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Featured researches published by Yoram Klein.


Annals of Surgery | 2006

Suicide Bombers Form a New Injury Profile

Limor Aharonson-Daniel; Yoram Klein; Kobi Peleg

Background:Recent explosions of suicide bombers introduced new and unique profiles of injury. Explosives frequently included small metal parts, increasing severity of injuries, challenging both physicians and healthcare systems. Timely detonation in crowded and confined spaces further increased explosion effect. Methods:Israel National Trauma Registry data on hospitalized terror casualties between October 1, 2000 and December 31, 2004 were analyzed. Results:A total of 1155 patients injured by explosion were studied. Nearly 30% suffered severe to critical injuries (ISS ≥ 16); severe injuries (AIS ≥ 3) were more prevalent than in other trauma. Triage has changed as metal parts contained in bombs penetrate the human body with great force and may result in tiny entry wounds easily concealed by hair, clothes etc. A total of 36.6% had a computed tomography (CT), 26.8% had ultrasound scanning, and 53.2% had an x-ray in the emergency department. From the emergency department, 28.3% went directly to the operating room, 10.1% to the intensive care unit, and 58.4% directly to the ward. Injuries were mostly internal, open wounds, and burns, with an excess of injuries to nerves and to blood vessels compared with other trauma mechanisms. A high rate of surgical procedures was recorded, including thoracotomies, laparotomies, craniotomies, and vascular surgery. In certain cases, there were simultaneous multiple injuries that required competing forms of treatment, such as burns and blast lung. Conclusions:Bombs containing metal fragments detonated by suicide bombers in crowded locations change patterns and severity of injury in a civil population. Specific injuries will require tailored approaches, an open mind, and close collaboration and cooperation between trauma surgeons to share experience, opinions, and ideas. Findings presented have implications for triage, diagnosis, treatment, hospital organization, and the definition of surge capacity.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2010

Management of patients with traumatic intracranial injury in hospitals without neurosurgical service.

Yoram Klein; Valery Donchik; Dena H. Jaffe; Daniel Simon; Boris Kessel; Leon Levy; Hanoch Kashtan; Kobi Peleg

BACKGROUND Many patients with intracranial bleeding (ICB) are being evaluated in hospitals with no neurosurgical service. Some of the patients may be safely managed in the primary hospital without transferring them to a designated neurosurgical center. In Israel, there are three approaches to alert patients with ICB: mandatory transfer, remote telemedicine neurosurgical consultation, and clinical-radiologic guidelines. We evaluated the outcome of alert patients with low-risk ICB who were managed in centers without neurosurgical service. METHODS A retrospective cohort comparative study. Patients with ICB and a Glasgow Coma Score >12 were included. Low-risk ICB was defined as solitary brain contusion of <1 cm in diameter, limited small subarachnoid hemorrhage, or subdural hematoma of <5 mm in maximal width and length. The decision to transfer the patients to a neurosurgical center was based on one of the three models. Hospital A: mandatory transfer. Hospital B: telemedicine-based consultation with a remote neurosurgeon. Hospital C: clinical-radiologic algorithm-based guidelines. Primary endpoint was the neurologic outcome of patients at discharge. RESULTS There were 152 patients in group A, 98 patients in group B, and 73 patients in group C. All patients of group A were transferred to a neurosurgical center. Fifty-eight percent of patients from hospital B and 26% of patients from hospital C were hospitalized in the primary center despite a proven ICB. These patients were discharged without any neurologic sequel of their injury. Two patients from group B and one patient from group C needed a delayed transfer to a neurosurgical center. None of the patient needed delayed neurosurgical intervention. CONCLUSIONS Despite the small sample size of this study, the presented data suggest that some patients with ICB can be safely and definitively managed in centers with no on-site neurosurgical service. The need for transfer may be based on telemedicine consultation or clinical -radiologic guidelines. Further larger scale studies are warranted.


