36 results match your criteria: "23298-0695; US Army Institute of Surgical Research[Affiliation]"

Cefepime challenge after piperacillin/tazobactam-induced thrombocytopenia.

J Thromb Thrombolysis

July 2019

Department of Anesthesiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Health/Medical College of Virginia Hospitals, 1200 E. Broad Street, 7th Floor, P.O. Box 980695, Richmond, VA, 23298-0695, USA.

Drug-induced thrombocytopenia (DITP) has been described as a sudden and severe hematologic complication of piperacillin/tazobactam. The proposed mechanism by which piperacillin/tazobactam causes DITP involves the formation of a covalent bond to platelet membrane protein thereby inducing a humoral immune response. Given the immunogenic nature of this adverse event and the structural similarities across beta-lactam antibiotics, the potential for cross-reactivity between agents within the class should be considered.

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A combination of inhaled nitrous oxide and low-dose ketamine infusion for labor analgesia.

J Clin Anesth

November 2019

Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, Department of Anesthesiology, West Hospital, 1200 E. Broad Street, 7th Floor, Box 980695, Richmond, VA 23298-0695, United States of America.

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Article Synopsis
  • The article with DOI: 10.1186/s13741-017-0063-6 has been corrected to address previous inaccuracies.
  • The correction aims to improve the clarity and reliability of the research findings presented in the article.
  • Readers are encouraged to refer to the corrected version for accurate information and conclusions.
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Purpose: The influence of obesity on anesthetic risk remains controversial, and obesity has only recently been specifically identified as a criterion by which a patient can be given a higher American Society of Anesthesiologists-physical status (ASA-PS) score. Nevertheless, we hypothesized that clinicians had assigned obese patients a greater ASA-PS score before obesity became an "official" criterion in 2015.

Methods: Basic demographic and physical details were collected on patients receiving anesthetics in the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System between 1986 and 2010.

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Background: Within an enhanced recovery pathway (ERP), the approach to treating pain should be multifaceted and the goal should be to deliver "optimal analgesia", which we define in this paper as a technique that optimizes patient comfort and facilitates functional recovery with the fewest medication side effects.

Methods: With input from a multidisciplinary, international group of experts and through a structured review of the literature and use of a modified Delphi method, we achieved consensus surrounding the topic of optimal analgesia in the perioperative period for colorectal surgery patients.

Discussion: As a part of the first Perioperative Quality Improvement (POQI) workgroup meeting, we sought to develop a consensus document describing a comprehensive, yet rational and practical, approach for developing an evidence-based plan for achieving optimal analgesia, specifically for a colorectal surgery within an ERP.

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Perfluorocarbon emulsion improves oxygen transport of normal and sickle cell human blood in vitro.

J Biomed Mater Res A

July 2014

Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center (VCURES), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, 23298-0695; Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center (VCURES), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, 23298-0695; US Army Institute of Surgical Research, Damage Control Resuscitation, San Antonio, Texas, 78234.

Perfluorocarbons (PFC) are compounds with high gas solubility that could help deliver O2 to tissues and have been suggested as adjunct therapy to ischemia. Using a newly designed in vitro system, we tested the hypothesis that a third generation PFC emulsion (Oxycyte) increased O2 transport of blood by measuring changes in O2 extraction ratio. The system included a computer-controlled pump and blood-gas exchange chambers to oxygenate and deoxygenate the blood from nine sickle cell disease (SCD) patients and five healthy donors.

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Introduction: Decompression sickness (DCS) results from a decrease in ambient pressure leading to supersaturation of tissues with inert gas and bubble formation. Perfluorocarbons (PFCs) are able to dissolve vast amounts of non-polar gases. Intravenous (IV) PFC emulsions reduce both morbidity and mortality associated with DCS, but the mechanism of this protective effect has not yet been demonstrated.

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The two faces of Eve: gaseous anaesthesia and inert gas narcosis.

Diving Hyperb Med

June 2010

Departments of Anesthesiology, Emergency Medicine and the Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center (VCURES), 1101 East Marshall Street, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA, Phone: +1-804-827-2205, Fax: +1-804-828-6413, E-mail:

Gaseous anaesthesia has been a great boon for medicine. These drugs form a foundation from which modern surgery has sprung, yet their mechanism(s) of actions remains poorly understood. Inert gas narcosis is a limitation of deep sea diving, and its mechanisms also remain poorly understood.

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Platelet transfusions: the science behind safety, risks and appropriate applications.

Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol

March 2010

Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Sanger Hall 81-007, 1101 East Marshall Street, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA.

Platelets are active metabolising cells that are evolved for the tasks of haemostasis, inflammatory reactions and wound healing. When platelet products are stored in the blood bank a complex series of changes occur, leading to partial activation, up-regulation of inflammatory mediators, cellular morphology changes, loss of cell membrane lipids and micro-particle formation, as well as apoptosis. The resultant coagulation transfusion product has a number of potential expected side effects including fever, alloimmunisation, sepsis, thrombosis and transfusion-related acute lung injury.

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The potential role of perfluorocarbon emulsions in decompression illness.

