Publications by authors named "Jessica Schucht"

Introduction: Early identification of traumatic brain injury followed by timely, targeted treatment is essential. We aimed to establish the ability of prehospital Glasgow Coma Scale score alone and combined with vital signs to predict hospital-diagnosed traumatic brain injury.

Methods: This study included adults from the 2017-2020 Trauma Quality Improvement Program data set with blunt mechanism.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Traumatic injuries to the axillary and subclavian arteries are rare, and a study analyzed patient data from 2015 to 2021 to understand injury characteristics and management strategies.
  • A total of 44 patients were reviewed, with injuries stemming equally from blunt and penetrating trauma; various injury types and management approaches were identified, including both operative and non-operative strategies.
  • The study found a high success rate for revascularization (97%) and low amputation (5%) and mortality (9%) rates, with differences in management based on the type of artery injured, particularly favoring non-operative treatment for subclavian artery injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: Intestinal ischaemia-reperfusion injury following resuscitated haemorrhagic shock (HS) leads to endothelial and microcirculatory dysfunction and intestinal barrier breakdown. Although vascular smooth muscle machinery remains intact, microvascular vasoconstriction occurs secondary to endothelial cell dysfunction, resulting in further ischaemia and organ injury. Resuscitation with fresh frozen plasma (FFP) improves blood flow, stabilizes the endothelial glycocalyx and alleviates organ injury.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Arteriovenous fistulas often require frequent interventions to maintain patency for hemodialysis. Interventions may include open or percutaneous thrombectomy with additional targeted interventions as indicated. We evaluated the primary and cumulative functional patency rates following three unique approaches to percutaneous thrombectomy of thrombosed dialysis access.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Intestinal injury from resuscitated hemorrhagic shock (HS) disrupts intestinal microvascular flow and causes enterocyte apoptosis, intestinal barrier breakdown, and injury to multiple organs. Fresh frozen plasma (FFP) resuscitation or directed peritoneal (DPR) resuscitation protect endothelial glycocalyx, improve intestinal blood flow, and alleviate intestinal injury. We postulated that FFP plus DPR might improve effective hepatic blood flow (EHBF) and prevent associated organ injury (liver, heart).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Direct peritoneal resuscitation (DPR) has been found to be a useful adjunct in the management of critically ill trauma patients. DPR is performed following damage control surgery by leaving a surgical drain in the mesentery, placing a temporary abdominal closure, and postoperatively running peritoneal dialysis solution through the surgical drain with removal through the temporary closure. In the original animal models, the peritoneal dialysate infusion was found to augment visceral microcirculatory blood flow reducing the ischemic insult that occurs following hemorrhagic shock.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients with burn injuries are often initially transported to centers without burn capabilities, requiring subsequent transfer to a higher level of care. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of this treatment delay on outcomes. Adult burn patients meeting American Burn Association criteria for transfer at a single burn center were retrospectively identified.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Hemorrhagic shock (HS) and resuscitation (RES) cause ischemia-induced intestinal permeability due to intestinal barrier breakdown, damage to the endothelium, and tight junction (TJ) complex disruption between enterocytes. The effect of hemostatic RES with blood products on this phenomenon is unknown. Previously, we showed that fresh frozen plasma (FFP) RES, with or without directed peritoneal resuscitation (DPR) improved blood flow and alleviated organ injury and enterocyte damage following HS/RES.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Impaired intestinal microvascular perfusion following resuscitated hemorrhagic shock (HS) leads to ischemia-reperfusion injury, microvascular dysfunction, and intestinal epithelial injury, which contribute to the development of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in some trauma patients. Restoration of central hemodynamics with traditional methods alone often fails to fully restore microvascular perfusion and does not protect against ischemia-reperfusion injury. We hypothesized that resuscitation (RES) with fresh frozen plasma (FFP) alone or combined with direct peritoneal resuscitation (DPR) with 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unplanned readmission is often used as a surgical quality metric. A subset of kidney transplant recipients undergos multiple readmissions (MRs), although the incidence and risk factors are not well described. The aim of this study was to evaluate risk factors for MR after deceased donor kidney transplantation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many transplant recipients travel long distances to their transplant center with challenging access to their transplant team. As such, many centers keep recipients near to the center for a period immediately after discharge from the transplant admission. Thus far, the correlation between distance to the transplant center, readmission, and outcomes has not been described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To assess renal transplant outcomes after donation by kidney-only (KO) multiple-organ (MO) donors on a national scale. The United Network for Organ Sharing database was examined for patients undergoing isolated kidney transplant from a deceased donor from 2000 through 2016. Comparison was made between recipients of grafts from KO MO donors at baseline and in a cohort of KO and MO recipients matched propensity scoring.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite low mortality rates, self-inflicted stab wounds (SISWs) can result in significant morbidity and often reflect underlying substance abuse and mental health disorders. This study aimed to characterize demographics, comorbidities, and outcomes seen in self-inflicted stabbings and compare these metrics to those seen in assault stabbings. A Level I trauma center registry was queried for patients with stab injuries between January 2010 and December 2015.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acute brain death (ABD) is associated with inflammation and lung injury. Direct peritoneal resuscitation (DPR) improves blood flow to the vital organs after ABD. DPR reduces lung injury, but the mechanism for this is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose Of Review: This review provides a comprehensive overview of the etiology of stress-related mucosal disease, current acid suppression therapy recommendations, and the role enteral nutrition may play in disease prevention.

Recent Findings: Recent literature indicates enteral nutrition may prevent complications of stress-related mucosal disease by increasing splanchnic blood flow, enhancing gastrointestinal motility, and promoting cellular immunity and integrity through local nutrient delivery. Stress-related mucosal disease is a common complication of hospitalization in the critically ill which may lead to overt gastrointestinal bleeding and enhanced mortality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF