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Dive into the research topics where William L. Hennrikus is active.

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Featured researches published by William L. Hennrikus.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1996

Outcomes of the Chrisman-Snook and modified-Broström procedures for chronic lateral ankle instability. A prospective, randomized comparison.

William L. Hennrikus; Randall C. Mapes; Patrick M. Lyons; John M. Lapoint

We prospectively and randomly compared the out comes of the Chrisman-Snook and modified-Broström procedures for chronic lateral ankle instability in 40 patients. Both operations provided good or excellent stability in more than 80% of the patients. However, the modified-Broström procedure resulted in higher Sefton scores than the Chrisman-Snook procedure. In addi tion, a statistically significant greater proportion of complications occurred in patients treated with the Chrisman-Snook procedure.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1995

Childhood scoliosis: clinical indications for magnetic resonance imaging.

Richard M. Schwend; William L. Hennrikus; John E. Hall; John B. Emans

We retrospectively reviewed the magnetic resonance imaging studies that had been made for ninety-five patients who had idiopathic scoliosis. We wished to determine if we could identify any criteria that should be met before these studies are performed. The study group included thirty-one male patients and sixty-four female patients. The average age at the time of the imaging study was thirteen years (range, one to twenty-eight years). The average curve was 41 degrees (range, 11 to 95 degrees). Fourteen patients were seen to have an intraspinal abnormality on the imaging study: twelve had a syrinx, one had a syrinx and an astrocytoma of the spinal cord, and one had dural ectasia. Five of the eight patients who were less than eleven years old and who had a left thoracic curve had an intraspinal abnormality on the imaging study, but this combination of factors did not indicate the need for operative intervention. Four of the intraspinal abnormalities in the fourteen patients necessitated neurosurgical intervention; if the criteria for obtaining the imaging study had been restricted to neck pain and headache--particularly with exertion--and neurological findings such as ataxia, weakness, and a cavus foot, these abnormalities would have been diagnosed.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 2001

Treatment of femoral fractures in children by pediatric orthopedists: results of a 1998 survey.

James O. Sanders; Richard Browne; James F. Mooney; Ellen M. Raney; Horn Bd; David J. Anderson; William L. Hennrikus; Robertson Ww

This study aimed to determine treatment preference of various femoral fracture patterns in children by pediatric orthopedists and whether it is practice dependent. In September 1998, members of the Pediatric Orthopedic Society of North America were surveyed to determine their current preferences in treating each of four middle one-third femoral fracture patterns in four age groups. Forty-four percent (286/656) of those surveyed responded. For each fracture pattern, operative treatment was increasingly preferred over nonoperative as patient age increased, and the preferred treatments within the operative and nonoperative categories changed significantly as patient age increased. Fourteen specific cases of femoral head avascular necrosis were noted after rigid reamed and unreamed rodding. There is a statistically significant trend by pediatric orthopedists to treat older childrens femur fractures operatively and younger childrens nonoperatively. The consensus treatment is age dependent. The numerous cases of avascular necrosis after rigid rodding are a concern.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1994

Self-administered Nitrous Oxide Analgesia for Pediatric Fracture Reductions

William L. Hennrikus; Robert Bruce Simpson; Carl E. Klingelberger; Mark T. Reis

We prospectively studied the efficacy and safety of self-administered nitrous oxide analgesia for 54 children undergoing closed reductions of fractures in the emergency department. No child was excluded from entry into the study because of fracture type. Nitrous oxide was the sole source of analgesia. The average Childrens Hospital of Eastern Ontario pain score (CHEOPS) rated by the emergency medicine physician observing the reduction was 9.1 (range 6-13). Ninety-one percent of children obtained an analgesic effect; however, 46% of children had a CHEOPS score of > or = 10, indicating significant pain. A statistically significantly higher proportion of failures using nitrous-oxide analgesia occurred in patients with completely displaced radius/ulna fractures (p = 0.027). No complications such as vomiting, respiratory depression, or a change in oxygen saturation resulted from the use of nitrous oxide.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2013

American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric: A beta phase report

