Surgery today
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We report herein the successful surgical treatment of a patient with high-output cardiac failure which developed from a high-flow hemodialysis arteriovenous fistula of the Brescia-Cimino type. Banding correction of the venous limb of the fistula with a woven Dacron prosthesis resulted in marked improvement of the cardiac failure. An ultrasonic study showed the fistula flow of 3.2 l/min to be as high as 40% of the resting cardiac output, or 8.0 l/min, before banding, while an intraoperative electromagnetic study was useful for controlling the degree of banding and showing the decrease of fistula flow from 3.7 l/min to 1.4 l/min.
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Case Reports
The efficacy of fluconazole in treating prosthetic valve endocarditis caused by Candida glabrata: report of a case.
A case of active prosthetic valve infective endocarditis (PVE) due to Candida glabrata was successfully treated by the systemic administration of fluconazole. A 66-year-old Japanese man with infective endocarditis of unknown etiology underwent aortic and mitral valve replacement to treat severe aortic and mitral regurgitation associated with multiple organ failure. ⋯ Fluconazole is thus considered to be effective in treating PVE caused by C. glabrata. When administering this treatment, it is also important to monitor the patient's renal and liver function.
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A retrospective study was conducted on 53 patients who suffered severe trauma to determine the severity of intravascular hemolysis, the variations of renal function after trauma, and the effects of transfusion and haptoglobin therapy on these factors. Serum total haptoglobin, total hemoglobin, and urine free hemoglobin were measured 0, 1, 3, and 5 days after the trauma and renal tubular function was evaluated by the urinary N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) index. Patients were divided into two groups depending on whether or not haptoglobin was given: group A (n = 34) did not receive haptoglobin, and group B (n = 19) was administered 4,421 +/- 245 U haptoglobin based on clinical indications. ⋯ In group B, decreases in total haptoglobin and increases in total hemoglobin were more remarkable, and 84.2% had a positive urine hemoglobin. On day 5, groups A and B had NAG indices of 18.8 +/- 3.3 and 133.6 +/- 33.8 U/L/creatinine respectively (P < 0.01). These findings led us to conclude that trauma caused hemolysis and that the administration of 4,000 U haptoglobin did not improve either the severity of hemolysis or the deteriorated renal tubular function caused by massive transfusion.
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Comparative Study
Postoperative changes in plasma tissue-type plasminogen activator and type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor.
To clarify the changes which occur postoperatively in intravascular fibrinolysis, plasma levels of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen, the total plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) antigen, and the t-PA-PAI-1 complexes were assayed in this study. Blood samples were taken the morning before surgery, then at 0, 12, 24, 36, 60, 108, and 156 h postoperatively in ten patients who underwent radical surgery for thoracic esophageal cancer. The plasma levels of the t-PA and total PAI-1 antigens, and the t-PA-PAI-1 complexes were then measured by enzyme immunoassay. ⋯ The platelet count and neutrophil elastase level were significantly correlated with the free t-PA antigen level at r = 0.630, P < 0.001, and r = -0.447, P < 0.01, respectively. The results of this study indicated that post-operative hypofibrinolysis caused by the increased synthesis of PAI-1 may enhance postoperative hypercoagulability, and this may lead to the development of organ damage. Thus, the concentration of the PAI-1 antigen may be a potentially important index for the prediction of postoperative illness.
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We describe a rare case of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum secondary to the rupture of a gas-containing pyogenic liver abscess in a 59-year-old man. The patient was diagnosed as having a hollow viscus perforation based on a sudden onset of acute abdominal pain along with radiological evidence of bilateral subphrenic feee air (pneumoperitoneum), and underwent an emergency laparotomy. Contrary to expectations, the surgery revealed no perforations of the hollow viscus, but instead a ruptured liver abscess at the dome of the right hepatic lobe was identified associated with suppurative peritonitis. To the best of our knowledge, such a case of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum secondary to the rupture of a gas-containing liver abscess is extremely rare.