44 research outputs found
Management Options of Colonoscopic Splenic Injury
Injury to the spleen during routine colonoscopy is an extremely rare injury. Diagnosis and management of the injury has evolved with technological advances and experience gained in the management of splenic injuries sustained in trauma. Of the 37 reported cases of colonoscopic splenic injury, 12 had a history of prior surgery or a disease process suggesting the presence of adhesions. Only 6 had noted difficulty during the procedure, and 31 patients experienced pain, shock, or hemoglobin drop as the indication of splenic injury. Since 1989, 21/24 (87.5%) patients have been diagnosed initially using computed tomography or ultrasonography. Overall, only 27.8% have retained their spleens. None have experienced as long a delay as our patient, nor have any had an attempt at percutaneous control of the injury. This report presents an unusual case of a rare complication of colonoscopy and the unsuccessful use of one nonoperative technique, and reviews the experience reported in the world literature, including current day management options
Diagnosis and Management of Esophageal Injuries: A Western Trauma Association Critical Decisions Algorithm
ABSTRACT: This is a recommended management algorithm from the Western Trauma Association addressing the diagnostic evaluation and management of esophageal injuries in adult patients. Because there is a paucity of published prospective randomized clinical trials that have generated Class I data, the recommendations herein are based primarily on published observational studies and expert opinion of Western Trauma Association members. The algorithms and accompanying comments represent a safe and sensible approach that can be followed at most trauma centers. We recognize that there will be patient, personnel, institutional, and situational factors that may warrant or require deviation from the recommended algorithm. We encourage institutions to use this guideline to formulate their own local protocols.
The algorithm contains letters at decision points; the corresponding paragraphs in the text elaborate on the thought process and cite pertinent literature. The annotated algorithm is intended to (a) serve as a quick bedside reference for clinicians; (b) foster more detailed patient care protocols that will allow for prospective data collection and analysis to identify best practices; and (c) generate research projects to answer specific questions concerning decision making in the management of adults with esophageal injuries
Are Trauma Surgeons Prepared? A Survey of Trauma Surgeons’ Disaster Preparedness Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic
OBJECTIVE: US trauma centers (TCs) must remain prepared for mass casualty incidents (MCIs). However, trauma surgeons may lack formal MCI training. The recent COVID-19 pandemic drove multiple patient surges, overloaded Emergency Medical Services (EMS) agencies, and stressed TCs. This survey assessed trauma surgeons\u27 MCI training, experience, and system and personal preparedness before the pandemic compared with the pandemic\u27s third year.
METHODS: Survey invitations were emailed to all 1544 members of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma in 2019, and then resent in 2022 to 1575 members with additional questions regarding the pandemic. Questions assessed practice type, TC characteristics, training, experience, beliefs about personal and hospital preparedness, likelihood of MCI scenarios, interventions desired from membership organizations, and pandemic experiences.
RESULTS: The response rate was 16.7% in 2019 and 12% in 2022. In 2022, surgeons felt better prepared than their hospitals for pandemic care, mass shootings, and active shooters, but remained feeling less well prepared for cyberattack and hazardous material events, compared with 2019. Only 35% of the respondents had unintentional MCI response experience in 2019 or 2022, and even fewer had experience with intentional MCI. 78% had completed a Stop the Bleed (STB) course and 63% own an STB kit. 57% had engaged in family preparedness activities; less than 40% had a family action plan if they could not come home during an MCI. 100% of the respondents witnessed pandemic-related adverse events, including colleague and coworker illness, patient surges, and resource limitations, and 17% faced colleague or coworker death.
CONCLUSIONS: Trauma surgeons thought that they became better at pandemic care and rated themselves as better prepared than their hospitals for MCI care, which is an opportunity for them to take greater leadership roles. Opportunities remain to improve surgeons\u27 family and personal MCI preparedness. Surgeons\u27 most desired professional organization interventions include advocacy, national standards for TC preparedness, and online training.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: VII, survey of expert opinion
Creative destruction in science
Drawing on the concept of a gale of creative destruction in a capitalistic economy, we argue that initiatives to assess the robustness of findings in the organizational literature should aim to simultaneously test competing ideas operating in the same theoretical space. In other words, replication efforts should seek not just to support or question the original findings, but also to replace them with revised, stronger theories with greater explanatory power. Achieving this will typically require adding new measures, conditions, and subject populations to research designs, in order to carry out conceptual tests of multiple theories in addition to directly replicating the original findings. To illustrate the value of the creative destruction approach for theory pruning in organizational scholarship, we describe recent replication initiatives re-examining culture and work morality, working parents\u2019 reasoning about day care options, and gender discrimination in hiring decisions.
