Military medicine
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Traumatic injury remains an unfortunate and all-too-common event in the United States military population. Traumatic hemipelvectomy is a rare but devastating injury with few survivors recorded in the medical literature. We report a surviving case of traumatic hemipelvectomy and review an approach to management.
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A 30-year-old black male soldier with sickle cell trait presented with fatal exertional rhabdomyolysis (which was unrecognized during 14 hours at a field clinic). After prompt treatment for heat exhaustion, his symptoms seemed mild and he was afebrile. His clinical course illustrates the potential for severe illness in the absence of fever, the importance of assessing mental dysfunction, indications for laboratory evaluation, the need for comprehensive management of severe dehydration and acidosis, common laboratory features of acute renal failure and exertional rhabdomyolysis, and the increased risk of exercise-related death in those with sickle cell trait.
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Pyridostigmine was first used extensively during Operation Desert Storm for prophylaxis against the effects of nerve agents. After initial reports of asthma exacerbations following its use, we gave 10 asthmatic and 6 non-asthmatic soldiers a 30-mg dose of pyridostigmine. ⋯ Severity of the exacerbation correlated best with severity of asthma in the desert and inversely with body weight. The irritant effect of the dust may predispose asthmatics to worsen after pyridostigmine, an effect not seen in the laboratory.