659 results match your criteria: "*U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research[Affiliation]"
Prehosp Emerg Care
October 2023
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, Texas, USA.
Background: The MARCH (Massive hemorrhage, Airway, Respirations, Circulation, and Hypothermia/Head injuries) algorithm taught to military medics includes interventions to prevent hypothermia. As possible sequelae from major trauma, hypothermia is associated with coagulopathy and lower survival. This paper sought to define hypothermia within our combat trauma population using an outcomes-based method, and determine clinical variables associated with hypothermia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Med
August 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
Access to the central vasculature is critical for hemodynamic monitoring and for delivery of life-saving therapeutics during emergency medicine and battlefield trauma situations but requires skill often unavailable in austere environments. Automated central vascular access devices (ACVADs) using ultrasound and robotics are being developed. Here, we present an ex vivo lower-body porcine model as a testing platform for evaluation of vascular devices and compare its features to commercially available platforms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
October 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas.
A focus of combat casualty care research is to develop treatments for when full resuscitation after hemorrhage is delayed. However, few animal models exist to investigate such treatments. Given the kidney's susceptibility to ischemia, we determined how delayed resuscitation affects renal function in a model of traumatic shock.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioengineering (Basel)
August 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
Hemorrhage remains a leading cause of death, with early goal-directed fluid resuscitation being a pillar of mortality prevention. While closed-loop resuscitation can potentially benefit this effort, development of these systems is resource-intensive, making it a challenge to compare infusion controllers and respective hardware within a range of physiologically relevant hemorrhage scenarios. Here, we present a hardware-in-loop automated testbed for resuscitation controllers (HATRC) that provides a simple yet robust methodology to evaluate controllers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaryngoscope Investig Otolaryngol
August 2022
Objectives/hypothesis: Composite vocal fold (VF) biomechanical data are lacking for augmentation after recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) injury. We hypothesize resulting atrophy decreases VF stiffness and augmentation restores native VF biomechanics.
Methods: Sixteen Yorkshire Crossbreed swine underwent left RLN transection and were observed or underwent carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) or calcium hydroxyapatite (CaHa) augmentation at 2 weeks.
Pediatr Crit Care Med
December 2022
Brooke Army Medical Center, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, TX.
Objectives: It is well known that polytrauma can lead to acute lung injury. Respiratory failure has been previously observed in combat trauma, but not reported in children, who account for over 11% of bed days at deployed Military Treatment Facilities (MTFs) using significant resources. We seek to identify risk factors associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV) which is important in resource planning and allocation in austere environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Musculoskelet Disord
July 2022
Combat Wound Care, U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, TX, 78234, USA.
Background: Delayed fracture healing caused by soft tissue loss can be resolved by the administration of a Th1 immunosuppressant, such as FK506. Additionally, open fractures are at high risk for infection. We hypothesized that the inclusion of an immunosuppressant to a subject at risk for a musculoskeletal infection will increase the likelihood of infection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Med
July 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
As we look to the current conflict in Ukraine, our service members deploy to periphery Northern Atlantic Treaty Organization countries. At the same time, we see an increase in high-kinetic wounding patterns in the United States. We look to the important underrepresented topic of urologic trauma in combat casualties to prepare for the wounds of modern warfare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioengineering (Basel)
July 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
Central vascular access (CVA) may be critical for trauma care and stabilizing the casualty. However, it requires skilled personnel, often unavailable during remote medical situations and combat casualty care scenarios. Automated CVA medical devices have the potential to make life-saving therapeutics available in these resource-limited scenarios, but they must be properly designed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Diagn Invest
September 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA.
The TEG 6s (Haemonetics) point-of-care viscoelastic analyzer is portable, compact, simple to use, and has the potential for rapid viscoelastic analysis that can guide the treatment of veterinary patients at the site of care. Although approved for use in people, the TEG 6s has yet to be evaluated for hemostatic analysis in veterinary medicine. Citrated whole blood (CWB) was collected from 27 healthy dogs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransfusion
August 2022
Departments of Surgery and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Ann Surg Open
September 2022
Joint Trauma System, DHA Combat Support, San Antonio, TX.
Objectives: The research question asked to what extent do self-rated performance scores of individual surgeons correspond to assessed procedural performance abilities and to peer ratings of procedural performance during a mass casualty (MASCAL) event?
Background: Self-assessment using performance rating scales is ubiquitous in surgical education as a proxy for direct measurement of competence. The validity and reliability of self-ratings as competency measures are susceptible to cognitive biases such as Dunning-Kruger effects, which describe how individuals over/underestimate their own performance compared to assessments from independent sources. The ability of surgeons to accurately self-assess their procedural performance remains undetermined.
Transfusion
August 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA-FT Sam Houston, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, USA.
