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1.
J Burn Care Rehabil ; 22(6): 429-34, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11761396

ABSTRACT

Major burns among food service workers appears to be an underappreciated source of morbidity and public expense in New York City. A retrospective study was conducted to identify workers requiring hospital admission over the past 3 years. Seventy-six restaurant workers (3.8% of all adult admissions) were identified. They averaged 33 years of age, and sustained burns with a mean %TBSA of 12.5, resulting in a mean length of stay of 12.8 days. Scalds predominated, with water/coffee burns most common (n = 29), followed by oil (n = 27), and soup/sauce burns (n = 12). Burns to the extremities occurred in 97% of patients. Surgery was required in 32 of 76 patients (42.1%). Oil burns were more likely to require surgery than aqueous scalds (59 vs 34%; P < 0.01). Hospitalization expenses averaged $1.13 million dollars per year. There were no mortalities. Restaurant-related major burns are a frequent occurrence, particularly scald injuries. Hospital care and further disability result in enormous publicly funded expenses. The morbidity and lost wages are a severe detriment to workers and their families. Greater public health awareness measures are warranted.


Subject(s)
Burns/epidemiology , Public Health/statistics & numerical data , Restaurants/statistics & numerical data , Skin/injuries , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Burn Units/economics , Burn Units/statistics & numerical data , Burns/economics , Burns/therapy , Female , Hospital Costs/statistics & numerical data , Hospitalization/economics , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, University/economics , Hospitals, University/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Length of Stay/economics , Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data , Male , Middle Aged , New York City/epidemiology , Occupational Health/statistics & numerical data , Public Health/economics , Restaurants/economics , Retrospective Studies , Trauma Severity Indices
3.
Ann Surg ; 224(1): 29-36, 1996 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8678614

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There is disagreement over the reliability of technetium Tc 99m (99mTc)-labeled erythrocyte scintigraphy in the localization of active lower gastrointestinal hemorrhage. A previous study at The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center that showed a superior sensitivity for localization of scintigraphy versus angiography in surgical patients led the authors to emphasize scintigraphy as the diagnostic test of first choice in the clinical diagnostic algorithm. The authors hypothesized that tagged erythrocyte scintigraphy can be used accurately as the primary diagnostic modality in localizing acute bleeding and guiding surgical intervention. METHODS: The authors conducted a 5-year, retrospective analysis of 224 inpatients who underwent scintigraphic imaging for diagnosis and localization of active lower gastrointestinal bleeding. Using scintigraphy as the primary diagnostic test, with colonoscopy, upper endoscopy, and angiography as adjunctive studies, 99mTc-labeled erythrocyte scans were performed at the clinician's discretion and were reviewed again for study purposes by two nuclear radiologists who were blinded to clinical outcome. Adjunctive diagnostic tests also were ordered for clinical indications. RESULTS: Using delayed periodic scintigraphic imaging, results of 115 scans (51.3%) demonstrated bleeding, with 96 scans (42.9%) localizing to a specific anatomic site. Patients with positive scans were five times more likely to require surgery (p < 0.005) than patients with negative scans, and surgical patients were twice as likely to localize by scintigraphy (p < 0.0001). Fifty patients (22.3%) required surgical intervention to control hemorrhage and had a bleeding site confirmed by both clinical and pathologic examinations. Forty-eight of those patients (96%) had a bleeding site determined preoperatively. For 37 patients with bleeding sites localized preoperatively by scintigraphy, 36 (97.3%) had correct localization based on surgical pathology. Only one patient required a subtotal colectomy solely because of nonlocalized bleeding. No patient bled postoperatively, and there was no mortality in either operated or nonoperated patients. The mean volume of transfused erythrocytes was similar in both scan-localized and nonlocalized surgical patients. CONCLUSION: When performed correctly and interpreted conservatively, scintigraphy is a useful and safe means of guiding segmental resection, and should be the primary tool used in the diagnosis of patients with active lower gastrointestinal bleeding.


Subject(s)
Erythrocytes/diagnostic imaging , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/diagnostic imaging , Sodium Pertechnetate Tc 99m , Chi-Square Distribution , Diagnosis, Differential , Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage/surgery , Humans , Intestines/diagnostic imaging , Intestines/surgery , Radionuclide Imaging/methods , Radionuclide Imaging/statistics & numerical data , Remission, Spontaneous , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
4.
Surg Technol Int ; IV: 333-8, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21400455

ABSTRACT

Prior to the mid-1980s, nitric oxide (NO) was viewed as an environmental pollutant but not as a compound of physiological significance. Thus, it was a skeptical audience that first heard the pronouncement at a scientific meeting in 1986, that NO was the identity of the elusive endothelium-derived relaxing factor, a mediator of vasorelaxation in response to numerous endogenous stimuli. Since then, the simple gas NO has gone from obscurity to center stage, being identified as a key player in physiologic processes as diverse as blood pressure maintenance, neural transmission, and immunologic defense. In addition to its physiological roles, NO has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a multitude of disease states, many of which are of primary interest to the cardiovascular surgeon: circulatory shock, atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, and ischemia-reperfusion injury. Recent years has seen NO biology emerge as an exciting and extremely fertile area of biomedical investigation. To fully understand the molecular basis of many clinical problems facing the cardiovascular surgeon, appreciation of NO's involvement is essential.

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