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1.
Pediatr Crit Care Med ; 19(4): e199-e206, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29369076

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The military uses "just-in-time" training to refresh deploying medical personnel on skills necessary for medical and surgical care in the theater of operations. The burden of pediatric care at Role 2 facilities has yet to be characterized; pediatric predeployment training has been extremely limited and primarily informed by anecdotal experience. The goal of this analysis was to describe pediatric care at Role 2 facilities to enable data-driven development of high-fidelity simulation training and core knowledge concepts specific to the combat zone. SETTING AND PATIENTS: A retrospective review of the Role 2 Database was conducted on all pediatric patients (< 18 yr) admitted to Role 2 in Afghanistan from 2008-2014. INTERVENTIONS: Three cohorts were determined based on commercially available simulation models: Group 1: less than 1 year, Group 2: 1-8 years, Group 3: more than 8 years. The groups were sub-stratified by point of injury care, pre-hospital management, and Role 2 facility medical/surgical management. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Appropriate descriptive statistics (chi square and Student t test) were utilized to define demographic and epidemiologic characteristics of this population. Of 15,404 patients in the Role 2 Database, 1,318 pediatric subjects (8.5%) were identified. The majority of patients were male (80.0%) with a mean age of 9.5 years (± SD, 4.5). Injury types included: penetrating (56%), blunt (33%), and burns (7%). Mean transport time from point of injury to Role 2 was 198 minutes (±24.5 min). Mean Glasgow Coma Scale and Revised Trauma Score were 14 (± 0.1) and 7.0 (± 1.4), respectively. Role 2 surgical procedures occurred for 424 patients (32%). Overall mortality was 4% (n = 58). CONCLUSIONS: We have described the epidemiology of pediatric trauma admitted to Role 2 facilities, characterizing the spectrum of pediatric injuries that deploying providers should be equipped to manage. This analysis will function as a needs assessment to facilitate high-fidelity simulation training and the development of "pediatric trauma core knowledge concepts" for deploying providers.


Subject(s)
Hospitals, Military/statistics & numerical data , War-Related Injuries/epidemiology , Afghanistan , Child , Child, Preschool , Cohort Studies , Databases, Factual , Female , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Infant , Male , Military Personnel , Retrospective Studies , Simulation Training , United States , War-Related Injuries/therapy
2.
JAMA ; 318(16): 1581-1591, 2017 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29067429

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: Prehospital blood product transfusion in trauma care remains controversial due to poor-quality evidence and cost. Sequential expansion of blood transfusion capability after 2012 to deployed military medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) units enabled a concurrent cohort study to focus on the timing as well as the location of the initial transfusion. OBJECTIVE: To examine the association of prehospital transfusion and time to initial transfusion with injury survival. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective cohort study of US military combat casualties in Afghanistan between April 1, 2012, and August 7, 2015. Eligible patients were rescued alive by MEDEVAC from point of injury with either (1) a traumatic limb amputation at or above the knee or elbow or (2) shock defined as a systolic blood pressure of less than 90 mm Hg or a heart rate greater than 120 beats per minute. EXPOSURES: Initiation of prehospital transfusion and time from MEDEVAC rescue to first transfusion, regardless of location (ie, prior to or during hospitalization). Transfusion recipients were compared with nonrecipients (unexposed) for whom transfusion was delayed or not given. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Mortality at 24 hours and 30 days after MEDEVAC rescue were coprimary outcomes. To balance injury severity, nonrecipients of prehospital transfusion were frequency matched to recipients by mechanism of injury, prehospital shock, severity of limb amputation, head injury, and torso hemorrhage. Cox regression was stratified by matched groups and also adjusted for age, injury year, transport team, tourniquet use, and time to MEDEVAC rescue. RESULTS: Of 502 patients (median age, 25 years [interquartile range, 22 to 29 years]; 98% male), 3 of 55 prehospital transfusion recipients (5%) and 85 of 447 nonrecipients (19%) died within 24 hours of MEDEVAC rescue (between-group difference, -14% [95% CI, -21% to -6%]; P = .01). By day 30, 6 recipients (11%) and 102 nonrecipients (23%) died (between-group difference, -12% [95% CI, -21% to -2%]; P = .04). For the 386 patients without missing covariate data among the 400 patients within the matched groups, the adjusted hazard ratio for mortality associated with prehospital transfusion was 0.26 (95% CI, 0.08 to 0.84, P = .02) over 24 hours (3 deaths among 54 recipients vs 67 deaths among 332 matched nonrecipients) and 0.39 (95% CI, 0.16 to 0.92, P = .03) over 30 days (6 vs 76 deaths, respectively). Time to initial transfusion, regardless of location (prehospital or during hospitalization), was associated with reduced 24-hour mortality only up to 15 minutes after MEDEVAC rescue (median, 36 minutes after injury; adjusted hazard ratio, 0.17 [95% CI, 0.04 to 0.73], P = .02; there were 2 deaths among 62 recipients vs 68 deaths among 324 delayed transfusion recipients or nonrecipients). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Among medically evacuated US military combat causalities in Afghanistan, blood product transfusion prehospital or within minutes of injury was associated with greater 24-hour and 30-day survival than delayed transfusion or no transfusion. The findings support prehospital transfusion in this setting.


