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Browsing by Author "Peck, Ethan E."
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Item Hemorrhagic Resuscitation Guided by Viscoelastography in Far-Forward Combat and Austere Civilian Environments: Goal-Directed Whole-Blood and Blood-Component Therapy Far from the Trauma Center(MDPI, 2022-01-12) Lantry, James H.; Mason, Phillip; Logsdon, Matthew G.; Bunch, Connor M.; Peck, Ethan E.; Moore, Ernest E.; Moore, Hunter B.; Neal, Matthew D.; Thomas, Scott G.; Khan, Rashid Z.; Gillespie, Laura; Florance, Charles; Korzan, Josh; Preuss, Fletcher R.; Mason, Dan; Saleh, Tarek; Marsee, Mathew K.; Vande Lune, Stefani; Ayoub, Qamarnisa; Fries, Dietmar; Walsh, Mark M.; Emergency Medicine, School of MedicineModern approaches to resuscitation seek to bring patient interventions as close as possible to the initial trauma. In recent decades, fresh or cold-stored whole blood has gained widespread support in multiple settings as the best first agent in resuscitation after massive blood loss. However, whole blood is not a panacea, and while current guidelines promote continued resuscitation with fixed ratios of blood products, the debate about the optimal resuscitation strategy-especially in austere or challenging environments-is by no means settled. In this narrative review, we give a brief history of military resuscitation and how whole blood became the mainstay of initial resuscitation. We then outline the principles of viscoelastic hemostatic assays as well as their adoption for providing goal-directed blood-component therapy in trauma centers. After summarizing the nascent research on the strengths and limitations of viscoelastic platforms in challenging environmental conditions, we conclude with our vision of how these platforms can be deployed in far-forward combat and austere civilian environments to maximize survival.Item Type B Lactic Acidosis in a Patient with Mantle Cell Lymphoma(Hindawi, 2023-08-16) Nzenwa, Ikemsinachi C.; Berquist, Margaret; Brenner, Toby J.; Ansari, Aida; Al-Fadhl, Hamid D.; Aboukhaled, Michael; Patel, Shivani S.; Peck, Ethan E.; Al-Fadhl, Mahmoud D.; Thomas, Anthony V.; Zackariya, Nuha; Walsh, Mark M.; Bufill, Jose A.; Medicine, School of MedicineType B lactic acidosis is an uncommon medical emergency in which acid production overwhelms hepatic clearance. This specific etiology of lactic acidosis occurs without organ hypoperfusion and has been most commonly described in patients with hematologic malignancies but also in patients with solid tumors. The mechanism by which cancer cells switch their glucose metabolism toward increasingly anaerobic glycolytic phenotypes has been described as the "Warburg effect." Without treating the underlying malignancy, the prognosis for patients diagnosed with malignancy-related type B lactic acidosis is extremely poor. Here, we present a case of a 66-year-old male who was diagnosed with type B lactic acidosis secondary to mantle cell lymphoma. Bicarbonate drip was started to correct the lactic acidosis. The patient was also immediately treated with rituximab chemotherapy combined with rasburicase to avoid the hyperuricemia associated with tumor lysis syndrome. He responded to the early treatment and was discharged with normal renal function. Type B lactic acidosis secondary to hematologic malignancy is important to recognize. In order to successfully treat this syndrome, early diagnosis and simultaneous treatment of the imbalance of lactic acid levels and the underlying malignancy are necessary.