operations on board a Polish Medical Air Rescue helicopter. The possibility of using an ultrasound apparatus during helicopter rescue service allows for a full professional evaluation of the patients health condition and enables the patient to be brought to a center with the most appropriate facilities for their condition.


Resuscitation | 2018

Cut-off values for serum potassium and core temperature at hospital admission for extracorporeal rewarming of avalanche victims in cardiac arrest

Hermann Brugger; Pierre Bouzat; Mathieu Pasquier; Peter Mair; Julia Fieler; Tomasz Darocha; Marc Blancher; Matthieu de Riedmatten; Markus Falk; Peter Paal; Giacomo Strapazzon; Ken Zafren; Monika Brodmann Maeder

The data and estimation methods presented in this article are associated with the research article, “Cut-off values of serum potassium and core temperature at hospital admission for extracorporeal rewarming of avalanche victims in cardiac arrest: a retrospective multi-centre study” [1]. In this article we estimate recommended cut-off values for in-hospital triage with respect to extracorporeal rewarming. With only 6 survivors of 103 patients collected over a period of 20 years the ability to estimate reliable threshold values is limited. In addition, because the number of avalanche victims is also limited, a significantly larger dataset is unlikely to be obtained. We have therefore adapted two nonparametric estimation methods (bootstrapping and exact binomial distribution) to our specific needs and performed a simulations to confirm validity and reliability.


Resuscitation | 2018

Hypothermia outcome prediction after extracorporeal life support for hypothermic cardiac arrest patients: The HOPE score

Mathieu Pasquier; Olivier Hugli; Peter Paal; Tomasz Darocha; Marc Blancher; Paul Husby; Tom Silfvast; Pierre-Nicolas Carron; Valentin Rousson

AIMS Currently, the decision to initiate extracorporeal life support for patients who suffer cardiac arrest due to accidental hypothermia is essentially based on serum potassium level. Our goal was to build a prediction score in order to determine the probability of survival following rewarming of hypothermic arrested patients based on several covariates available at admission. METHODS We included consecutive hypothermic arrested patients who underwent rewarming with extracorporeal life support. The sample comprised 237 patients identified through the literature from 18 studies, and 49 additional patients obtained from hospital data collection. We considered nine potential predictors of survival: age; sex; core temperature; serum potassium level; mechanism of hypothermia; cardiac rhythm at admission; witnessed cardiac arrest, rewarming method and cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration prior to the initiation of extracorporeal life support. The primary outcome parameter was survival to hospital discharge. RESULTS Overall, 106 of the 286 included patients survived (37%; 95% CI: 32-43%), most (84%) with a good neurological outcome. The final score included the following variables: age, sex, core temperature at admission, serum potassium level, mechanism of cooling, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration. The corresponding area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.895 (95% CI: 0.859-0.931) compared to 0.774 (95% CI: 0.720-0.828) when based on serum potassium level alone. CONCLUSIONS In this large retrospective study we found that our score was superior to dichotomous triage based on serum potassium level in assessing which hypothermic patients in cardiac arrest would benefit from extracorporeal life support. External validation of our findings is required.


Journal of Emergency Nursing | 2018

Severe Post-Traumatic Hypothermia in a Burned Patient

Paweł Podsiadło; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Tomasz Darocha; Tomasz Derkowski; Andrzej Krajewski; Robert Gałązkowski

Abstract Unlabelled BoxContribution to Emergency Nursing Practice •The current literature on post-traumatic hypothermia indicates that burned skin loses its thermoregulatory properties. •This article contributes an example of the onset of severe hypothermia in burn victims due to negligence in thermal insulation. •Key implications for emergency nursing practice found in this article are the awareness of the impact of post-traumatic hypothermia on mortality and the need of careful insulation in burn victims. Maintaining normothermia can increase the chances of patients survival.


High Altitude Medicine & Biology | 2018

The Use of E-Learning in Medical Education for Mountain Rescuers Concerning Hypothermia

Paweł Podsiadło; Sylweriusz Kosinski; Tomasz Darocha; Kinga Sałapa; Tomasz Sanak; Hermann Brugger

Abstract Podsiadło, Paweł, Sylweriusz Kosiński, Tomasz Darocha, Kinga Sałapa, Tomasz Sanak, and Hermann Brugger. The use of e-learning in medical education for mountain rescuers concerning hypothermia. High Alt Med Biol 19:272–277, 2018. Objective: Victims of mountain accidents are often exposed to wet and cold environments which may increase the risk of hypothermia. Mountain rescuers should be able to recognize and manage hypothermia. We aimed to assess relevant knowledge in professional and volunteer mountain rescuers, as well as to evaluate the efficacy of an e-learning platform for continuing medical education. Methods: An e-learning platform was developed to provide access to updated information about hypothermia. Volunteer and professional mountain rescuers participated in an e-learning course. Pretest, post-test, and specific lesson test scores were compared. After 1 year, a follow-up course was performed. Results: In total, 187 rescuers, comprising 136 (72.7%) volunteers and 51 (27.3%) professionals, were enrolled. Ahead of the course, no difference in knowledge was found between professionals and volunteers. After the course, ones knowledge of hypothermia increased significantly (p < 0.001). The scores achieved in the field management of hypothermia were better among professional rescuers than among volunteer rescuers (p = 0.003), whereas in post-traumatic hypothermia half of the results were insufficient in both groups. Moreover, 57 rescuers repeated the course after 12 months. While professionals partially retained the achieved level of knowledge, the volunteers had dropped back to their initial level. Conclusions: The e-learning course increased the knowledge of hypothermia among mountain rescuers. The poor retention after 1 year indicates that the interval between lectures should be reduced. An e-learning platform is an effective tool for the medical education of mountain rescuers.


Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica | 2018

Cost‐utility of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation rewarming in accidentally hypothermic patients—A single‐centre retrospective study

S. Kosiński; Tomasz Darocha; Aleksandra Czerw; Peter Paal; M. Pasquier; P. Krawczyk; Rafał Drwiła; Robert Gałązkowski

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has become the treatment of choice for severely hypothermic patients in cardiac arrest or acute cardiac failure. Highly specialized ECMO centres have been established, however, no centre has ever reported the costs of extracorporeal rewarming. The aim of this study was to assess the costs of the treatment of patients in Swiss Stage III and IV rewarmed with veno‐arterial ECMO.

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Sylweriusz Kosinski

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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Robert Gałązkowski

Medical University of Warsaw

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Anna Jarosz

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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Paweł Podsiadło

Jan Kochanowski University

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Tomasz Sanak

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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Bogusław Kapelak

Jagiellonian University Medical College

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