Subject(s)
Afghan Campaign 2001- , Blood Transfusion , Emergency Medical Services , Military Medicine , Military Personnel , Wounds and Injuries/therapy , Adult , Air Ambulances , Female , Humans , Male , Proportional Hazards Models , Retrospective Studies , Survival Analysis , Time-to-Treatment , United States , Wounds and Injuries/mortality , Young Adult
3.
Mil Med ; 2022 Dec 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36574225

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: In battle-injured U.S. service members, head and neck (H&N) injuries have been documented in 29% who were treated for wounds in deployed locations and 21% who were evacuated to a Role 4 MTF. The purpose of this study is to examine the H&N surgical workload at deployed U.S. military facilities in Iraq and Afghanistan in order to inform training, needed proficiency, and MTF manning. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the DoD Trauma Registry was performed for all Role 2 and Role 3 MTFs, from January 2002 to May 2016; 385 ICD-9 CM procedure codes were identified as H&N surgical procedures and were stratified into eight categories. For the purposes of this analysis, H&N procedures included dental, ophthalmologic, airway, ear, face, mandible maxilla, neck, and oral injuries. Traumatic brain injuries and vascular injuries to the neck were excluded. RESULTS: A total of 15,620 H&N surgical procedures were identified at Role 2 and Role 3 MTFs. The majority of H&N surgical procedures (14,703, 94.14%) were reported at Role 3 facilities. Facial bone procedures were the most common subgroup across both roles of care (1,181, 75.03%). Tracheostomy accounted for 16.67% of all H&N surgical procedures followed by linear repair of laceration of eyelid or eyebrow (8.23%) and neck exploration (7.41%). H&N caseload was variable. CONCLUSIONS: H&N procedures accounted for 8.25% of all surgical procedures performed at Role 2 and Role 3 MTFs; the majority of procedures were eye (40.54%) and airway (18.50%). These data can be used as planning tools to help determine the medical footprint and also to help inform training and sustainment requirements for deployed military general surgeons especially if future contingency operations are more constrained in terms of resources and personnel.

4.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 89(3): 551-557, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32467471

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Thoracic surgery constitutes 2.5% of surgical procedures performed in theater, but the skills required are increasingly foreign to military surgeons. This study examines thoracic surgical workload in Iraq and Afghanistan to help define surgical training gaps. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of Department of Defense Trauma Registry for all role 2 (R2) (forward surgical) and role 3 (R3) (theater) military facilities, from January 2002 to May 2016. The 95 thoracic surgical International Classification of Diseases-9th Rev.-Clinical Modification procedure codes were grouped into 10 categories based on anatomy or endoscopy. Select groups were further stratified by type of definitive procedure. Procedure groupings were determined and adjudicated by surgeon subject matter experts. Data analysis used Stata Version 15 (College Station, TX). RESULTS: Of the total procedures, 5,301 were classified as thoracic surgical procedures and were included in the present study. The majority of thoracic surgical procedures (4,645 [87.6%]) were recorded as being performed at R3 medical treatment facilities (MTFs). The thoracic surgical procedures groups with the largest proportions were: bronchoscopy (39.1%), thoracotomy (16.9%), diaphragm (15.6%), and lung (11.4%). The most common lung procedure subgroup, aside from not otherwise specified, was segmentectomy (28.8%). The R3 MTFs recorded nearly five times the number of lung procedures compared with R2 MTFs; with R3 MTFs recording more than eight times the number of lobectomies compared with R2 MTFs. Thoracic workload was variable over the 15-year study period. CONCLUSION: Thoracic surgical skills are necessary in the deployed environment to manage combat-related injuries. Given the current trends in training and specialization, development and sustainment of thoracic surgical skills is challenging in the deployed US trauma system and likely for other nations, and humanitarian surgical care as well. Current training and practice paradigms pose both training and sustainment challenges for surgeons who deploy to a combat zone. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic/Care Management IV.


Subject(s)
Thoracic Injuries/surgery , Thoracic Surgical Procedures/statistics & numerical data , War-Related Injuries/surgery , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Clinical Competence , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Military Medicine/education , Registries , Retrospective Studies , Thoracic Injuries/epidemiology , Thoracic Surgery/education , United States
5.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 89(2S Suppl 2): S16-S25, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32301888

ABSTRACT

Under direction from the Defense Health Agency, subject matter experts (SMEs) from the Joint Trauma System, Armed Forces Medical Examiner System, and civilian sector established the Military Trauma Mortality Review process. To establish the most empirically robust process, these SMEs used both qualitative and quantitative methods published in a series of peer-reviewed articles over the last 3 years. Most recently, the Military Mortality Review process was implemented for the first time on all battle-injured service members attached to the United States Special Operations Command from 2001 to 2018. The current Military Mortality Review process builds on the strengths and limitations of important previous work from both the military and civilian sector. To prospectively improve the trauma care system and drive preventable death to the lowest level possible, we present the main misconceptions and lessons learned from our 3-year effort to establish a reliable and sustainable Military Trauma Mortality Review process. These lessons include the following: (1) requirement to use standardized and appropriate lexicon, definitions, and criteria; (2) requirement to use a combination of objective injury scoring systems, forensic information, and thorough SME case review to make injury survivability and death preventability determinations; (3) requirement to use nonmedical information to make reliable death preventability determinations and a comprehensive list of opportunities for improvement to reduce preventable deaths within the trauma care system; and (4) acknowledgment that the military health system still has gaps in current infrastructure that must be addressed to globally and continuously implement the process outlined in the Military Trauma Mortality Review process in the future. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III.


Subject(s)
Military Medicine , Military Personnel , War-Related Injuries/mortality , Cause of Death , Humans , Injury Severity Score , Military Medicine/standards , Trauma Severity Indices , United States , War-Related Injuries/therapy , Wounds and Injuries/mortality , Wounds and Injuries/therapy
6.
Mil Med ; 185(Suppl 1): 500-507, 2020 01 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32074304

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) is the execution of prehospital trauma skills in the combat environment. TCCC was recognized by the 2018 Department of Defense Instruction on Medical Readiness Training as a critical wartime task. This study examines the training, understanding, and utilization of TCCC principles and guidelines among US Army medical providers and examines provider confidence of medics in performing TCCC skills. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A cross-sectional survey, developed by members of the Committee on TCCC, was distributed to all US Army Physicians and Physician Assistants via anonymous electronic communication. RESULTS: A total of 613 completed surveys were included in the analyses. Logistic regression analyses were conducted on: TCCC test score of 80% or higher, confidence with medic utilization of TCCC, and medic utilization of ketamine in accordance with TCCC. CONCLUSIONS: <60% of respondents expressed confidence in the ability of the medics to perform all TCCC skills. Supervising providers who that believed 80 to 100% of their medics had completed TCCC training had more confidence in their medic's TCCC abilities. With TCCC, a recognized lifesaver on the battlefield, continued training and utilization of TCCC concepts are paramount for deploying personnel.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services/methods , Military Medicine/education , Military Personnel/education , Teaching/standards , Warfare , Cross-Sectional Studies , Emergency Medical Services/trends , Humans , Logistic Models , Military Medicine/standards , Military Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Teaching/statistics & numerical data , United States
7.
Mil Med Res ; 6(1): 24, 2019 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31352902

ABSTRACT

After publication of this article [1], it was brought to our attention that the Fig. 2 is incorrect. The correct Fig. 2 is as below.

