Research Topics
| Charles J FoxSummaryAffiliation: Walter Reed Army Medical Center Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Damage control resuscitation for vascular surgery in a combat support hospitalCharles J Fox
Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
J Trauma 65:1-9. 2008..We hypothesized that limb preservation could be successful when the damage control approach combines advanced resuscitative strategies and modern vascular techniques...
Update on wartime vascular injuryCharles J Fox
31st Combat Support Hospital, Camp Dwyer, Afghanistan
Perspect Vasc Surg Endovasc Ther 23:13-25. 2011..All of these advances contributed to an increase in amputation-free survival rates. The management of combat-related vascular injuries has progressed to the point of achieving reasonable outcomes for our country's military casualties...
Advances in resuscitation in the setting of vascular injuryCharles J Fox
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
Perspect Vasc Surg Endovasc Ther 23:112-6. 2011..This method is associated with decreased mortality and improved limb salvage in military and civilian trauma patients...
Popliteal artery repair in massively transfused military trauma casualties: a pursuit to save life and limbCharles J Fox
Vascular Surgery Division, Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia 20307, USA
J Trauma 69:S123-34. 2010....
Effect of recombinant factor VIIa as an adjunctive therapy in damage control for wartime vascular injuries: a case control studyCharles J Fox
Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Trauma 66:S112-9. 2009..The primary aim of this study was to assess the effect of rFVIIa use during DCR for vascular trauma and the impact on vessel repair...
The effectiveness of a damage control resuscitation strategy for vascular injury in a combat support hospital: results of a case control studyCharles J Fox
Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Trauma 64:S99-106; discussion S106-7. 2008..The objective of this report is to establish the use and effectiveness of a damage control resuscitation (DCR) strategy in the setting of wartime vascular injury...
Vascular surgery on the modern battlefieldCharles J Fox
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Vascular Surgery, Bldg 2, Ward 64, 6900 Georgia Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Surg Clin North Am 87:1193-211, xi. 2007..This article provides an overview of the contemporary management of vascular injuries in combat casualties during recent United States military operations...
Traumatic pseudoaneurysms of the head and neck: early endovascular interventionMitchell W Cox
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Vasc Surg 46:1227-33. 2007..Pseudoaneurysms are the most frequent finding on delayed evaluation and can result in life-threatening episodes of rebleeding...
Sixty-four slice multidetector computed tomographic angiography in the evaluation of vascular traumaPaul W White
Department of Surgery, Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
J Trauma 68:96-102. 2010..The objective of this study is to review the utility of MDCTA in the evaluation of recent combat casualties with vascular injuries...
The effect of vein repair on the risk of venous thromboembolic events: a review of more than 100 traumatic military venous injuriesReagan W Quan
Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Vasc Surg 47:571-7. 2008..We analyzed the current treatment of wartime venous injuries in United States military personnel in an effort to answer this question...
The management of trauma venous injury: civilian and wartime experiencesReagan W Quan
Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Perspect Vasc Surg Endovasc Ther 18:149-56. 2006..Venous repair in civilian trauma and in wartime is commonplace; however, overall treatment strategies remain largely unchanged since the Vietnam War...
The use of prosthetic grafts in complex military vascular trauma: a limb salvage strategy for patients with severely limited autologous conduitAmy Vertrees
Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
J Trauma 66:980-3. 2009..We reviewed the experience with the use of prosthetic grafts for the treatment of vascular injuries sustained during recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan...
Delayed evaluation of combat-related penetrating neck traumaCharles J Fox
Department of Surgery, Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Vasc Surg 44:86-93. 2006..The objective of this study was to review the delayed evaluation of combat-related penetrating neck trauma in patients after evacuation to the United States...
Varied presentations of missile emboli in military combatGilbert Aidinian
Department of Surgery, Peripheral Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
J Vasc Surg 51:214-7. 2010..Venous emboli were treated with anticoagulation and arterial emboli were treated with standard embolectomy techniques with good result. The presentation, diagnosis, and surgical management of these cases are described...
Intravascular ultrasound--guided inferior vena cava filter placement in the military multitrauma patients: a single-center experienceGilbert Aidinian
Department of Surgery, Peripheral Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D C, USA
Vasc Endovascular Surg 43:497-501. 2009..High velocity fragments have resulted in a multitude of complex injuries in the military patients, placing them at increased risk of venous thromboembolism...
Contemporary management of wartime vascular traumaCharles J Fox
Department of Surgery, Peripheral Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Vasc Surg 41:638-44. 2005..The objective of this report is to provide a single-institution analysis of injury patterns and management strategies in the care of modern wartime vascular injuries...
Arteriography in the delayed evaluation of wartime extremity injuriesOwen N Johnson
Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
Vasc Endovascular Surg 41:217-24. 2007..Lesions are found and require further intervention at a higher rate than expected from the typical civilian trauma experience...
The use of retrievable inferior vena cava filters in severely injured military trauma patientsOwen N Johnson
Department of Surgery, Peripheral Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307, USA
J Vasc Surg 49:410-6; discussion 416. 2009..Because US military casualties can be more easily followed globally, our objective was to further characterize R-IVCF outcomes in a trauma population with improved follow-up...
Norman M. Rich--the Walter Reed Vascular Surgery FellowshipDavid L Gillespie
Peripheral Vaspular Surgery Service, Department of Surgery, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC 20307-5001, USA
World J Surg 29:S72-3. 2005
The endovascular management of recurrent aortic hypoplasia and coarctation in a 15-year-old maleAndrew B Rhodes
Vascular Surgery Clinic Ward 64, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 6900 Georgia Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20307-5001, USA
J Vasc Surg 41:531-4. 2005..Percutaneous balloon-expandable stents were placed in the aortic coarctation, innominate, and the left common carotid arteries. Postprocedure, ankle brachial indices were >1 and the patient remains asymptomatic after 1 year...
Survey of the indications for use of emergency tourniquetsJohn F Kragh
U S Army Institute of Surgical Research, Damage Control Resuscitation, 3400 Rawley E Chambers Ave, Bldg 3611, Room 282 4, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234 6315, USA
J Spec Oper Med 11:30-8. 2011..Challenges remain in estimation of blood loss volumes, lesion lethality, and casualty propensity to survive hemorrhage...
Practical use of emergency tourniquets to stop bleeding in major limb traumaJohn F Kragh
US Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234 6315, USA
J Trauma 64:S38-49; discussion S49-50. 2008..Previously we showed that tourniquets were lifesaving devices in the current war. Few studies, however, describe their actual morbidity in combat casualties. The purpose of this study was to measure tourniquet use and complications...
Cystic adventitial disease of the popliteal arteryCharles J Fox
Peripheral Vascular Surgery Service, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA
J Vasc Surg 39:1351. 2004
Upper extremity arterial combat injury managementMichael A Weber
Division of Vascular Surgery, Uniformed University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, USA
Perspect Vasc Surg Endovasc Ther 18:141-5. 2006..The objective of this report is to review the historical experience with managing military upper extremity arterial injuries and compare that experience with current management...