Significance statement
It is becoming increasingly clear that many, if not most, published research findings across scientific fields are not readily replicable when the same method is repeated. Although extremely valuable, failed replications risk leaving a theoretical void\u2014 reducing confidence the original theoretical prediction is true, but not replacing it with positive evidence in favor of an alternative theory. We introduce the creative destruction approach to replication, which combines theory pruning methods from the field of management with emerging best practices from the open science movement, with the aim of making replications as generative as possible. In effect, we advocate for a Replication 2.0 movement in which the goal shifts from checking on the reliability of past findings to actively engaging in competitive theory testing and theory building.
Scientific transparency statement
The materials, code, and data for this article are posted publicly on the Open Science Framework, with links provided in the article
Recruitment and Consolidation of Cell Assemblies for Words by Way of Hebbian Learning and Competition in a Multi-Layer Neural Network
Current cognitive theories postulate either localist representations of knowledge or fully overlapping, distributed ones. We use a connectionist model that closely replicates known anatomical properties of the cerebral cortex and neurophysiological principles to show that Hebbian learning in a multi-layer neural network leads to memory traces (cell assemblies) that are both distributed and anatomically distinct. Taking the example of word learning based on action-perception correlation, we document mechanisms underlying the emergence of these assemblies, especially (i) the recruitment of neurons and consolidation of connections defining the kernel of the assembly along with (ii) the pruning of the cell assembly’s halo (consisting of very weakly connected cells). We found that, whereas a learning rule mapping covariance led to significant overlap and merging of assemblies, a neurobiologically grounded synaptic plasticity rule with fixed LTP/LTD thresholds produced minimal overlap and prevented merging, exhibiting competitive learning behaviour. Our results are discussed in light of current theories of language and memory. As simulations with neurobiologically realistic neural networks demonstrate here spontaneous emergence of lexical representations that are both cortically dispersed and anatomically distinct, both localist and distributed cognitive accounts receive partial support
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Management options of colonoscopic splenic injury.
Injury to the spleen during routine colonoscopy is an extremely rare injury. Diagnosis and management of the injury has evolved with technological advances and experience gained in the management of splenic injuries sustained in trauma. Of the 37 reported cases of colonoscopic splenic injury, 12 had a history of prior surgery or a disease process suggesting the presence of adhesions. Only 6 had noted difficulty during the procedure, and 31 patients experienced pain, shock, or hemoglobin drop as the indication of splenic injury. Since 1989, 21/24 (87.5%) patients have been diagnosed initially using computed tomography or ultrasonography. Overall, only 27.8% have retained their spleens. None have experienced as long a delay as our patient, nor have any had an attempt at percutaneous control of the injury. This report presents an unusual case of a rare complication of colonoscopy and the unsuccessful use of one nonoperative technique, and reviews the experience reported in the world literature, including current day management options
The Rare Requirement of On-scene Extremity Amputations in the Entrapped Trauma Patient
ABSTRACT Objectives Entrapment of trauma patients in motor vehicle and other accidents is common. Frequently, Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel and firefighters are able to free the patient and initiate rapid transport to trauma centers. In rare circumstances, severe torso and extremity injuries combined with major entrapment may require complex rescue operations. These trauma patients spend the “Golden Hour” at the scene under difficult conditions. The objective of this review is to evaluate the role of the trauma surgeon leading the care at the scene of critically injured and entrapped trauma patients with possible need for surgical interventions. Materials and methods A 10-year review of all trauma surgeon to scene activations between 2005 and 2014 at the Ryder Trauma Center, an urban ACS Level 1 trauma center, was performed. An analysis of the trauma registry, individual cases, and surgical interventions was conducted. Results The University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital (UM/JMH) Ryder Trauma Center and Miami Dade Fire Rescue have an established program in place for trauma surgeon to scene activations. During the study period, the on-call trauma surgeon was activated six times and traveled to the scene by air rescue helicopter four times, by ground in 1 case and in 1 case the patient expired before takeoff. One patient required on-scene amputation of an entrapped non-salvageable upper extremity. Two patients required on-scene amputation of bilateral lower mangled, entrapped extremities. One patient required a localized limb preserving surgical procedure to free him from entrapment. The incidence was 0.016% of 36,872 trauma alert activated patients evaluated at Ryder Trauma Center during the study period. Hemorrhagic shock, associated injuries, and long scene times were present in all patients. The survival of treated patients was 80%. Conclusion The need for on-scene amputations of nonsalvable extremities in entrapped trauma patients is rare. Experienced trauma surgeons should evaluate these patients and decide which interventions are necessary. All efforts should be made to salvage the limb. However, if the entrapped extremity appears nonsalvageable and the patient is in profound life-threatening shock requiring rapid transport, field amputation may be required. Policies, safety training and gear, supply kits, and partnerships with EMS are needed. How to cite this article Pust GD, Grossman MM, Shatz DV, Habib F, Pizano L, Zakrison TL, Marttos A, Ruiz G, Ginzburg E, Namias N. The Rare Requirement of On-scene Extremity Amputations in the Entrapped Trauma Patient. Panam J Trauma Crit Care Emerg Surg 2016;5(2):93-100
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