8.
Mil Med Res ; 6(1): 7, 2019 02 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30813959

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Since 2001, the French Armed Forces have sustained many casualties during the Global War on Terror; however, even today, there is no French Military trauma registry. Some French service members (SMs) were treated in US Military Medical Treatment Facilities (MTFs) and were recorded in the US Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DoDTR). Our objective was to conduct a descriptive analysis of the injuries sustained by French SMs reported in the DoDTR and subsequent care provided to them to assist in understanding the importance of building a French Military trauma registry. METHODS: Using DoDTR data collected from 2001 to 2017, a retrospective descriptive analysis was conducted. We identified 59 French SMs treated in US MTFs. The characteristics of the SMs' demographics, injuries, care provided to them, and discharge outcomes were summarized. RESULTS: Among the 59 French SMs identified, 46 (78%) sustained battle injuries (BIs) and 13 (22%) sustained nonbattle injuries (NBIs). There were 47 (80%) SMs injured in Afghanistan (Opération Pamir), while 12 (20%) were injured in Opération Chammal in Iraq and Syria. Explosives accounted for 52.5% of injuries, while 25.4% were due to gunshot wounds; all were BIs. The majority of reported injuries were penetrating (59.3%), most of which were BIs (71.7%). The mean Injury Severity Score for BIs was 12 (SD = 8.9) compared to 6 (SD = 1.7) for NBIs. Around half of SMs (n = 30; 51%) were injured in Afghanistan between the years 2008-2010. Among a total of 246 injuries sustained by 59 patients, extremities were the body part most prone to BIs followed by the head and face. Four SMs died after admission (6.8%). CONCLUSIONS: The DoDTR provides extensive data on trauma injuries that can be used to inform injury prevention and clinical care. The majority of injuries sustained by French SMs were BIs, caused by explosives, and predominantly occurring to the extremities; these findings are similar to those of other studies conducted in combat zones. There is a need to establish a French Military trauma registry to improve the combat casualty care provided to French SMs, and its creation may benefit from the DoDTR model.


Subject(s)
Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Wounds and Injuries/epidemiology , Adult , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Female , France/ethnology , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Male , Middle Aged , Registries/statistics & numerical data , United States , United States Department of Defense/organization & administration , United States Department of Defense/statistics & numerical data
9.
Mil Med ; 184(11-12): 813-819, 2019 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31132109

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Orthopedic surgery constitutes 27% of procedures performed for combat injuries. General surgeons may deploy far forward without orthopedic surgeon support. This study examines the type and volume of orthopedic procedures during 15 years of combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective analysis of the US Department of Defense Trauma Registry (DoDTR) was performed for all Role 2 and Role 3 facilities, from January 2002 to May 2016. The 342 ICD-9-CM orthopedic surgical procedure codes identified were stratified into fifteen categories, with upper and lower extremity subgroups. Data analysis used Stata Version 14 (College Station, TX). RESULTS: A total of 51,159 orthopedic procedures were identified. Most (43,611, 85.2%) were reported at Role 3 s. More procedures were reported on lower extremities (21,688, 57.9%). Orthopedic caseload was extremely variable throughout the 15-year study period. CONCLUSIONS: Orthopedic surgical procedures are common on the battlefield. Current dispersed military operations can occur without orthopedic surgeon support; general surgeons therefore become responsible for initial management of all injuries. Debridement of open fracture, fasciotomy, amputation and external fixation account for 2/3 of combat orthopedic volume; these procedures are no longer a significant part of general surgery training, and uncommonly performed by general/trauma surgeons at US hospitals. Given their frequency in war, expertise in orthopedic procedures by military general surgeons is imperative.


Subject(s)
Orthopedic Procedures/statistics & numerical data , Warfare/statistics & numerical data , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Amputation, Surgical/methods , Amputation, Surgical/statistics & numerical data , Debridement/methods , Debridement/statistics & numerical data , Fasciotomy/methods , Fasciotomy/statistics & numerical data , Fractures, Open/epidemiology , Fractures, Open/surgery , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Military Medicine/methods , Military Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Orthopedic Procedures/methods , Registries/statistics & numerical data , Retrospective Studies , United States/epidemiology
10.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 13767, 2019 09 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31551454

ABSTRACT

A mortality review of death caused by injury requires a determination of injury survivability prior to a determination of death preventability. If injuries are nonsurvivable, only non-medical primary prevention strategies have potential to prevent the death. Therefore, objective measures are needed to empirically inform injury survivability from complex anatomic patterns of injury. As a component of injury mortality reviews, network structures show promise to objectively elucidate survivability from complex anatomic patterns of injury resulting from explosive and firearm mechanisms. In this network analysis of 5,703 critically injured combat casualties, patterns of injury among fatalities from explosive mechanisms were associated with both a higher number and severity of anatomic injuries to regions such as the extremities, abdomen, and thorax. Patterns of injuries from a firearm were more isolated to individual body regions with fatal patterns involving more severe injuries to the head and thorax. Each injury generates a specific level of risk as part of an overall anatomic pattern to inform injury survivability not always captured by traditional trauma scoring systems. Network models have potential to further elucidate differences between potentially survivable and nonsurvivable anatomic patterns of injury as part of the mortality review process relevant to improving both the military and civilian trauma care systems.


Subject(s)
Wounds and Injuries/mortality , Adolescent , Adult , Cause of Death , Female , Humans , Injury Severity Score , Male , Military Personnel , Young Adult
11.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 87(4): 907-914, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31589195

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Motor vehicle-related (MVR) incidents are important causes of morbidity among deployed US service members (SMs). Nonbattle MVR injuries are usually similar to civilian MVR injuries, while battle MVR injuries are often unique due to the blast effects from precipitating explosive mechanisms. Our primary objective was to describe the characteristics and trends of nonfatal MVR injuries sustained by deployed US SMs. A second objective was to assess the association between mechanism of injury (i.e., explosive vs. nonexplosive) and limb amputation. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional analysis using data from the Department of Defense Trauma Registry collected from October 2001 to December 2018. Descriptive statistics were reported stratified by mechanism of injury (explosive vs. nonexplosive). The association between mechanism of injury and limb amputation was assessed using logistic regression models. RESULTS: There were 3,119 US casualties who sustained nonfatal MVR injuries, 2,380 (76.3%) SMs sustained nonexplosive MVR injuries while 739 (23.7%) sustained explosive MVR injuries. Of all MVR casualties, 2,085 (66.9%) were in Iraq or Syria and 1034 (33.1%) in Afghanistan. The annual prevalence of nonfatal MVR battle casualties was highest in Iraq and Syria from 2003 to 2009 and Afghanistan from 2009 to 2014, ranging overall 15 to 50 MVR casualties per 1,000 wounded in action. There were 92 limb amputations associated with MVR incidents. Compared with nonexplosive MVR mechanisms, explosive MVR mechanisms had higher association with limb amputation (adjusted odds ratio, 2.6; confidence interval, 1.7-3.9), even after adjusting for injury year and Injury Severity Score (AOR, 2.1; confidence interval: 1.4-3.4). CONCLUSION: Motor vehicle-related incidents are an important cause of injury in US military operations. Compared with nonexplosive MVR incidents, explosive MVR incidents result in more severe injuries, and have a higher associated risk of limb amputation. Continued efforts to improve injury prevention through protective equipment and medical training specific to MVR injuries are needed. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic and epidemiological study, Level III.


Subject(s)
Amputation, Surgical , Blast Injuries , Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Amputation, Surgical/methods , Amputation, Surgical/statistics & numerical data , Armed Conflicts/statistics & numerical data , Blast Injuries/diagnosis , Blast Injuries/epidemiology , Blast Injuries/etiology , Blast Injuries/surgery , Cross-Sectional Studies , Explosions , Female , Humans , Injury Severity Score , Male , Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Motor Vehicles , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , United States/epidemiology
12.
JAMA Surg ; 154(7): 600-608, 2019 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30916730

