World journal of surgery
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World journal of surgery · Nov 1993
Pyloric exclusion in severe penetrating injuries of the duodenum.
This study comprises 74 patients with penetrating injuries of the duodenum. Sixty-three of these had sustained gunshot wounds, many of which were high velocity. The change in the incidence and the severity of the gunshot injuries within the last few years resulted in changes in the operative management of the duodenal wound with gradually improving results. ⋯ When only primary repair was done, the leakage rate was 43%. We suggest that pyloric exclusion be added to the treatment of most severe grade II and all grade III gunshot duodenal injuries. The adequacy of primary repair and pyloric exclusion in grade IV injuries requires further study.
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World journal of surgery · Sep 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialEndocrine-metabolic response to abdominal aortic surgery: a randomized trial of general anesthesia versus general plus epidural anesthesia.
The influence of epidural anesthesia on the endocrine-metabolic response following abdominal aortic reconstruction was studied in a prospective randomized trial. Cortisol and catecholamine responses and nitrogen balance were measured in two groups of five patients receiving general anesthesia only (group 1) or general anesthesia combined with epidural bupivacaine (group 2). The study lasted from preoperatively until the first postoperative day. ⋯ Intraoperative urinary excretion of epinephrine and postoperative norepinephrine excretion were significantly higher in group 1 than in group 2. Urinary excretion of free cortisol and cumulative nitrogen balance were not different between the groups. Although the number of patients was limited and the sensory nerve block level was not measured perioperatively, this study suggests that epidural anesthesia attenuates the stress response to aortic surgery.
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World journal of surgery · Sep 1993
Correlation of metabolic acidosis with outcome following injury and its value as a scoring tool.
This study looked at preresuscitation arterial pH as a predictor of outcome in injury. Seriously injured patients admitted to the Trauma Service over a 5-month period were evaluated prospectively. Data collected included basic patient demographics, initial arterial blood gas determinations (ABGs) including pH, bicarbonate (HCO3), base deficit or excess (BASE), admitting trauma score (TS), discharge injury severity score (ISS), total blood products used for initial resuscitation (TBP), and outcome. ⋯ Comparing survivors to nonsurvivors, the ISS (18.2 vs. 38.3), TS (14.1 vs. 7.8), TBP (976 vs. 5881 cc), HCO3 (21.1 vs. 17.6), and BASE (-3.1 vs. -5.8) data were significantly different; pH (7.38 vs. 7.36) and age (34.4 vs. 38.5) were not. Using multiple regression with TBP as the dependent variable, BASE, age, TS, and to a lesser extent pH and HCO3 correlated (r = 0.536; p < 0.001); using outcome as the dependent variable, only TS and age correlated (r = 0.465; p < 0.0001). Although metabolic acidosis (pH, HCO3, BASE) predicts the TBP used, it does not improve on TS and age for predicting outcome.
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Surgical risk increases with age, primarily from loss of cardiac and pulmonary reserve. Complications are tolerated poorly by the elderly, emphasizing the importance of their prediction and prevention. ⋯ Risk assessment based on validated tools is utilized, and perioperative management recommendations based on the state of the art are examined. In addition, pulmonary embolism and postoperative confusion are examined separately with the same overall strategy.
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Treatment of postoperative pain has not received sufficient attention by the surgical profession. Recent developments concerned with acute pain physiology and improved techniques for postoperative pain relief should result in more satisfactory treatment of postoperative pain. Such pain relief may also modify various aspects of the surgical stress response, and nociceptive blockade by regional anesthetic techniques has been demonstrated to improve various parameters of postoperative outcome. It is therefore stressed that effective control of postoperative pain, combined with a high degree of surgical expertise and use of other perioperative therapeutic interventions including nutrition and mobilization, should be combined to improve overall perioperative care and surgical outcome.