World journal of surgery
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The objective of this study was to determine the incidence of hypomagnesemia in injured patients (versus a general hospital cohort) and to compare total and ionized values with each other and with the incidence of injury severity and ethanol level. It was a descriptive study of consecutive injured patients at a level II trauma center. For 3 months subjects underwent admission paired analysis of blood total magnesium (TMg) and ionized magnesium (IMg). ⋯ It was concluded that hypomagnesia is common in injured patients but does not correlate with indices of injury severity or ethanol level. TMg is not a good predictor of IMg at low levels. Trauma patients may benefit from determination of IMg for accurate diagnosis of a low Mg level to facilitate repletion.
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World journal of surgery · Sep 1999
Computer simulation of hypothermia during "damage control" laparotomy.
"Damage control" is a surgical strategy for the staged repair of severe trauma that aims to avoid an irreversible physiologic insult marked by a self-propagating combination of hypothermia, coagulopathy, and acidosis. The point beyond which the physiologic insult becomes irreversible, however, remains ill-defined. The aim of this study was to address this problem by means of a dynamic computer model of heat loss during laparotomy for exsanguinating hemorrhage. ⋯ A series of simulation runs showed that the exposed peritoneum is the dominant factor contributing to heat loss; the bleeding rate has a less marked effect. Elevation of the ambient temperature and rapid abdominal closure are effective interventions available to the surgeon to modify the heat loss curve. This study shows that during a "damage control" laparotomy for exanguinating hemorrhage the window of opportunity for salvage before the onset of an irreversible physiologic insult is no longer than 60 to 90 minutes.