Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Current recommendations of the American College of Surgeons Advanced Trauma Life Support course is routine radiographic screening of the pelvis for all patients who suffer blunt torso trauma. The purpose of this study is to evaluate in a prospective manner the sensitivity of clinical examination as a screening modality for pelvic fractures in awake and alert blunt trauma patients. ⋯ 1) Clinical examination of the pelvis can reliably rule out significant pelvic fracture in the awake and alert blunt trauma patient. 2) The addition of routine A-P pelvic x-ray does not improve the sensitivity in diagnosis of surgically significant pelvic fractures nor does it have significant impact on outcomes of pelvic fracture patients. 3) Elevated ethanol level is not a contraindication to use of clinical examination as a screening modality for pelvic fractures in the awake and alert blunt trauma patient.
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Despite extensive preoperative imaging and intraoperative "gadgetry" to facilitate localization of abnormal parathyroid glands, the onus of identification and resection remains with the surgeon in the operating room. We pondered the relative usefulness of routine laboratory studies to the surgeon as predictive guides to the intraoperative findings in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT). ⋯ Extreme values of PTH in patients with single-gland parathyroid disease alert the surgeon to the likelihood of small or large parathyroid adenomas. Laboratory studies do not differentiate adenoma from hyperplasia, nor do they pinpoint the size of abnormal glands with moderate-range PTH values.