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Institution

St. Elizabeth Hospital

HealthcareEnumclaw, Washington, United States
About: St. Elizabeth Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Enumclaw, Washington, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Health care & Gentamicin. The organization has 502 authors who have published 507 publications receiving 14201 citations. The organization is also known as: Enumclaw Regional Hospital.


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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1985-Chest
TL;DR: The development by the senior author (P.C.) of percutaneous tracheostomy from cricothyroidostomy and subcricoid fingertip trachesostomy is traced, and the technique and patient material is presented.

984 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The periprocedure risks for major and minor strokes and death are generally acceptable at this early stage of development and have not changed significantly since the first survey results.
Abstract: The purpose of this article is to review and update the current status of carotid artery stent placement in the world. Surveys to major interventional centers in Europe, North and South America, and Asia were initially completed in June 1997. Subsequent information from these 24 centers in addition to 12 new centers has been obtained to update the information. The survey asked the various questions regarding the patients enrolled, procedure techniques, and results of carotid stenting, including complications and restenosis. The total number of endovascular carotid stent procedures that have been performed worldwide to date included 5,210 procedures involving 4,757 patients. There was a technical success of 98.4% with 5,129 carotid arteries treated. Complications that occurred during the carotid stent placement or within a 30-day period following placement were recorded. Overall, there were 134 transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) for a rate of 2.82%. Based on the total patient population, there were 129 minor strokes with a rate of occurrence of 2.72%. The total number of major strokes was 71 for a rate of 1.49%. There were 41 deaths within a 30-day postprocedure period resulting in a mortality rate of 0.86%. The combined minor and major strokes and procedure-related death rate was 5.07%. Restenosis rates of carotid stenting have been 1.99% and 3.46% at 6 and 12 months, respectively. The rate of neurologic events after stent placement has been 1.42% at 6-12-month follow-up. Endovascular stent treatment of carotid artery atherosclerotic disease is growing as an alternative for vascular surgery, especially for patients that are high risk for standard carotid endarterectomy. The periprocedure risks for major and minor strokes and death are generally acceptable at this early stage of development and have not changed significantly since the first survey results. Cathet. Cardiovasc. Intervent. 50:160-167, 2000.

495 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mode of treatment, age, cecal diameter, delay in decompression, and status of the bowel significantly influence the mortality rate, which is approximately 15 percent with early appropriate management, compared with 36 to 44 percent in perforated or ischemic bowel.
Abstract: This study analyzes 400 cases of acute pseudo-obstruction of the colon (Ogilvie's syndrome). Seven cases were reported at St. Elizabeth Hospital Medical Center between October 1982 and February 1985; 393 cases were reported in the literature from 1970–1985. Ogilvie's syndrome is most commonly reported in patients in the sixth decade, and is more predominant in men. It is caused by an unknown disturbance to the autonomic innervation of the distal colon, and is associated with different conditions. Plain abdominal roentgenogram is the most useful diagnostic test. If the cecal diameter is 12 cm or greater, or conservative management is unsuccessful, colonoscopic or operative decompression is needed. The mode of treatment, age, cecal diameter, delay in decompression, and status of the bowel significantly influence the mortality rate, which is approximately 15 percent with early appropriate management, compared with 36 to 44 percent in perforated or ischemic bowel.

454 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 Feb 2011-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The NP microbiota of young children is highly diverse and appears different between seasons, and differences seem independent of antibiotic use or viral co-infection.
Abstract: The nasopharynx is the ecological niche for many commensal bacteria and for potential respiratory or invasive pathogens like Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Neisseria meningitidis. Disturbance of a balanced nasopharyngeal (NP) microbiome might be involved in the onset of symptomatic infections with these pathogens, which occurs primarily in fall and winter. It is unknown whether seasonal infection patterns are associated with concomitant changes in NP microbiota. As young children are generally prone to respiratory and invasive infections, we characterized the NP microbiota of 96 healthy children by barcoded pyrosequencing of the V5-V6 hypervariable region of the 16S-rRNA gene, and compared microbiota composition between children sampled in winter/fall with children sampled in spring. The approximately 1000000 sequences generated represented 13 taxonomic phyla and approximately 250 species-level phyla types (OTUs). The 5 most predominant phyla were Proteobacteria (64%), Firmicutes (21%), Bacteroidetes (11%), Actinobacteria (3%) and Fusobacteria (1,4%) with Moraxella, Haemophilus, Streptococcus, Flavobacteria, Dolosigranulum, Corynebacterium and Neisseria as predominant genera. The inter-individual variability was that high that on OTU level a core microbiome could not be defined. Microbiota profiles varied strongly with season, with in fall/winter a predominance of Proteobacteria (relative abundance (% of all sequences): 75% versus 51% in spring) and Fusobacteria (absolute abundance (% of children): 14% versus 2% in spring), and in spring a predominance of Bacteroidetes (relative abundance: 19% versus 3% in fall/winter, absolute abundance: 91% versus 54% in fall/winter), and Firmicutes. The latter increase is mainly due to (Brevi)bacillus and Lactobacillus species (absolute abundance: 96% versus 10% in fall/winter) which are like Bacteroidetes species generally related to healthy ecosystems. The observed seasonal effects could not be attributed to recent antibiotics or viral co-infection. The NP microbiota of young children is highly diverse and appears different between seasons. These differences seem independent of antibiotic use or viral co-infection. © 2011 Bogaert et al.

412 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The disease is usually classified as sporadic if uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase is deficient only in the liver, and as familial (autosomal dominant) if the enzyme is also deficient in nonhepatic tissues such as erythrocytes.
Abstract: PORPHYRIA cutanea tarda, which is the most common and readily treated form of porphyria in humans, results from a deficiency of uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase in the liver.1 2 3 It is characterized by cutaneous photosensitivity. The disease is usually classified as sporadic if uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase is deficient only in the liver, and as familial (autosomal dominant) if the enzyme is also deficient in nonhepatic tissues such as erythrocytes.3 4 5 There is also a familial form in which only the hepatic enzyme is deficient.6 Increased iron content in the liver is a major contributing factor in both sporadic and familial porphyria cutanea tarda,7 as are . . .

291 citations


Authors

Showing all 503 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Daniel R. Weinberger177879128450
Lars Olson10849842512
Michael Simons10640138071
Thomas A. Einhorn9433032850
Pieter Wesseling7836026189
Jan Kluytmans7033522424
Thomas N. Chase7030419453
Åke Seiger6426116884
Manuel F. Casanova6034313759
Kenneth Rosenfield5923518172
Ger T. Rijkers532958576
Ingemar S. J. Merkies521679089
Patrick G. Gallagher5228010279
Menno Sluzewski511497063
John W. A. Rossen422366757
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202111
202014
201917
201810
201710