J
James M. Haan
Researcher at University of Kansas
Publications - 95
Citations - 2051
James M. Haan is an academic researcher from University of Kansas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Injury Severity Score & Trauma center. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 81 publications receiving 1686 citations. Previous affiliations of James M. Haan include Johns Hopkins University & Saint Francis University.
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Nonoperative management of blunt splenic injury: a 5-year experience.
TL;DR: Splenic embolization is a valuable adjunct to splenic salvage in the experience, allowing for the increased use of nonoperative management and higher salvage rates for American Association for the Surgery of Trauma splenic injury grades when compared with prior studies.
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Ligamentous injuries of the cervical spine in unreliable blunt trauma patients: incidence, evaluation, and outcome
TL;DR: Application of the practice management guidelines developed by the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma for identifying C-spine instability is effective and should facilitate early removal of the cervical collar in unreliable patients.
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Independent predictors of enteric fistula and abdominal sepsis after damage control laparotomy: results from the prospective AAST Open Abdomen registry.
Matthew J. Bradley,Joseph J. DuBose,Thomas M. Scalea,John B. Holcomb,Binod Shrestha,Obi Okoye,Kenji Inaba,Tiffany K. Bee,Timothy C. Fabian,James Whelan,Rao R. Ivatury,Agathoklis Konstantinidis,Jay Menaker,Stephanie Goldberg,Martin D. Zielinski,Donald H. Jenkins,Stephen A. Rowe,Darrell E.R. Alley,John D. Berne,Ladonna Allen,Paola G. Pieri,Starre Haney,Jeffrey A. Claridge,Katherine B. Kelly,Raul Coimbra,Jay Doucet,Ben Coopwood,David Keith,Carlos V.R. Brown,James M. Haan,Jeanette G. Ward,Stuart M. Leon,Evert Erriksson,Debbie Couillard,Marc de Moya,Gwendolyn M. van der Wilden +35 more
TL;DR: Large bowel resection, large-volume fluid resuscitation, and an increasing number of abdominal reexplorations were statistically significant predictors of ECF, EAF, or IAS in patients with an open abdomen after damage control laparotomy.
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Who should we feed? A Western Trauma Association multi-institutional study of enteral nutrition in the open abdomen after injury
Clay Cothren Burlew,Ernest E. Moore,Joseph Cuschieri,Gregory J. Jurkovich,Panna A. Codner,Ram Nirula,D. Millar,Mitchell J. Cohen,Matthew E. Kutcher,James M. Haan,Heather G. MacNew,M. Gage Ochsner,Susan E. Rowell,Michael S. Truitt,Forrest O. Moore,Fredric M. Pieracci,Krista L. Kaups +16 more
TL;DR: Enteral nutrition for patients with an open abdomen after trauma and the effect of EN on fascial closure rates and nosocomial infections is analyzed to clarify the role of EN in this subgroup.
Journal ArticleDOI
Blunt traumatic occult pneumothorax: is observation safe?--results of a prospective, AAST multicenter study.
Forrest O. Moore,Pamela W. Goslar,Raul Coimbra,George C. Velmahos,Carlos V.R. Brown,Thomas B. Coopwood,Lawrence Lottenberg,Herbert Phelan,Brandon R. Bruns,John P. Sherck,Scott H. Norwood,Stephen L. Barnes,Marc R. Matthews,William S. Hoff,Marc de Moya,Vishal Bansal,Charles K C Hu,Riyad Karmy-Jones,Fausto Y. Vinces,Karl Pembaur,David M. Notrica,James M. Haan +21 more
TL;DR: Most blunt trauma patients with OPTX can be carefully monitored without tube thoracostomy; however, OPTX progression and respiratory distress are independently associated with observation failure.