World journal of surgery
-
World journal of surgery · Oct 2003
Prediction of cardiac risk prior to elective abdominal aortic surgery: role of multiple gated acquisition scan.
Debate continues regarding the value of cardiac testing before major vascular surgery. Studies looking at whether a low radioisotope left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) could reliably predict postoperative cardiac events have produced conflicting results. Technetium-99m multiple gated acquisition (MUGA) scanning was employed in 122 patients undergoing elective abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery to estimate the resting LVEF and to detect regional or global myocardial wall motion abnormalities (WMAs). ⋯ Only the presence of WMAs (not the resting LVEF) was useful for predicting postoperative cardiac events. A history of cardiac disease, additional procedures, and reoperation during the postoperative period also place a patient at high risk for cardiac complications. A normal LVEF is by no means reassuring that a patient is at low risk of suffering an adverse cardiac outcome.
-
World journal of surgery · Oct 2003
Blunt liver injuries in polytrauma: results from a cohort study with the regular use of whole-body helical computed tomography.
The estimated prevalence of liver injury in patients with blunt multiple trauma ranges from 1% to 8%. The objective of this study was to investigate the profile of accompanying liver injury in a cohort of polytraumatized patients who had regularly undergone contrast-enhanced, whole-body helical computed tomography (CT). We enrolled consecutive patients admitted between September 1997 and January 2001 to a level I trauma center. ⋯ Sevenfold increased relative odds were observed if liver laceration was considered the leading injury (OR 7.17, 95% CI 1.17-43.97). The prevalence of liver lacerations among multiple-trauma patients is likely to be underestimated and must be determined by the independent application of reference standards, such as helical CT. High-grade hepatic injuries and the need for surgical repair are associated with poorer survival prognosis.