Current Opinion in Anesthesiology | 2002

Lung contusion: Pathophysiology and management

Yoram Klein; Stephen M. Cohn; Kenneth G. Proctor

&NA; Management of severe pulmonary contusion is a challenge for clinicians. The incidence of adult respiratory distress syndrome (5‐20%), pneumonia (5‐50%), and mortality (5‐10%) associated with traumatic lung injury has changed little in the past three decades. Therapeutic options are limited to basic supportive measures such as mechanical ventilation, positive end expiratory pressure, invasive cardiopulmonary monitoring, analgesics and aggressive pulmonary hygiene. Presently, no pharmacological agents can prevent the progressive respiratory embarrassment that is associated with the natural history of the disease, but several drugs have been tested in the laboratory. The purpose of this brief review is to summarize information published since January 2000 related to the clinical management and pathophysiology of lung contusion. Curr Opin Anaesthesiol 15:65‐68.


American Journal of Surgery | 2013

Perforations following endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography: a single institution experience and surgical recommendations.

Rafi Miller; Andrew P. Zbar; Yoram Klein; Victor Buyeviz; Ehud Melzer; Bruce N. Mosenkis; Eli Mavor

BACKGROUND Perforation after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is uncommon, and its management is dependent on the mechanism and the graded classification of injury. METHODS Records of patients undergoing ERCP were analyzed over a 16-year period, patterning the types of injuries, diagnosis, management, and patient outcome. Type I injuries damage the medial or lateral duodenal wall before sphincter cannulation. Type II injuries are periampullary and occur as a result of a precut or a papillotomy. Type III injuries occur secondary to guidewire insertion or stone extraction from the common bile duct. Type IV injuries are probably microperforations that are noted on excessive insufflation during and after ERCP withdrawal. RESULTS Between 1995 and 2011, 27 perforations were identified from 1,638 ERCP procedures (1.6%). Nearly half of the procedures were regarded as difficult by the endoscopist, with 70% of the ERCPs (19 of 27) being for therapeutic indications. There were 5 type I, 12 type II, 5 type III, and 5 type IV perforations, of which 18 cases were diagnosed at the time of ERCP. Delayed diagnosis of type I perforations that were associated with free intraperitoneal air and contrast leakage proved fatal. Most type II perforations required immediate surgery with pyloric exclusion; delayed surgery with simple drainage had a high mortality rate. Most type III and type IV injuries can successfully be managed conservatively without delayed sepsis. CONCLUSIONS In perforation, the mechanism of injury during ERCP predicts the need for surgical management. Type I and type II injuries require early diagnosis and aggressive surgery, whereas type III and type IV injuries may be managed conservatively.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2011

Urine flow is a novel hemodynamic monitoring tool for the detection of hypovolemia.

Micha Y. Shamir; Leonid Kaplan; Rachel S. Marans; Dafna Willner; Yoram Klein

BACKGROUND:Noticeable changes in vital signs indicating hypovolemia occur only after 15% of the blood volume is lost. More sensitive variables (e.g., cardiac output, systolic pressure variation and its &Dgr;down component) are invasive and difficult to obtain in the early phase of bleeding. Lately, a new technology for continuous optical measurements of minute-to-minute urine flow rates has become available. We performed a preliminary evaluation to determine whether urine flow can act as an early and sensitive warning of hypovolemia. METHODS:Eleven patients (ASA physical status I–II) undergoing posterior spine fusion surgery were studied prospectively. Study variables included heart rate, blood pressure (systolic and diastolic), systolic pressure variation and &Dgr;down, minute urinary flow, hemoglobin, blood and urinary sodium, and creatinine in the blood and urine. Urine flow rate was measured using URINFO 2000™ (FlowSense Medical, Misgav, Israel). After recording baseline variables, 10 mL/kg of the patients blood was shed and a second set of variables was recorded. Subsequently, hypovolemia was reversed by infusing colloid solution (hetastarch 6%) followed by recording a third set of variables. These 3 observations were then compared. RESULTS:An average of 614 ± 143 mL (mean ± SD) of blood was shed. During phlebotomy, the mean urine flow rate decreased from 5.7 ± 8 mL/min to 1.07 ± 2.5 mL/min. Systolic blood pressure and hemoglobin also decreased. &Dgr;down increased. After rehydration, urine flow, blood pressure, and &Dgr;down values returned to baseline. The hemoglobin concentration decreased whereas other variables did not change significantly. CONCLUSION:Urine flow rate is a dynamic variable that seems to be a reliable indicator of changes in blood volume. These results justify further investigation.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2012

Minute-to-minute urine flow rate variability: a new renal physiology variable.