ABSTRACT

Importance: Although the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts have the lowest US case-fatality rates in history, no comprehensive assessment of combat casualty care statistics, major interventions, or risk factors has been reported to date after 16 years of conflict. Objectives: To analyze trends in overall combat casualty statistics, to assess aggregate measures of injury and interventions, and to simulate how mortality rates would have changed had the interventions not occurred. Design, Setting, and Participants: Retrospective analysis of all available aggregate and weighted individual administrative data compiled from Department of Defense databases on all 56 763 US military casualties injured in battle in Afghanistan and Iraq from October 1, 2001, through December 31, 2017. Casualty outcomes were compared with period-specific ratios of the use of tourniquets, blood transfusions, and transport to a surgical facility within 60 minutes. Main Outcomes and Measures: Main outcomes were casualty status (alive, killed in action [KIA], or died of wounds [DOW]) and the case-fatality rate (CFR). Regression, simulation, and decomposition analyses were used to assess associations between covariates, interventions, and individual casualty status; estimate casualty transitions (KIA to DOW, KIA to alive, and DOW to alive); and estimate the contribution of interventions to changes in CFR. Results: In aggregate data for 56 763 casualties, CFR decreased in Afghanistan (20.0% to 8.6%) and Iraq (20.4% to 10.1%) from early stages to later stages of the conflicts. Survival for critically injured casualties (Injury Severity Score, 25-75 [critical]) increased from 2.2% to 39.9% in Afghanistan and from 8.9% to 32.9% in Iraq. Simulations using data from 23 699 individual casualties showed that without interventions assessed, CFR would likely have been higher in Afghanistan (15.6% estimated vs 8.6% observed) and Iraq (16.3% estimated vs 10.1% observed), equating to 3672 additional deaths (95% CI, 3209-4244 deaths), of which 1623 (44.2%) were associated with the interventions studied: 474 deaths (12.9%) (95% CI, 439-510) associated with the use of tourniquets, 873 (23.8%) (95% CI, 840-910) with blood transfusion, and 275 (7.5%) (95% CI, 259-292) with prehospital transport times. Conclusions and Relevance: Our analysis suggests that increased use of tourniquets, blood transfusions, and more rapid prehospital transport were associated with 44.2% of total mortality reduction. More critically injured casualties reached surgical care, with increased survival, implying improvements in prehospital and hospital care.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medical Services/statistics & numerical data , Military Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Wounds and Injuries/epidemiology , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Female , Humans , Incidence , Injury Severity Score , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Male , Retrospective Studies , Survival Rate/trends , United States/epidemiology , Wounds and Injuries/diagnosis
13.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 85(1S Suppl 2): S145-S153, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29462088

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vascular surgery constitutes approximately 6.5% of surgical procedures performed for combat injuries, yet general surgeons are increasingly unfamiliar with vascular surgery. This study examines the frequency and type of vascular surgical procedures performed during recent US Military operations from 2002 to 2016. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the Department of Defense Trauma Registry was performed for all Role (R)2 and R3 medical treatment facilities (MTFs), from January 2002 to May 2016. A total of 106 International Classification of Diseases-9th Rev.-Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) procedure codes were categorized as vascular and were included in the present analysis. Procedure codes were separated by anatomic location and procedure type. Ligation as part of an amputation was excluded. Grafts were further subdivided by type: synthetic, autologous, and unknown. Procedure grouping and categorization were determined by subject matter experts. Data analysis used Stata Version 14 (College Station, TX). RESULTS: A total of 25,816 vascular surgical procedures were identified at R2 and R3 MTFs. Role 3 MTFs reported more than four times the number of procedures compared to R2 MTFs. The most common anatomic locations documented were extremity (64.96%) and not otherwise specified (28.1%). The most common procedures overall were amputation (33.36%) and fasciotomy (18.83%). The most common graft type was autologous (68.87%), and the least common was synthetic (5.69%). CONCLUSION: While amputation, fasciotomy, and ligation were the most common vascular procedures performed for combat trauma, the need for definitive repair including grafting is common at both R2 and R3 MTFs. Vascular surgery therefore remains a necessary skill set for the deployed US Military surgeon; military general surgeons need to train and sustain their vascular skills, including proficiency at amputation and fasciotomy. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Epidemiologic study, level III.


Subject(s)
Vascular Surgical Procedures/statistics & numerical data , Vascular System Injuries/surgery , War-Related Injuries/surgery , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Amputation, Surgical/statistics & numerical data , Fasciotomy/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Registries , Retrospective Studies , United States , Vascular Grafting/statistics & numerical data , Vascular System Injuries/epidemiology
14.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 85(1S Suppl 2): S122-S128, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29370066

