The Thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon
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Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jun 1994
Comparative StudyPostoperative visceral hypotension the common cause for gastrointestinal complications after cardiac surgery.
In order to identify peroperative risk factors and to evaluate different etiological factors in developing postoperative gastrointestinal complications, clinical variables were studied in 3493 patients undergoing adult cardiac surgery. There were 86 gastrointestinal complications, 2.9%, with an overall morality among these of 22.1%: the mortality rate was 3.9% for all patients undergoing cardiac surgery at our institution (p < 0.001). Paralytic ileus, intestinal ischemia, and acute cholecystitis were the most frequently seen complications. ⋯ The incidence of peroperative myocardial infarction, low postoperative cardiac output necessitating massive use of vasopressor substances and/or intraaortic balloon pumping were significantly more often observed in patients who subsequently developed gastrointestinal complications. The common etiological factor in developing gastrointestinal complications of any kind, after cardiac surgery, seems to be postoperative splanchnic hypoperfusion with visceral ischemia. In order to reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality it is essential to identify patients at risk, support preoperative poor cardiac function, and to carefully monitor these patients postoperatively for abdominal complications to reach an early diagnosis.
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Thorac Cardiovasc Surg · Jun 1994
Case ReportsChylothorax after blunt chest trauma: an unusual case with a long latent period.
We report on a case of closed chest trauma with an unusual latent period of 11 weeks in a woman 26 years old. The patient had a dual thoracic duct with a dual lesion and was evaluated using lymphography and CT. We discuss the pathogenetic mechanism and the unusual radiological appearance with discontinuity of the duct, and an increase in back pressure which promotes dilatation of lymphatic vessels and nodes. ⋯ Pleuroperitoneal shunting was effective after failure of conservative treatment. Two years after discharge the patient is asymptomatic with normal chest X-ray image. She is near term in a normal pregnancy and without signs of silent malignancy.