J Pers Med
June 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
Hemorrhage is a leading cause of preventable death in trauma, which can often be avoided with proper fluid resuscitation. Fluid administration can be cognitive-demanding for medical personnel as the rates and volumes must be personalized to the trauma due to variations in injury severity and overall fluid responsiveness. Thus, automated fluid administration systems are ideal to simplify hemorrhagic shock resuscitation if properly designed for a wide range of hemorrhage scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransfusion
August 2022
Battlefield Health & Trauma Center for Human Integrative Physiology, U. S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
Background: Based on previous experiments in nonhuman primates, we hypothesized that DO crit in humans is 5-6 ml O ·kg min .
Study Design And Methods: We measured the compensatory reserve (CRM) and calculated oxygen delivery (DO ) in 166 healthy, normotensive, nonsmoking subjects (97 males, 69 females) during progressive central hypovolemia induced by lower body negative pressure as a model of ongoing hemorrhage. Subjects were classified as having either high tolerance (HT; N = 111) or low tolerance (LT; N = 55) to central hypovolemia.
Transfusion
August 2022
Department of Pediatrics, USUHS, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Background: Previous studies have found that intravenous fluid administration within the first 24 h may be associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV). We examined the association between initial 24 h fluids and PMV in combat casualties.
Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a previously described dataset from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DODTR).
Transfusion
August 2022
Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Background: Mass casualty incidents (MCIs) create an immediate surge in blood product demand. We hypothesize local inventories in major U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransfus Clin Biol
August 2022
Institut de Recherche Biomédicale des Armées, France.
Sensors (Basel)
April 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, TX 78234, USA.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg
August 2022
From the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research (J.M.G.), Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas; US+UAE Trauma, Burn, and Rehabilitative Medicine Mission (B.J.G.), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emeritus; 1st Medical Battalion (T.D.E., M.D.T.), 1st Marine Logistics Group, Oceanside, California; Womack Army Medical Center (S.R.B.), Fort Bragg, North Carolina; Joint Trauma System, DoD Center of Excellence for Trauma (J.M.G., S.D.J., C.W.C., S.A.S.), Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas; 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (T.D.E., B.G.D.), Camp Pendleton, California; Division of Acute Care Surgery Joint Medical, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (M.J.E.), Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Office of the Command Surgeon (A.B.H.), MacDill AFB, Florida; Professor of Surgery, Department of Surgery, Trauma and Surgical Critical Care, University of Alabama at Birmingham (J.B.H.), Birmingham, Alabama; Naval Trauma Training Center (B.S.K.), NAVMED OTC NEMTI CA, Los Angeles, California; Division of Trauma (R.N.L.), Brooke Army Medical Center, San Antonio Texas; US Army Medical Research and Development Command (T.M.P.), Army Futures Command (AFC), Ft Detrick, Maryland; Professor of Surgery, Division of Trauma, Critical Care and Acute Care Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University (M.A.S.), Portland, Oregon; Force Surgeon, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force; Chair, JTS Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care, Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton (B.G.D.), Camp Pendleton, California; and Department of Emergency Medicine (C.W.C.), CRDAMC, Ft Hood, Texas.
Background: Over the last 20 years of war, there has been an operational need for far forward surgical teams near the point of injury. Over time, the medical footprint of these teams has decreased and the utilization of mobile single surgeon teams (SSTs) by the Services has increased. The increased use of SSTs is because of a tactical mobility requirement and not because of proven noninferiority of clinical outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMil Med
May 2022
Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program, Preventive Medicine & Biostatistics Department, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
Introduction: During the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, increased incidence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) organisms, as well as polymicrobial wounds and infections, complicated the management of combat trauma-related infections. Multidrug resistance and wound microbiology are a research focus of the Trauma Infectious Disease Outcomes Study (TIDOS), an Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program, Uniformed Services University, research protocol. To conduct comprehensive microbiological research with the goal of improving the understanding of the complicated etiology of wound infections, the TIDOS MDR and Virulent Organisms Trauma Infections Initiative (MDR/VO Initiative) was established as a collaborative effort with the Brooke Army Medical Center, Naval Medical Research Center, U.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Phys Eng Express
April 2022
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, Ft. Sam Houston, TX, United States of America.
Artif Organs
June 2022
Autonomous Reanimation and Evacuation (AREVA) Research Program, Geneva Foundation, San Antonio, Texas, USA.
Background: Consumption of platelets and coagulation factors during extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO R) increases bleeding complications and associated mortality. Regional infusion of lactic acid enhances ECCO R by shifting the chemical equilibrium from bicarbonate to carbon dioxide. Our goal was to test if regional blood acidification during ECCO R inhibits platelet function and coagulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Surg Res
June 2022
The Burn Center, Department of Surgery, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, District of Columbia; Firefighters' Burn and Surgical Research Laboratory, MedStar Health Research Institute, Washington, District of Columbia; Departments of Surgery and Biochemistry, Georgetown University, Washington, District of Columbia. Electronic address:
Introduction: Proposed mechanisms of acute traumatic coagulopathy (ATC) include decreased clotting potential due to factor consumption and proteolytic inactivation of factor V (FV) and activated factor V (FVa) by activated protein C (aPC). The role of FV/FVa depletion or inactivation in burn-induced coagulopathy is not well characterized. This study evaluates FV dynamics following burn and nonburn trauma.
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