The American surgeon
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The American surgeon · Dec 2002
Clinical TrialOral antibiotics in the management of perforated appendicitis in children.
After appendectomy for perforated appendicitis children have traditionally been managed with intravenous broad-spectrum antibiotics for 5 to 10 days and then until fever and leukocytosis have resolved. We prospectively evaluated a protocol of hospital discharge on oral antibiotics when oral intake is tolerated-regardless of fever or leukocytosis-in a consecutive series of 80 children between one and 15 years of age who underwent appendectomy (38 open and 42 laparoscopic) for perforated appendicitis. At discharge subjects began a 7-day course of oral trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and metronidazole. ⋯ Among the 66 children who were discharged on oral antibiotics without having had an inpatient infectious complication there were three wound infections (4.4%). None of these patients had a fever or leukocytosis at discharge. We conclude that after appendectomy for perforated appendicitis children may be safely discharged home on oral antibiotics when enteral intake is tolerated regardless of fever or leukocytosis.
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The American surgeon · Dec 2002
Comparative StudyDay for night: should we staff a trauma center like a nightclub?
Most trauma services throughout the country are staffed on a fixed-call rotational basis. Staff is deployed in a linear fashion when trauma often occurs in a skewed sporadic fashion resulting in large fluctuations in volume, injury severity, and mechanism of injury. Medical error and increased mortality have been associated with certain admission times. ⋯ Six comparisons were performed: 1) morning versus night admission; 2) weekday versus weekend admission; 3) least busy day (Tuesday) versus busiest day (Sunday) admission; 4) weeknight versus weekend night admission; 5) in cases of penetrating trauma, morning versus night admission; and 6) in cases of blunt trauma, morning versus night admission. None of the six comparisons showed a significant difference in mortality. There was no significant difference in ISS-matched mortality related to fixed trauma call staffing.
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Despite the abundance of literature on nonoperative management (NOM) of blunt trauma to the liver and spleen there is limited information on NOM of blunt renal injuries. In an effort to evaluate the role of NOM 37 consecutive unselected patients with renal injuries (grade 1, four; grade 2, 12; grade 3, 11; grade 4, six; and grade 5, four) were followed prospectively over 30 months (Match 1999 to September 2001). Patients without peritonitis or hemodynamic instability were managed nonoperatively regardless of the appearance of the kidney on CT scan. ⋯ We conclude that NOM is the prevailing method of treatment after blunt renal trauma. It is successful in the majority of patients without peritonitis or hemodynamic instability and should be considered regardless of the severity of renal injury. Predictors of failure may exist on the basis of injury severity, fluid and blood requirements, and abdominal ultrasonographic findings and need validation by a larger sample size.
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The American surgeon · Dec 2002
Wireless clinical alerts and patient outcomes in the surgical intensive care unit.
Errors in medicine have gained public interest since the Institute of Medicine published its 1999 report on this subject. Although errors of commission are frequently cited, errors of omission can be equally serious. A computerized surgical intensive care unit (SICU) information system when coupled to an event-driven alerting engine has the potential to reduce errors of omission for critical intensive care unit events. ⋯ Patients triggering the alert paging system were 49.4 times more likely to die in the SICU compared with patients who did not generate an alert. Even after transfer to floor care the patients who triggered the alerting system were 5.7 times more likely to die in the hospital. An alert page identifies patients who will stay in the SICU longer and have a significantly higher chance of death compared with patients who do not trigger the alerting system.
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The American surgeon · Dec 2002
Technical consideration in the management of chronic mesenteric ischemia.
Our aging population may result in a rise in the prevalence of chronic mesenteric ischemia. This report reviews our contemporary experience with a tailored surgical approach to chronic mesenteric ischemia. The medical records of 17 patients operated on for chronic mesenteric ischemia were retrospectively reviewed. ⋯ Follow-up duplex scans at a mean of 34 months (range 1-114) showed no graft thromboses. We conclude that a variety of surgical techniques can provide durable relief of mesenteric ischemia. A tailored approach to revascularization optimizes patency and provides long-term symptom-free survival.