19 results match your criteria: "Trauma and Burn Center[Affiliation]"

Fasttrack intubation with the head rotated 30° following a cervical stab wound. A case report.

Int J Surg Case Rep

December 2024

Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Ben Arous Trauma and Burn Center, 2013 Ben Arous, Tunisia; University of Tunis Medical School, Tunisia; University Tunis El Manar Medical School, Tunisia.

Article Synopsis
  • Airway management in cervical trauma cases can be particularly difficult, especially with intubation, as it often requires maintaining a neutral head position, which may not be possible due to injury.
  • A case of a 19-year-old with a blunt cervical spine injury from an assault showed he was stable but required careful positioning and intubation, which was successfully completed using a LMA Factrach.
  • While traditional intubation methods may be challenging in non-standard positions, techniques like awake fiberoptic nasotracheal intubation and videolaryngoscopy are recommended for better outcomes in difficult situations.
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Death in detention in the Northern part of Tunisia: a 15-year study (2005-2019).

Int J Prison Health

September 2023

Faculty of Medicine, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia and Department of Legal Medicine, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis, Tunisia.

Purpose: This study aims to analyze the pattern of deaths in detention in Northern Tunisia as well as the causes of death.

Design/methodology/approach: The authors conducted a cross-sectional retrospective study including all the casualties of death in detention examined in the legal medicine Department in the main teaching hospital from 2005 to 2019. The department covers 10 out of the 11 governorates of Northern Tunisia and 13 prisons.

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A Spectacular Penetrating Craniocerebral Trauma From a Rake: A Case Report.

Korean J Neurotrauma

March 2023

Department of Neurosurgery, Trauma and Burn Center of Ben Arous, Faculty of Medicine of Tunis, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia.

Penetrating intracranial foreign bodies are rare and have a high potential for death or serious morbidity. Their surgical management is complicated and challenging. Herein, we present the case of a 30-years-old man who was a victim of aggression from a rake blow to the head.

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Cardiac echinococcosis is rare, and its clinical evolution is slow and asymptomatic until complications occur such as sudden death. Although more frequent in endemic countries, hydatid disease should be known by forensic specialists with regard to the migration flows of people from zones with high endemicity and who are likely to die from infection. We report an autopsy case of a 33-year-old male without any medical history who presented to the emergency room with shortness of breath, chest tightness, tingling all over the body and faintness without fever.

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Introduction: The celiacomesenteric trunk (CMT) is one of the most striking among the different variations of the normal vascularisation of the gastro-intestinal tract. It is often accidentally discovered during autoptical dissections, angiography or abdominal computed tomography (CT).

Case Presentation: A 27-year-old man was admitted to emergency for an acute abdominal pain.

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Improving Care Transitions to Drive Patient Outcomes: The Triple Aim Meets the Four Pillars.

Prof Case Manag

March 2020

Vivian Campagna, MSN, RN-BC, CCM, is the Chief Industry Relations Officer (CIRO) for the Commission for Case Manager Certification, the first and largest nationally accredited organization that certifies more than 45,000 professional case managers and more than 2,600 disability management specialists. Vivian has been involved in case management for more than 25 years, holding staff and administrative positions on both the independent and acute care side of the industry. Sheila A. Nelson, MSN, RN, CCM, is a CCMC Commissioner and also a Clinical Practice Specialist, Care Management Programs and Strategies, for Kaiser Permanente Washington, supporting clinical practice innovation, education, and program development to achieve cost, quality, safety, and service outcomes. Sheila has been involved in case management for more than 18 years, including holding leadership positions with large national health plans. Jean Krsnak, MSN/MBA, RN, CCM, is a CCMC Commissioner. She is also an Acute Care Case Manager at UC Irvine Medical Center, the only Level I trauma and burn center in Orange County, California. Her experience is primarily in academic centers and across settings including critical care, medical and surgical telemetry, and oncology.

Purpose: The purpose of this article is to examine how case managers can support positive outcomes during care transitions by focusing on the goals of the Triple Aim () and Coleman's Four Pillars (). Case managers can play a pivotal role to ensure high-quality transitions by assessing patients and identifying those who are at high risk; coordinating care and services among providers and settings; reconciling medications; and facilitating education of patients and their support systems to improve self-management. These activities are congruent with an underlying value of case management as defined by the Code of Professional Conduct for Case Managers: "improving client [i.

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Calculations for reproducible autologous skin cell-spray grafting.

Burns

December 2016

Bioreactor Group, McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. Electronic address:

Non-cultured, autologous cell-spray grafting is an alternative to mesh grafting for larger partial- and deep partial-thickness burn wounds. The treatment uses a suspension of isolated cells, from a patient's donor site skin tissue, and cell-spray deposition onto the wound that facilitates re-epithelialization. Existing protocols for therapeutic autologous skin cell isolation and cell-spray grafting have defined the donor site area to treatment area ratio of 1:80, substantially exceeding the coverage of conventional mesh grafting.

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Effects of wound dressings on cultured primary keratinocytes.

Burns

February 2016

Bioreactor Group, McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. Electronic address:

Autologous cell-spray grafting of non-cultured epidermal cells is an innovative approach for the treatment of severe second-degree burns. After treatment, wounds are covered with dressings that are widely used in wound care management; however, little is known about the effects of wound dressings on individually isolated cells. The sprayed cells have to actively attach, spread, proliferate, and migrate in the wound for successful re-epithelialization, during the healing process.

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Admission temperature and survival in patients admitted to burn centers.