Yoram Klein; Mor Grinstein; Stephen M. Cohn; Jacob Silverman; Moti Klein; Hanoch Kashtan; Micha Y. Shamir

BACKGROUND:Urine output is a surrogate for tissue perfusion and is typically measured at 1-hour intervals. Because small urine volumes are difficult to measure in urine collection bags, considerable over- or underestimation is common. To overcome these shortcomings, digital urine meters were developed. Because these monitors measure urine volume in 1-minute intervals, they provide minute-to-minute measurements of the urine flow rate (UFR). In a previous study, we observed that the minute-to-minute variability in the UFR disappeared during hypovolemia. The aim of this study was to describe the minute-to-minute variability in the UFR as a new physiological variable and to show its relationship to blood volume depletion. METHODS:Seven adult pigs were used in this study. The UFR, minute-to-minute UFR, mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and base excess were measured at euvolemia and during gradual hemorrhaging (10%, 20%, and 30% of estimated blood volume). Variance and wavelet spectral analysis were used to measure the disappearance of the minute-to-minute UFR variability. RESULTS:The UFR decreased from 2.2 ± 0.2 to 1.0 ± 0.1 mL/min after a 10% estimated blood volume loss (±1 SE, n = 7, P = 0.0348). The variance in the minute-to-minute UFR decreased from 1.4 ± 0.3 to 0.4 ± 0.1 mL/min (±1 SE, n = 7, P = 0.046). CONCLUSIONS:The UFR and its minute-to-minute variability decrease during hemorrhaging. The variability in the UFR may be useful as an aid for the diagnosis of hypovolemia.


Journal of Emergencies, Trauma, and Shock | 2015

Extra-peritoneal pressure packing without external pelvic fixation: A life-saving stand-alone surgical treatment.

Guy Ron; Dan Epstein; Peleg Ben-Galim; Yoram Klein; Alexander Kaban; Shaul Sagiv

Purpose: Traditional maneuvers aim to decrease retroperitoneal bleeding in hemodynamically unstable multi-trauma patients with unstable pelvic fractures, are reportedly successful in approximately only 50%. The life-saving effect of extra-peritoneal pressure packing (EPPP) is based on direct compression and control of both venous and arterial retroperitoneal bleeders. This study describes the safety and efficacy of emergent EPPP employment, as a stand-alone surgical treatment, that is, carried out without external pelvic fixation or emergent angiography. Materials and Methods: A retrospective chart review of all hemodynamic unstable, multi-trauma patients with mechanically unstable pelvic fractures treated by the EPPP technique at our medical center between the years 2005 and 2011. Survival rates, clinical, and physiological outcomes were followed prospectively. Results: Twenty-five of the 181 pelvic fracture patients had biomechanically unstable fractures that required surgical fixation. Fourteen of those 25 patients had deteriorating hemodynamic instability from massive pelvic bleeding which was resistant to resuscitation, and they underwent EPPP, as a stand-alone treatment. The procedure successfully achieved hemodynamic stability in all 14 patients and obviated the early mortality associated with massive pelvic bleeding. Three of these patients eventually succumbed to their multiple injuries. Conclusion: Implementation of EPPP improved all measured physiological outcome parameters and survival rates of hemodynamically unstable multi-trauma patients with unstable pelvic fractures in our trauma center. It provided the unique advantage of directly compressing the life-threatening retroperitoneal bleeders by applying direct pressure and causing a tamponade effect to stanch venous and arterial pelvic blood flow and obviate the early mortality associated with massive pelvic bleeding.


