American journal of surgery
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Hypovolemic shock, if untreated for a while or if severe, results in an increase in intravascular capacity due to the opening of all capillaries at once. This expansion of the vascular capacity in patients with severe or untreated shock requires much more intravenous fluids for adequate treatment than the volume of blood lost. ⋯ Blood volume measurements are useless. The vascular space shrinks to normal after adequate resuscitation, creating relative hypervolemia.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of the relative effectiveness of colloids and crystalloids in emergency resuscitation.
Over a 2.5 year period, the fluid management of 600 hypotensive patients entering our surgical emergency department was evaluated during a prospective clinical trial of a resuscitation algorithm. The major clinical determinants (low mean arterial pressure, age, severity of illness, primary illness or injury, amount of blood loss, volume of fluids given, use of a protocol or clinical algorithm and satisfactory compliance with the algorithm) were controlled by grouping the patients into specific strata; the resuscitation times were almost always shorter with a regimen of about one-fourth colloids than with crystalloids only. This is consistent with the observations of greater increases in hemodynamic and oxygen transport variables after albumin than after lactated Ringer's solution when the latter was given in either 2 or 4 times the volume.
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(1) Emergency thoracotomy can be a lifesaving procedure in critically injured patients who present with no detectable pulse or blood pressure. (2) Emergency thoracotomy is nonproductive if cardiac electrical activity is absent. (3) Best results are achieved in patients with chest injuries and the worst results in those with isolated blunt abdominal injury. (4) Survival was better if patient was taken directly to the operating room with ongoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation. (5) Prehospital airway control, volume resuscitation and cardiopulmonary resuscitation play a significant role in improving the outcome in traumatized patients who undergo emergency thoracotomy.
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Computed tomographic angiography performed by the intravenous administration of contrast medium was evaluated in 86 vascular patients. This experience demonstrates a new approach to the evaluation of patients with symptomatic aortic aneurysms, in whom computed tomographic angiography will aid in evaluating the need for emergency surgery. ⋯ Computed tomographic angiography was beneficial in the evaluation of the patency of vascular reconstructive procedures such as femoropopliteal bypass, aortoiliac bypass and application of a vena caval device. More clinical experience and possibly a rapid sequence technique are needed to evaluate patients with portasystemic shunts.