Lancet
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25 consecutive episodes of acute chest syndrome in 13 adult patients with sickle-cell disease were studied retrospectively. Chest symptoms were present on admission in 23 of 25 episodes. Abnormal chest signs and an abnormal chest X-ray were present on admission in only 11 and 9 episodes, respectively, but developed later in the remainder. ⋯ In 12 episodes (6 bilateral, 6 unilateral) exchange transfusion was required and produced striking improvement in 11. Despite intensive microbiological investigation, infection was found in only 2 episodes--1 mycoplasma and 1 evidence of Escherichia coli. Pulmonary intravascular sickling may account for much of the clinical picture.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Pancuronium prevents pneumothoraces in ventilated premature babies who actively expire against positive pressure inflation.
Preterm infants who were making expiratory efforts against ventilator inflation were randomised to be paralysed with pancuronium or to receive no paralysing agent during ventilation. Pneumothoraces developed in all 11 unparalysed babies but in only 1 of 11 (p less than 0.0004) of those managed with pancuronium, which had no serious side-effects. In 34 infants excluded from the trial because they were not breathing against the ventilator, no pneumothoraces developed.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Effect of catheter tunnelling and a nutrition nurse on catheter sepsis during parenteral nutrition. A controlled trial.
In a three-year controlled trial of subcutaneous catheter tunnelling as a method of reducing total parenteral nutrition (TPN) catheter sepsis 99 silicone catheters (52 tunnelled, 47 untunnelled) were inserted into the subclavian (94%) or jugular (6%) veins under aseptic conditions. The influence of a nutrition nurse, who joined the nutrition team after 18 months, on catheter sepsis rate was also documented. Catheter sepsis was confirmed in 13 of 47 (28%) untunnelled catheters and only 6 of 52 (11.5%) tunnelled catheters (p less than 0.05). ⋯ There was no significant difference between tunnelled and untunnelled catheters in sepsis rates after the arrival of the nutrition nurse. Although 85% patients had concurrent internal sepsis, the pathogens implicated in catheter sepsis came from superficial sites in 16 of 19 cases (p less than 0.01). Rigorous aseptic nursing care is thus the most significant factor in the reduction of TPN catheter sepsis, but tunnelling can reduce sepsis rate when nursing care is suboptimum.