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Abdominal surgery constitutes approximately 13% of surgical procedures performed for combat injuries. This study examines the frequencies and type of abdominal surgical procedures performed during recent US Military operations. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the Department of Defense Trauma Registry was performed for all Role 2 (R2) and Role 3 (R3) medical treatment facilities (MTFs), from January 2002 to May 2016. The 273 International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification procedure codes that were identified as abdominal surgical procedures were stratified into 24 groups based on anatomic and functional classifications and then grouped by whether they were laparoscopic. Procedure grouping and categorization were determined, and adjudicated if necessary, by subject matter experts. Data analysis used Stata version 14 (College Station, TX). RESULTS: A total of 26,548 abdominal surgical procedures were identified at R2 and R3 MTFs. The majority of abdominal surgical procedures were reported at R3 facilities. The largest procedure group at both R2 and R3 MTFs were procedures involving the bowel. There were 18 laparoscopic procedures reported (R2: 4 procedures, R3: 14 procedures). Laparotomy not otherwise specified was the second largest procedure group at both R2 (1,060 [24.55%]) and R3 (4,935 [22.2%]) MTFs. Abdominal caseload was variable over the 15-year study period. CONCLUSIONS: Surgical skills such as open laparotomy and procedures involving the bowel are crucial in war surgery. The abundance of laparotomy not otherwise specified may reflect inadequate documentation, or the plethora of second- and third-look operations and washouts performed for complex abdominal injuries. Traditional elective general surgical cases (gallbladder, hernia) were relatively infrequent. Laparoscopy was almost nonexistent. Open abdominal surgical skills therefore remain a necessity for the deployed US Military General Surgeons; this is at odds with the shifting paradigm from open to laparoscopic skills in stateside civilian and military hospitals. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Epidemiologic study, level III.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Injuries/surgery , War-Related Injuries/surgery , Abdominal Injuries/epidemiology , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Humans , Intestines/injuries , Intestines/surgery , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Laparoscopy/statistics & numerical data , Registries , Retrospective Studies , United States , War-Related Injuries/epidemiology
15.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg ; 85(1): 140-147, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29965942

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Approximately 4.5% of surgical procedures performed at Role 2 (R2) (forward surgical) and Role 3 (R3) (theater) medical treatment facilities can be classified as neurosurgical. These procedures are foreign to the routine daily practice of the military general surgeon. The purpose of this study was to examine the neurosurgical workload in Iraq and Afghanistan in order to inform the future predeployment neurosurgical training needs of nonneurosurgical providers. METHODS: Retrospective analysis of the Department of Defense Trauma Registry for all R2 and R3 medical facilities, from January 2002 to May 2016. The 103 neurosurgical International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification procedure codes identified were grouped by anatomic location. Select groups were further subdivided. Data analysis used Stata version 14 (College Station, TX). RESULTS: A total of 7,509 neurosurgical procedures were identified. The majority (7,244 [96.5%]) occurred at R3 theater hospitals. Cranial procedures were the most common at both R2 (120, 45.3%) and R3 (4,483 [61.9%]), with craniotomy/craniectomy the most frequent procedure. Spine procedures were performed almost exclusively at R3, with 61.1% being fusions/stabilizations and 26.9% being spinal decompression alone. Neurosurgical caseload was variable over the 15-year study period, dropping to almost zero in 2016. CONCLUSIONS: Neurosurgical procedures were performed primarily at larger R3 theater hospitals where neurosurgeons were assigned if present in theater; however, more than 100 cranial procedures were performed at forward R2 where neurosurgeons were not deployed. Considering that neurosurgeons are not everywhere available within the war zone, deploying general surgeons should have familiarity with trauma neurosurgery. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Epidemiologic study, level III; Care Management, level IV.


Subject(s)
Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Neurosurgical Procedures/statistics & numerical data , War-Related Injuries/surgery , Workload/statistics & numerical data , Afghanistan , Hospitals, Military/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Iraq , Military Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Registries , Retrospective Studies , United States , United States Department of Defense , War-Related Injuries/epidemiology
16.
Mil Med ; 183(suppl_2): 118-122, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30189056

ABSTRACT

High, combat-related bilateral lower extremity amputations rarely occur in isolation. Dismounted complex blast injury is a devastating and life-threatening constellation of multisystem injuries most commonly due to dismounted contact with improvised explosive devices. Rapid damage control resuscitation and surgery are essential to improve patient survival and minimize both early complications and late sequelae. A coordinated team approach is essential to provide simultaneous airway management, volume resuscitation (ideally with whole blood or ratio transfusion), and immediate control of life-threatening hemorrhage. Temporary aortic or iliac vessel clamping during concurrent exploratory or vascular control laparotomy is frequently required. Stabilization of unstable pelvic fractures is then performed, followed by debridement and irrigation of all wounds, which should be left open, and subsequent provisional stabilization of long bone fractures. The goal of the initial surgical resuscitative endeavor is rapid concurrent control of all sources of hemorrhage to avoid the lethal triad of acidosis, hypothermia and coagulopathy. To this end, multiple surgeons or surgical teams should be utilized whenever feasible. Patients then require ongoing resuscitation followed by early and frequent return to the operating suite throughout the evacuation chain. Utilizing this approach, a high survival rate with reasonable functional outcomes is achievable despite the extreme severity of the DCBI pattern.


