American journal of surgery
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Review Comparative Study
A comparison of monobactam antibiotics in surgical infections.
The introduction of gentamicin almost 20 years ago provided an effective option for the treatment of gram-negative bacillary infections. During the past few years, the availability of aztreonam (a monobactam), imipenem (a carbapenem), and newer cephalosporins within vitro activities comparable with aminoglycosides against many gram-negative bacilli, has stimulated a reassessment of the role of aminoglycosides in treating these infections. When determining the role of new antimicrobials as potential replacements for more established agents, the clinical focus should be on three factors: comparative efficacy, safety, and cost. ⋯ The only member of this class currently in clinical use is aztreonam. A comparison with aminoglycosides is particularly relevant because aztreonam is active against aerobic gram-negative bacilli. This review will discuss the acknowledged concerns with aminoglycoside use and compare the characteristics of aztreonam and currently marketed aminoglycosides.
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The ability to predict whether burn wounds will heal spontaneously or will require skin grafting is important because of increasing utilization of primary excision and grafting. This study prospectively evaluated the ability of heated laser Doppler flow measurements obtained in the first 48 hours after burn injury to predict whether burn wounds would heal within 3 weeks. ⋯ There was also a significant correlation between initial flow measurements and severity of scarring at 3 months. We conclude that heated laser Doppler flow measurements performed early after burn injury are useful in predicting whether healing is likely to occur, as well as the quality of late scar formation; therefore, the method is useful in selecting patients for primary excision and grafting of burn wounds.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Hypertonic saline-dextran solutions for the prehospital management of traumatic hypotension.
We report the results of the first clinical study on the use of a hypertonic saline-dextran solution for the prehospital management of hypotensive victims of penetrating trauma. During a 4-month period, 48 trauma patients with penetrating injuries and a prehospital systolic blood pressure of 90 mm Hg or less were infused in-field with 250 ml of either a hypertonic saline-dextran solution or the crystalloid plasmalyte A. There were no complications associated with the infusion of the hypertonic saline-dextran solution, and execution of the protocol by paramedic personnel was both safe and uniformly successful. The potential impact of this solution on medical care and the results of this feasibility study justify the initiation of a larger prospective, randomized clinical trial on the efficacy of this solution in the prehospital setting.
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Prehospital and emergency room recordings of hemodynamic vital signs frequently play a major role in the evaluation and treatment of trauma victims. Guidelines for resuscitation and treatment are affected by absolute cutoffs in hemodynamic parameters. ⋯ Although the sensitivity of vital signs in identifying this group of patients improved as the variance from normal increased, standard cutoffs were relatively insensitive. We conclude that normal postinjury vital signs do not predict the absence of potentially life-threatening hemorrhage and abnormal vital signs at any point after injury require investigation to rule out significant blood loss.
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Comparative Study
Empyema thoracis in patients undergoing emergent closed tube thoracostomy for thoracic trauma.
The vast majority of thoracic trauma victims require only observation or tube thoracostomy for definitive treatment of their thoracic injury. Although tube thoracostomy is generally considered a limited intervention, 2 to 25 percent of patients who undergo this procedure develop infectious complications. To determine the incidence and risk factors for the development of empyema thoracis after tube thoracostomy, a retrospective study was undertaken. We found that the development of empyema thoracis was increased in patients whose pleural space was incompletely drained and whose thoracic catheters were in place for a prolonged period.