American journal of surgery
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In a 2 year period, 237 patients presented with stab wounds to the lower chest and anterior abdomen. Ninety-six patients were discharged from the emergency room after negative findings on wound exploration. There were no apparent missed injuries but two wound infections in this group for an overall morbidity of 2.1 percent. ⋯ Seventy-seven required emergency laparatomy because of hemodynamic signs of blood loss or peritonitis. Sixty-four patients whose only indication for laparotomy was penetration of the anterior abdominal wall fascia by local wound exploration underwent peritoneal lavage before laparotomy. If 50,000 red blood cells/mm3 in the lavage fluid had been used to select patients for observation, the incidence of negative laparotomy would have been reduced from 58 to 3.2 percent, and only one significant visceral injury would have been missed.
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Experience with 37 patients with adult colovesical fistula over the past 19 years is reviewed. Specific guidelines for treatment of adult colovesical fistula are influenced by the location and cause of the fistula, the patient's general condition, the presence of a pelvic abscess and the presence of colonic obstruction. ⋯ In patients with colovesical fistula due to cancer, the extent of tumor should be carefully evaluated and resection carried out whenever possible. Colovesical fistulas due to trauma, inflammatory bowel disease and iatrogenic causes are often unusual in location; thus treatment must be individualized.
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The charts of 168 patients undergoing resuscitative thoracotomy for trauma in the emergency room at the San Francisco General Hospital from 1972 through 1978 were reviewed to assess factors affecting neurologic recovery after cardiac arrest. Forty-nine patients survived resuscitation and definitive operation, but 8 of them died in the first 24 hours postoperatively. Four patients in this group made some neurologic recovery (two good recoveries, two severe disabilities) but died later (12 to 44 days postoperatively) of septic complications. ⋯ Transient amnesia was present during recovery in three patients. Wakefulness was the best prognostic sign of full neurologic recovery. In conclusion, emergency room thoracotomy can save a substantial number of moribund trauma patients who can be expected to sustain full neurologic recovery if they awaken within 12 hours.
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The use of continuous epidural anesthesia in 100 consecutive abdominal aortic operations since 1975 was reviewed. There were no anesthetic complications. Low-dose systemic heparinization was used. General anesthetic and narcotic requirements were reduced, and postoperative pain was greatly alleviated.