|
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research Public Affairs Office
3400 Rawley E. Chambers Avenue
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Mike Feeley
Public Affairs Officer
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research
(210) 916-0859
E-mail:
michael.feeley@amedd.army.mil

For Immediate Release
U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research’s Burn Resuscitation Decision
Support System
Receives 2009 Army Greatest Inventions Award
(Fort Sam Houston, Texas) –The Burn Resuscitation Decision Support System
developed at the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research was one of the ten
Army Greatest Invention Award winners deemed by the U.S. Army Research,
Development and Engineering Command for 2009.
The award will be presented to the USAISR at the 27th Army Science
Conference in Orlando, Fla. Nov. 29 by Dr. Marilyn M. Freeman, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Research and Technology).
Optimal fluid resuscitation of acute burn casualties is one of the
cornerstones of initial care for burn injuries. Clinical studies have shown
that administration of either too much fluid or too little fluid in burn
patients may be associated with less than optimal outcome. The BRDSS was
designed specifically to assist providers who do not care for burn patients
routinely. It utilizes an algorithm to generate recommendations for IV fluid
rates to improve fluid balance during the initial 48 hours after the burn
and avoid complications associated with inadequate or excessive
resuscitation strategies.
The BRDSS resulted from the collaborative efforts of clinical research teams
at the USAISR and the University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Texas.
“Being named one of the Army’s ten greatest inventions for 2009 is a great
honor,” said Dr. Jose Salinas, task area manager for Combat Critical Care
Engineering at the USAISR, “it recognizes the hard work and dedication of
both the clinical and research staff at the USAISR and UTMB to use cutting
edge technology to provide the best possible care for burn patients.”
Preliminary analysis of the BRDSS performance over the last two years in the
burn centers at the USAISR and UTMB suggests that it has improved burn
resuscitation management by reducing the volume of fluids given to patients
with large burns while maintaining clinical goals and improving patient
outcomes.
“Decision support systems such as this one have the potential to change
critical care medicine, not just for burns, but for many other types of
injuries and diseases by providing real time bedside augmentation of medical
expertise” said Dr. George Kramer, Director of the Resuscitation Laboratory,
Dept. of Anesthesiology, UTMB.
Based on its successful use in the USAISR, the U.S. Army Decision Gate
Office has put the system into an accelerated acquisition track designed to
develop a mobile version of the system that can be used by DoD providers
deployed in support of overseas operations. This accelerated acquisition
approach will allow the DoD to field mobile burn resuscitation units that
provide decision support for burn resuscitation from the combat support
hospitals in the field and throughout the evacuation chain across the
different echelons of care.
“Ideally, this system will be used on large burn patients as soon as they
arrive in a field hospital and will remain with the patient as he or she is
globally evacuated from the initial treatment facility to the USAISR Burn
Center.” said Dr. Kevin Chung, Medical Director of the burn intensive care
unit at the USAISR.
“Decision support systems and automation technology are critical to
improving medicine. We hope this is just one of many future products that
will help to improve the care of our critically injured Soldiers, Sailors,
Airmen, and Marines” said Salinas.
For more information about the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research,
visit
http://www.usaisr.amedd.army.mil

The U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command is the Army’s medical
materiel developer, with lead agency responsibility for medical research,
development and acquisition, and medical logistics management. The USAMRMC's
expertise in these critical areas helps establish and maintain the
capabilities the Army needs to fight and win on the battlefield. Ensuring
our armed forces remain in optimal health and are equipped to protect
themselves from disease and injury, particularly on the battlefield, is the
job of the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command. The Command is
headquartered at Fort Detrick, MD, with 11 subordinate commands located
throughout the world.
The U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research is part of the U.S. Army
Medical Research and Materiel Command and is collocated with Brooke Army
Medical Center. The USAISR is dedicated to both laboratory and clinical
trauma research. Its mission is to provide requirements-driven combat
casualty care medical solutions and products for injured soldiers, from
self-aid through definitive care across the full spectrum of military
operations; provide state-of-the-art trauma, burn, and critical care to
Department of Defense beneficiaries around the world and civilians in our
trauma region; and provide Burn Special Medical Augmentation Response Teams.
|