Subject(s)
Amputation, Surgical/classification , Amputation, Surgical/methods , Blast Injuries/complications , Walking/physiology , Blast Injuries/physiopathology , Blast Injuries/surgery , Debridement/methods , Humans , Military Medicine/methods , Military Medicine/trends , Military Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Wound Healing
17.
Mil Med ; 183(suppl_2): 98-100, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30189065

ABSTRACT

Unlike penetrating abdominal injuries where the decision to operate is relatively straight forward, those combat casualties that sustain blunt abdominal trauma offer more of a diagnostic and clinical challenge. For unstable patients with a positive focused abdominal sonography in trauma or diagnostic peritoneal lavage, exploratory laparotomy should be undertaken immediately. All grade IV-V splenic injuries should undergo splenectomy, patients undergoing attempted splenic salvage should be monitored in the Role 3 facility and embolization of such splenic injuries may be considered if available. Patients who fail non-operative management of the spleen require splenectomy at the Role 3 prior to aeromedical evacuation. Overwhelming post-splenectomy infection is a serious disease that can progress from a mild flu-like illness to fulminant sepsis in a short period of time. Although relatively rare, it has a high mortality rate with delayed or inadequate treatment. All splenectomized patients and those deemed to be functionally asplenic should be vaccinated within 14 days from splenectomy and prior to aeromedical evacuation.


Subject(s)
Splenectomy/methods , Vaccination/methods , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/complications , Abdominal Injuries/complications , Abdominal Injuries/surgery , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Spleen/injuries , Spleen/physiopathology , Splenectomy/adverse effects , Ultrasonography/methods , Vaccination/trends , Wounds, Nonpenetrating/surgery
18.
Mil Med ; 183(suppl_2): 8-11, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30189085

ABSTRACT

There is a widely prevailing belief that electronic health records and data registries are the same, or that registries can be replaced by electronic health records given the advances in technology. While information systems have revolutionized documentation of medical care, distinctions continue to exist. This article will clear the confusion between the two systems, using the Joint Trauma System's (JTS) Department of Defense (DoD) Trauma Registry (DoDTR), the approved enterprise wide trauma registry for the military, as an example.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/standards , Registries/standards , Data Collection , Documentation/methods , Documentation/standards , Documentation/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Registries/statistics & numerical data , United States , United States Department of Defense/organization & administration
19.
Mil Med ; 183(suppl_2): 115-117, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30189052

ABSTRACT

While combat-related pelvis fractures are more commonly open, higher energy, and complex in pattern than those seen in the civilian setting, the principles of management are similar. The primary differences are related to the austere setting in which the initial management takes place, and the lack of resources typically available. Initial management consists of cessation of hemorrhage, along with the multi-disciplinary prioritized management of associated injuries, and skeletal stabilization. This is most commonly achieved with a compressive sheet or pelvic binder, with pelvic external fixation when resources allow, and debridement of open wounds as necessary. Definitive, internal fixation is delayed until the patient arrives at a higher echelon of care.


Subject(s)
Fractures, Bone/therapy , Pelvis/injuries , Debridement/methods , Disease Management , Fracture Fixation/methods , Fracture Fixation/trends , Fractures, Bone/physiopathology , Humans , Pelvis/physiopathology , Wounds and Injuries/physiopathology , Wounds and Injuries/surgery
20.
Mil Med ; 183(suppl_2): 112-114, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30189055

ABSTRACT

Combat extremity injury and amputation is a life threatening injury. Initial surgical care should focus on hemostasis followed by irrigation and debridement of contaminated and nonviable tissue. Preservation of limb length begins at the initial surgical procedure, to include retention of atypical soft tissue flaps for later reconstruction and treatment of proximal fractures. Serial irrigation and debridements are required throughout the MEDEVAC system as the evolving zone of injury becomes more mature, followed by the appropriate timing of closure outside the combat theater.


Subject(s)
Amputation, Surgical/methods , Treatment Outcome , Amputation, Surgical/standards , Debridement/methods , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Limb Salvage/methods , Research Design , Severity of Illness Index , Surgical Flaps/surgery
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