Brain Injury | 2016

Incidence and injury characteristics of traumatic brain injury: Comparison between children, adults and seniors in Israel

Maya Siman-Tov; Irina Radomislensky; Nachshon Knoller; Hany Bahouth; Boris Kessel; Yoram Klein; Moshe Michaelson; Bala Miklosh Avraham Rivkind; Gad Shaked; Daniel Simon; Dror Soffer; Michael Stein; Igor Jeroukhimov; Kobi Peleg

Abstract Aim: To assess the incidence and injury characteristics of hospitalized trauma patients diagnosed with TBI. Methods: A retrospective study of all injured hospitalized patients recorded in the National Trauma Registry at 19 trauma centres in Israel between 2002–2011. Incidence and injury characteristics were examined among children, adults and seniors. Results: The annual incidence rate of hospitalized TBI for the Israeli population in 2011 was 31.8/100 000. Age-specific incidence was highest among seniors with a dramatic decrease in TBI-related mortality rate among them. Adults, in comparison to children and seniors, had higher rates of severe TBI, severe and critical injuries, more admission to the intensive care unit, underwent surgery, were hospitalization for more than 2 weeks and were discharged to rehabilitation. After adjusting for age, gender, ethnicity, mechanism of injury and injury severity score, TBI-related in-hospital mortality was higher among seniors and adults compared to children. Conclusion: Seniors are at high risk for TBI-related in-hospital mortality, although adults had more severe and critical injuries and utilized more hospital resources. However, seniors showed the most significant reduction in mortality rate during the study period. Appropriate intervention programmes should be designed and implemented, targeted to reduce TBI among high risk groups.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 2014

Reconsidering policy of casualty evacuation in a remote mass-casualty incident.

Bruria Adini; Robert Cohen; Elon Glassberg; B. Azaria; Daniel Simon; Michael Stein; Yoram Klein; Kobi Peleg

OBJECTIVES Inappropriate distribution of casualties in mass-casualty incidents (MCIs) may overwhelm hospitals. This study aimed to review the consequences of evacuating casualties from a bus accident to a single peripheral hospital and lessons learned regarding policy of casualty evacuation. METHODS Medical records of all casualties relating to evacuation times, injury severity, diagnoses, treatments, resources utilized and outcomes were independently reviewed by two senior trauma surgeons. In addition, four senior trauma surgeons reviewed impact of treatment provided on patient outcomes. They reviewed the times for the primary and secondary evacuation, injury severity, diagnoses, surgical treatments, resources utilized, and the final outcomes of the patients at the point of discharge from the tertiary care hospital. RESULTS Thirty-one survivors were transferred to the closest local hospital; four died en route to hospital or within 30 minutes of arrival. Twenty-seven casualties were evacuated by air from the local hospital within 2.5 to 6.15 hours to Level I and II hospitals. Undertriage of 15% and overtriage of seven percent were noted. Four casualties did not receive treatment that might have improved their condition at the local hospital. CONCLUSIONS In MCIs occurring in remote areas, policy makers should consider revising the current evacuation plan so that only immediate unstable casualties should be transferred to the closest primary hospital. On site Advanced Life Support (ALS) should be administered to non-severe casualties until they can be evacuated directly to tertiary care hospitals. First responders must be trained to provide ALS to non-severe casualties until evacuation resources are available.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2003

Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage Through an Abdominal Stab Wound

Yoram Klein; Hani H. Haider; Mark G. McKenney; Mauricio Lynn; Stephen M. Cohn

Diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) is one of the most useful tools in the diagnosis of intraperitoneal injuries secondary to stab wounds. The lavage catheter is inserted into the peritoneal cavity through a surgical incision or a blind puncture. Complications related to the catheter insertion were previously reported in both techniques. We describe 2 cases in which the lavage catheter was inserted through the stab wound itself after local wound exploration clearly demonstrated violation of the peritoneum. We suggest that in anterior abdominal stab wounds, the DPL can be safely and effectively performed through the stab wound if penetration to the peritoneum is diagnosed.

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Stephen M. Cohn

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Guy Pines

Kaplan Medical Center

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Svetlana Machlenkin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Moti Klein

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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