Diving Hyperb Med

March 2010

Professor of Anesthesiology and Emergency Medicine and Director of VCURES at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, 1101 East Marshal Street, Sanger Hall B1-007, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA, E-mail:

Decompression illness (DCI) is an occasional occurrence in sport, professional, and military diving as well as a potential catastrophe in high-altitude flight, space exploration, mining, and caisson bridge construction. DCI theoretically could be a success-limiting problem in escape from a disabled submarine (DISSUB). Perfluorocarbon emulsions (PFCs) have previously been investigated as 'blood substitutes' with one approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of myocardial ischaemia.

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Basic mechanisms of gas transport and past research using perfluorocarbons.

Diving Hyperb Med

March 2010

Professor of Anesthesiology and Emergency Medicine and Director of VCURES at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, 1101 East Marshal Street, Sanger Hall B1-007, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA, E-mail:

Perfluorocarbon compounds have been utilized either in pure (neat) form or as emulsions suspended in aqueous fluids. These man-made chemicals possess a unique physical property allowing them to dissolve much more respiratory gases than any water-based system. Understanding the basic physical chemistry surrounding these emerging medical technologies will assure they are utilized to maximum benefit for mankind.

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Introduction: Decompression illness (DCI) results from sudden changes in ambient pressure leading to super-saturation and bubble formation in tissues and the blood stream. Perfluorocarbon emulsions (PFC) increase both oxygen and nitrogen solubility when infused into the blood stream. This study hypothesized that PFC would increase N(2) removal as well as O(2) delivery to tissues.

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Red cell transfusions and guidelines: a work in progress.

Hematol Oncol Clin North Am

February 2007

Department of Anesthesiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, 1200 East Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23298-0695, USA.

Blood transfusion utilization continues to rise, yet it has never undergone prospective safety and efficacy testing. Recent data regarding oxygen delivery, microcirculation, and inflammation all point toward potential problems with allogeneic transfusion. Outcome data from retrospective data bases are sobering, calling to question the present practices of red cell transfusion.

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Unfractionated heparin has been a near universal anticoagulant for cardiac surgery; however it is contraindicated in heparin-induced thrombocytopenia type II. Alternative anticoagulants such as bivalirudin (a direct thrombin inhibitor) are being utilized. Bivalirudin was successfully used in an immunologically complex patient (diagnoses of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia type II, systemic lupus erythematosus, antiphospholipid syndrome, and dialysis-dependent renal failure) requiring cardiopulmonary bypass.

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Although heparin/protamine has been the standard anticoagulation regimen in cardiac surgery for decades, it induces negative reactions within the vasculature. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a highly prothrombotic immune reaction to heparin that may result in death, limb ischemia leading to amputation, graft occlusion, and other severe thrombotic events. Patients undergoing cardiac surgery are at high risk for HIT antibody seroconversion and at risk for clinical HIT.

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Hemoglobin oxygen saturation measurements using resonance Raman intravital microscopy.

Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol

July 2005

Dept. of Anesthesiology, Virginia Commonwealth Univ., 1101 E. Marshall St., Rm. B1-012, PO Box 980695, Richmond, VA 23298-0695, USA.

A system is described for in vivo noninvasive measurements of hemoglobin oxygen saturation (HbO2Sat) at the microscopic level. The spectroscopic basis for the application is resonant Raman enhancement of Hb in the violet/ultraviolet region, allowing simultaneous identification of oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin with the same excitation wavelength. The heme vibrational bands are well known, but the technique has never been used to determine microvascular HbO2Sat in vivo.

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Risks of transfusion: outcome focus.

Transfusion

December 2004

Department of Anesthesiology, VCUMC, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA.

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Transfusion of blood products affects outcome in cardiac surgery.

Semin Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth

December 2004

Department of Anesthesiology and the Reanimation Engineering Shock Center, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, VA 23298-0695, USA.

There remains controversy as to when patients undergoing cardiac surgery should receive a transfusion and whether a low hematocrit and its treatment with a transfusion of red cells influences outcome. The data related to this controversy are reviewed. Although the risk of known viral transmission is currently low, stored red cells do not function normally, and each unit contains activated inflammatory cells and mediators.

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Experimental analysis of critical oxygen delivery.

Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol

March 2005

Department of Anesthesiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA.

Systemic variables were evaluated with respect to O(2) delivery to test the hypothesis that critical O(2) delivery and critical Hb can be estimated by multiple variables collected simultaneously. Rats were subjected to transfusion with either fresh or stored blood and then subjected to stepwise isovolemic hemodilution. Critical levels were measured by the dual-regression method from plots of systemic variables against O(2) delivery and Hb.

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Background: Platelet (PLT) transfusions are administered in cardiac surgery to prevent or treat bleeding, despite appreciation of the risks of blood component transfusion. The current analysis investigates the hypothesis that PLT transfusion is associated with adverse outcomes associated with coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG).

Study Design And Methods: Data originally collected during double-blind placebo-controlled phase III trials for licensure of Trasylol (aprotinin injection) were retrospectively analyzed.

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Systemic responses to prolonged hemorrhagic hypotension.

Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol

May 2004

Department of Physiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0695, USA.

Studies are needed to provide a rigorous examination of the relevance of monitored variables during prolonged hemorrhagic hypotension (HH). This study was designed to investigate the parameters that describe biochemical and O2 transport patterns in animals subjected to HH. Systemic parameters that could differentiate survivors from nonsurvivors were identified.

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