Jennifer L. Bruny; Bruce L. Hall; Douglas C. Barnhart; Deborah F. Billmire; Mark S. Dias; Peter W. Dillon; Charles Fisher; Kurt F. Heiss; William L. Hennrikus; Clifford Y. Ko; Lawrence Moss; Keith T. Oldham; Karen Richards; Rahul K. Shah; Charles D. Vinocur; Moritz M. Ziegler

PURPOSE The American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Pediatric (NSQIP-P) expanded to beta phase testing with the enrollment of 29 institutions. Data collection and analysis were aimed at program refinement and development of risk-adjusted models for inter-institutional comparisons. METHODS Data from the first full year of beta-phase NSQIP-P were analyzed. Patient accrual used ACS-NSQIP methodology tailored to pediatric specialties. Preliminary risk adjusted modeling for all pediatric and neonatal operations and pediatric (excluding neonatal) abdominal operations was performed for all cause morbidity (other than death) and surgical site infections (SSI) using hierarchical logistic regression methodology and eight predictor variables. Results were expressed as odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals. RESULTS During calendar year 2010, 29 institutions enrolled 37,141 patients. 1644 total CPT codes were entered, of which 456 accounted for 90% of the cases. 450 codes were entered only once (1.2% of cases). For all cases, overall mortality was 0.25%, overall morbidity 7.9%, and the SSI rate 1.8%. For neonatal cases, mortality was 2.39%, morbidity 18.7%, and the SSI rate 3%. For the all operations model, risk-adjusted morbidity institutional odds ratios ranged 0.48-2.63, with 9/29 hospitals categorized as low outliers and 9/29 high outliers, while risk-adjusted SSI institutional odds ratios ranged 0.36-2.04, with 2/29 hospitals low outliers and 7/29 high outliers. CONCLUSION This report represents the first risk-adjusted hospital-level comparison of surgical outcomes in infants and children using NSQIP-P data. Programmatic and analytic modifications will improve the impact of this program as it moves into full implementation. These results indicate that NSQIP-P has the potential to serve as a model for determining risk-adjusted outcomes in the neonatal and pediatric population with the goal of developing quality improvement initiatives for the surgical care of children.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1995

Self-administered nitrous oxide and a hematoma block for analgesia in the outpatient reduction of fractures in children.

William L. Hennrikus; Alexander Y. Shin; C E Klingelberger

We prospectively studied the efficacy and safety of self-administered nitrous oxide combined with a hematoma block in 100 children who had a closed reduction of a fracture in the emergency department. No child was excluded from the study because of the type of fracture. The average Childrens Hospital of Eastern Ontario pain score (CHEOPS), as determined by the emergency-medicine physician who observed the reduction, was 6.8 points (range, 4 to 12 points). The average grade for pain, as recalled by the patient and indicated on a visual-analogue pain scale that ranged from 0 to 10 points, was 6.5 points before the patient received any analgesia and 1.2 points immediately after reduction of the fracture and application of a cast. Ninety-seven patients obtained an analgesic effect from the combination of nitrous oxide and a hematoma block. The three remaining children obtained no effect, and the fracture was reduced with use of general anesthesia. Three additional reductions were technically unsuccessful because of rotational or angular malalignment, and a second reduction was performed with general anesthesia. There were no complications such as vomiting, respiratory depression, a change in the oxygen-saturation level, infection, or nerve injury. We concluded that self-administration of nitrous oxide combined with use of a hematoma block is a safe and effective technique of analgesia for the outpatient reduction of fractures in children.


Pediatrics | 2014

Evaluating children with fractures for child physical abuse

Emalee G. Flaherty; Jeannette M. Perez-Rossello; Michael A. Levine; William L. Hennrikus; Cindy W. Christian; James E. Crawford-Jakubiak; John M. Leventhal; James L. Lukefahr; Robert D. Sege; Harriet MacMillan; Catherine M. Nolan; Linda Anne Valley; Tammy Piazza Hurley; Christopher I. Cassady; Dorothy I. Bulas; John A. Cassese; Amy R. Mehollin-Ray; Maria Gisela Mercado-Deane; Sarah Milla; Vivian Thorne; Irene N. Sills; Clifford A. Bloch; Samuel J. Casella; Joyce M. Lee; Jane L. Lynch; Kupper A. Wintergerst; Laura Laskosz; Richard M. Schwend; J. Eric Gordon; Norman Y. Otsuka

Fractures are common injuries caused by child abuse. Although the consequences of failing to diagnose an abusive injury in a child can be grave, incorrectly diagnosing child abuse in a child whose fractures have another etiology can be distressing for a family. The aim of this report is to review recent advances in the understanding of fracture specificity, the mechanism of fractures, and other medical diseases that predispose to fractures in infants and children. This clinical report will aid physicians in developing an evidence-based differential diagnosis and performing the appropriate evaluation when assessing a child with fractures.


