European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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Review Practice Guideline Guideline
Guidelines for the management of severe head injury. Brain Trauma Foundation.
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Review Case Reports
Traumatic blunt carotid injury: clinical experience and review of the literature.
To evaluate the symptoms, the associated lesions, the treatment and the outcome of patients with blunt carotid injury (BCI), we reviewed the records of all patients admitted to our intensive care unit with head trauma between May 1991 and May 1995. A patient's assessment included the commonly used severity scores and cranial computed tomography (CT). Other diagnostic investigations were performed according to the clinical setting. ⋯ In every patient the radiologic investigations demonstrated a thrombotic obstruction of the internal carotid artery (ICA), associated with an intimal dissection in two cases. Three patients were discharged with only minor neurologic symptoms. The fourth patient was referred to our ICU after the development of a massive hemispheric infarction, and died 3 days after admission.
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Dizziness is a common and vexing diagnostic problem in emergency departments. The term is rather undefinite and often misused, but can in practice be classified into four categories: fainting, disequilibrium, vertigo and miscellaneous syndromes. Vertigo is the most common category of dizziness. ⋯ Physicians working in emergency departments must be able to rapidly identify patients with potentially serious forms of vertigo, which could cause death or disability, and patients with mild conditions, that can be effectively treated. Previous studies and the experience of the authors have shown that reliable diagnostic hypotheses can be generated by taking a proper clinical history (focused on the onset and duration of the disease, the circumstances causing the vertigo and associated otological or neurological symptoms) and performing an accurate physical examination (evaluation of neurological defects and spontaneous or provoked nystagmus), supplemented by few laboratory tests and diagnostic procedures. Therapy of vertigo in emergency settings is mainly symptomatic and based on sedation and use of vestibulosuppressant drugs (antihistamines, phenothiazines).
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Over a 3-year period, 663 children aged under 13 years were seen with a history of foreign body (FB) ingestion. Seventy-six per cent of the children were less than 6 years old. Coins and chicken or fish bones were the most common objects ingested. ⋯ All 224 FBs detected in the stomach or beyond were allowed to pass naturally, and delayed passage occurred in only one case. Passage of 11 alkaline disc batteries occurred without complication. No patient required surgical removal of an FB.
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During the last two decades the reported risk of overwhelming postsplenectomy infection (OPSI) has resulted in a conservative approach to splenic trauma, with the aim of splenic salvage. The appropriateness of this strategy is now questioned. The risk of OPSI varies with age and indication for splenectomy from less than 1% in adults to more than 4% in children. ⋯ A prerequisite for splenic preservation procedures should be a haemodynamically stable patient without other intraabdominal injuries. The benefits derived from non-operative treatment of splenic salvage procedures may be overshadowed by the potential risk of transfusion-related bacterial and viral diseases. Polyvalent pneumococcal vaccines given early after splenectomy appear to reduce the incidence of OPSI substantially.