J Burn Care Res

April 2014

From the *Department of Emergency Medicine, Emergency Responder Human Performance Lab, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and †Department of Surgery, UPMC Mercy Trauma and Burn Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

It is commonly believed that hypothermia occurring during burn resuscitation is associated with poor outcome, but there is little direct supporting evidence. The authors conducted an analysis of a statewide trauma registry to determine whether hypothermia (T ≤36.5°C) was associated with mortality when controlling for clinical confounders.

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An open, prospective, randomized pilot investigation evaluating pain with the use of a soft silicone wound contact layer vs bridal veil and staples on split thickness skin grafts as a primary dressing.

J Burn Care Res

July 2014

From the *Nathan Speare Regional Burn Treatment Center, Crozer-Chester Medical Center, Upland, Pennsylvania; †Joseph M. Still Burn Center, Joseph M. Still Research Foundation, Inc., Augusta, Georgia; ‡Tampa General Hospital Burn Center, University Foundation for Education & Research, Inc., Florida Gulf-to-Bay Anesthesiology, Tampa, Florida; and §University of Kansas Hospital Trauma and Burn Center, Kansas City, Kansas.

An open, prospective, randomized, pilot investigation was implemented to evaluate the pain, cost-effectiveness, ease of use, tolerance, efficacy, and safety of a soft silicone wound contact layer (Mepitel One) vs Bridal Veil and staples used on split thickness skin grafts in the treatment of deep partial or full-thickness thermal burns. Individuals aged between 18 and 70 years with deep partial or full-thickness thermal burns (1-25% TBSA) were randomized into two groups and treated for 14 days or until greater than 95% graft take was achieved, whichever occurred first. Data were obtained and analyzed on pain experienced before, during, and after dressing removal.

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Solitary paralysis of the flexor pollicis longus muscle after minimally invasive elbow procedures: anatomical and clinical study of the anterior interosseous nerve.

Plast Reconstr Surg

March 2011

Tuebingen and Murnau, Germany; Graz, Austria; Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; and Galway, Ireland From the Department of Plastic, Hand, and Reconstructive Surgery, BG Trauma and Burn Center, Eberhard-Karls University Tuebingen; the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, and the Institute of Pathology, Medical University of Graz; the Department of Plastic, Hand, and Reconstructive Microsurgery, BG Trauma Center Murnau; the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Melbourne; and the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital Galway.

Background: The origin of the flexor pollicis longus muscle can vary, causing compression of the anterior interosseous nerve in the forearm. The topographic relationship of the flexor pollicis longus to the median and anterior interosseous nerves must be considered when these nerves are decompressed. The anterior interosseous nerve is a motor nerve supplying the flexor pollicis longus, the flexor digitorum profundus, and the pronator quadratus.

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The contemporary role of blood products and components used in trauma resuscitation.

Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med

November 2010

Level I Trauma and Burn Center, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN 55101, USA.

Introduction: There is renewed interest in blood product use for resuscitation stimulated by recent military experience and growing recognition of the limitations of large-volume crystalloid resuscitation.

Methods: An editorial review of recent reports published by investigators from the United States and Europe is presented. There is little prospective data in this area.

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Weight loss and lean mass loss from burn induced catabolism can be more rapidly restored when the anabolic steroid oxandrolone is added to optimum nutrition compared to nutrition alone. Our purpose in this study was to determine whether the regained lean body mass (LBM) is retained 6 months after stopping oxandrolone. Forty-five severe burn patients, entering the recovery phase were randomized into a nutrition group alone or with the addition of oxandrolone, 20mg per day upon admission to the acute burn rehabilitation (RH) unit.

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The rate of re-epithelialization across meshed skin grafts is increased with exposure to silver.

Burns

May 2002

Department of Surgery, Trauma and Burn Center, Brigham & Women's Hospital, 75 Francis Street, PBB-B4, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

Unlabelled: The objective in this study was to determine whether exposure to pure silver increases the rate of re-epithelialization across a partial thickness wound. A meshed skin graft, placed on an excised burn wound was used as a healing model.

Methods: The rate of meshed skin graft epithelial closure on an exposed burn using a moist healing environment was shown.

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This study compared the effect of standard topical antibiotic management versus a biological skin substitute wound closure for mid-partial thickness burns of the face. Adult patients with mid-dermal facial burns produced by flash flames or flame exposure were studied using a randomized prospective study design. Total daily burn care time, pain (0-10 scale) and healing time were monitored.

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This study compared the anticatabolic and wound healing effects of the anabolic agents human growth hormone, HGH, and the testosterone analogue, oxandrolone, after severe burn injury. A randomized prospective study design was used. Patients were given HGH at a dose of 0.

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We studied the relationship between restoration of weight loss and healing of the "non-healing wound." Eight consecutive patients with large "non-healing wounds" of an average of 12 months duration, despite good local wound care, were studied. All had a weight loss of 10 percent or more of body weight, mainly lean body mass.

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The pastoral staff of the Mercy Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is a vital participant in the advanced trauma-care team. The staff of professionally certified chaplains take an active role in ministering to the unique temporal, psychological, and spiritual needs of both patients and patients' families. These professionals serve as hosts, counselors, confidants, and friends to people who have been suddenly thrown into chaos.

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Haloperidol complications in burn patients.

J Burn Care Rehabil

November 1987

Longwood Area Trauma and Burn Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115.

Neuropsychiatric complications are commonly seen in major burn patients. Haloperidol is frequently used to treat severe psychopathic behavior. We have noted severe muscle rigidity-an extrapyramidal side effect of the agent-in a number of burn patients.

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