Pediatrics | 2008

Management of pediatric trauma

William L. Hennrikus; John F. Sarwark; Paul W. Esposito; Keith R. Gabriel; Kenneth J. Guidera; David P. Roye; Michael G. Vitale; David D. Aronsson; Mervyn Letts; Niccole Alexander; Steven E. Krug; Thomas Bojko; Joel A. Fein; Karen S. Frush; Louis C. Hampers; Patricia J. O'Malley; Robert E. Sapien; Paul E. Sirbaugh; Milton Tenenbein; Loren G. Yamamoto; Karen Belli; Kathleen Brown; Kim Bullock; Dan Kavanaugh; Cindy Pellegrini; Ghazala Q. Sharieff; Tasmeen Singh; Sally K. Snow; David W. Tuggle; Tina Turgel

Injury is the number 1 killer of children in the United States. In 2004, injury accounted for 59.5% of all deaths in children younger than 18 years. The financial burden to society of children who survive childhood injury with disability continues to be enormous. The entire process of managing childhood injury is complex and varies by region. Only the comprehensive cooperation of a broadly diverse group of people will have a significant effect on improving the care and outcome of injured children. This statement has been endorsed by the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses, American College of Emergency Physicians, American College of Surgeons, American Pediatric Surgical Association, National Association of Childrens Hospitals and Related Institutions, National Association of State EMS Officials, and Society of Critical Care Medicine.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1998

Correlation of MRI and arthroscopic diagnosis of knee pathology in children and adolescents

Michael J. McDermott; Beth Bathgate; Bruce L. Gillingham; William L. Hennrikus

The accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in diagnosing knee pathology in the pediatric and adolescent population is not well established. The purpose of this study was to correlate the findings of MRI and knee arthroscopy in children and adolescents. One hundred and eight consecutive knee arthroscopies performed in patients ages 4-17 years between 1992 and 1996 were retrospectively reviewed. Fifty-three of these patients underwent preoperative MRI. Age-related comparisons were then made between MRIs and observed intraoperative meniscal and anterior cruciate ligament pathology. The pediatric group (ages 4-14 years) was demonstrated to have an appreciable decrease in sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and accuracy for essentially all categories of pathologic changes. Conversely, negative predictive values for the pediatric group exceeded those of the adolescent group (ages 15-17 years) in each category. The ability of MRI to predict intraarticular knee pathology among adolescents is comparable to that in adults, whereas it is much less accurate in the pediatric population.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1997

Surgical treatment of displaced medial epicondyle fractures in adolescent athletes

Steven L. Case; William L. Hennrikus

Eight adolescent athletes (average age, 11 years; range, 9 to 15) underwent open reduction and internal fixation of acute, displaced medial epicondyle frac tures. Fixation was achieved with a screw and washer. Four patients (50%) had associated elbow disloca tions. Elbow motion in a brace was initiated 4 days after surgery. The brace allowed full flexion and exten sion but protected the elbow against valgus stress. Bracing was continued for 4 weeks. The average du ration of followup was 10 months (range, 6 to 13). All fractures united, and full motion was achieved in seven patients. One patient lost 5° of hyperextension com pared with the opposite elbow. All eight elbows were stable to valgus stress and were pain-free. All patients returned to full sports activity.

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Douglas G. Armstrong

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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David Gendelberg

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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James J. Bresnahan

Pennsylvania State University

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Brian A. Shaw

Boston Children's Hospital

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Gregory J. Pinkowsky

Pennsylvania State University

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Jennifer Slough

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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Matthew G Fanelli

Pennsylvania State University

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Amiethab Aiyer

Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

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