Journal of the American College of Surgeons
-
Comparative Study
Improved ventilatory function in burn patients using volumetric diffusive respiration.
Volumetric diffusive respiration (VDR) offers theoretical advantages over conventional mechanical ventilation (CV) by using lower airway pressures, recruiting alveoli, and mobilizing secretions. ⋯ The VDR ventilator is more effective than conventional ventilation for maintaining optimal gas exchange at lower airway pressures in thermally injured pediatric patients.
-
After the successful evolution of hepatic transplantation during the last decade, small bowel and multivisceral transplantation remains the sole elusive achievement for the next era of transplant surgeons. Until recently, and for the last thirty years, the results of the sporadic attempts of intestinal transplantation worldwide were discouraging because of unsatisfactory graft and patient survival. The experimental and clinical demonstration of the superior therapeutic efficacy of FK 506, a new immunosuppressive drug, ushered in the current era of small bowel and multivisceral transplantation with initial promising results. ⋯ Although intestinal transplantation has gone through the feasibility phase, strategies will be required to increase its practicality. One possibility is to combine intestinal transplantation with contemporaneous autologous bone marrow transplantation.
-
Comparative Study
Comparison of the effects of commonly used wound agents on epithelialization and neovascularization.
The primary effect sought with most topical wound therapy is antimicrobial. Topical wound agents are thought to promote normal healing by protecting the wound from infection. In this study, we examined the effect of six commonly used topical wound agents (bacitracin, sodium hypochlorite, silver nitrate, silver sulfadiazine, mafenide acetate, and povidone-iodine) on epithelialization and neovascularization in noninfected wounds. For this study, a new wound model was used in which direct visualization and quantification of wound epithelialization and neovascularization were carried out throughout the entire healing process. ⋯ The various antimicrobial agents studied in our in vivo model affect wound epithelialization and neovascularization differently. These effects on these two very important aspects of healing should be taken into consideration when indicating a specific agent for treatment of different types of wounds.
-
Electrosurgical injuries occur during laparoscopic operations and are potentially serious. The overall incidence of recognized injuries is between one and two patients per 1,000 operations. The majority go unrecognized at the time of the electrical insult and commonly present three to seven days afterward with fever and pain in the abdomen. Since these injuries appear late the pathophysiology remains speculative. ⋯ An awareness of the hazards of diathermy together with an understanding of the mechanisms of injury should enable the surgeon to dissect tissue and to achieve hemostasis, while at the same time decreasing the risk of serious complications to the patient.
-
The cause of allograft liver dysfunction after transplantation is unresolved. We tested the hypothesis that human donor liver may be predisposed to ischemia reperfusion injury, and graft dysfunction subsequent to ongoing inflammatory processes during donor hospitalization. ⋯ These results indicate that, although an ongoing inflammatory response to injury was evident in these donors at the time of organ procurement, there were no apparent adverse effects arising from these inflammatory processes on the function and quality of the donor liver after transplantation. Bacterial translocation does not seem to be a component of the pathogenesis of inflammation. Whether or not the presence of inflammation in the donor alters the metabolic responses of the allograft liver and recipient to transplant operation is unknown.