Institution
Detroit Receiving Hospital
Healthcare•Detroit, Michigan, United States•
About: Detroit Receiving Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Detroit, Michigan, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Vancomycin & Population. The organization has 877 authors who have published 850 publications receiving 37202 citations. The organization is also known as: Detroit General.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: For optimal treatment, abdominal abscesses require prompt drainage and properly selected antibiotics at adequate doses, and appropriate antibiotic concentrations from abscess fluid are evaluated.
Abstract: Background Appropriate antibiotic therapy and prompt drainage are essential for optimal results with abdominal abscesses. Methods In this prospective study, 47 abdominal abscesses from 42 patients over 2 years who had percutaneous drainage were evaluated. Antibiotic concentrations were evaluated from the abscess fluid and correlated with clinical and microbiologic cure. Results Only 23% of patients had appropriate antibiotic selection with optimal concentrations for the bacteria recovered. Piperacillin/tazobactam, cefepime, and metronidazole provided adequate concentrations in all except the largest abscesses, whereas fluconazole required higher doses in all abscesses. Vancomycin and ciprofloxacin levels were inadequate in most abscesses. With gram-negative aerobes, the use of appropriate antibiotics resulted in a relatively higher incidence of presumed eradication (100% [4 of 4] vs 75% [9 of 12], P = .26). With ≥3 organisms identified, clinical failure was significant (58% vs 13%, P = .01). Conclusions For optimal treatment, abdominal abscesses require prompt drainage and properly selected antibiotics at adequate doses. Essential information can be obtained from abscess cultures and their antibiotic concentrations.
8 citations
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8 citations
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8 citations
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TL;DR: There seems to be a significant difference in the physical and emotional relationship of patients who required skin grafts to the penis compared with the relationships of patients with encephalopathy after their injury.
Abstract: In this article the psychologic problems that occur after burns to the penis are investigated. The statistical power of this study is limited because of the small number of patients in this study. There seems to be a significant difference in the physical and emotional relationships of patients who required skin grafts to the penis compared with the relationships of patients with encephalopathy after their injury. (J BURN CARE REHABIL 1995;16:508-10)
8 citations
Authors
Showing all 878 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Ronald N. Jones | 109 | 1169 | 54206 |
Husseini K. Manji | 104 | 283 | 36624 |
Paul E. Marik | 89 | 621 | 32719 |
Michael J. Rybak | 77 | 420 | 24816 |
John M. Carethers | 52 | 199 | 9723 |
Renee C. LeBoeuf | 50 | 112 | 7017 |
John W. Devlin | 48 | 234 | 11941 |
Charles E. Lucas | 47 | 260 | 6768 |
Jan Paul Muizelaar | 47 | 99 | 10934 |
Vincent H. Tam | 45 | 184 | 7276 |
Berton R. Moed | 42 | 154 | 5311 |
James T. Fitzgerald | 42 | 120 | 7989 |
David Edelman | 38 | 165 | 5346 |
Donald P. Levine | 38 | 87 | 11611 |
Scott A. Dulchavsky | 38 | 130 | 5669 |