European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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This retrospective study was conducted to evaluate whether an observation unit (OU) attached to the emergency department (ED) of a tertiary care hospital in India is safe, is effective in minimizing hospitalization of acutely ill patients and is acceptable to the patients. Of 115,916 patients who attended the ED, 11,130 (9.6%) were observed in the OU. ⋯ Twenty-four patients left the hospital against medical advice, and three patients died in the OU. It is concluded that an OU in the ED is safe in treating acutely ill patients, is effective in reducing substantially the number of patients requiring admission to the hospital, and is acceptable to the patients.
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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.
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Case Reports
Bilateral first rib fractures associated with driver's air bag inflation: case report and implications for surgery.
A case of bilateral fractures of the first rib occurring in an otherwise fit road traffic accident victim is described. The only other injuries sustained were of the peripheral limbs. The driver's air bag was inflated during the crash, leading to speculation as to whether this may have contributed to the mechanism of injury. ⋯ Aortic arch aortography was not performed before internal fixation of the peripheral fractures was undertaken under general anaesthesia. A review of the indications for angiography in such patients follows. The policy that patients with fractures of the upper first ribs do not require angiography unless there is other evidence of neurovascular damage is supported.
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Comparative Study
Helicopters as part of a regional EMS system--a cost-effectiveness analysis for three EMS regions in Germany.
With increasing health care costs the use of rescue helicopters is being questioned on the grounds of expense. No data exist on the cost-effectiveness of the use of rescue helicopters as part of a regional EMS. The end-point of this study was to analyse the cost-effectiveness of a 15 min response time (state regulation) of advanced life support (ALS) equipment provided by helicopter (1,575,000 DM annual costs) versus a ground-based ambulance (1,004,000 DM annual costs) in three EMS systems (50 km radius) with differing demographic and geographic features in Germany. ⋯ In model 2 each region had its existing helicopter withdrawn and replaced with six ALS cars. This made response times longer and increased expenditure. In conclusion, the additional use of rescue helicopters in EMS regions (50 km radius) remains cost-effective up to an ALSC:helicopter cost ratio of 1:6.
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Recognition of tissue hypoxia or cumulative oxygen debt is of fundamental importance for the triage and resuscitation of critically ill patients during the 'golden hour' in the emergency department. Vital signs, shock index and invasive monitoring of mean arterial pressure and central venous pressure have limited roles in evaluating cumulative oxygen debt and systemic oxygen balance in an acute critical illness. ⋯ Organ-specific oxygenation indices such as gastric tonometry and renal function can supplement indicators of systemic oxygen balance to detect ischaemia-hypoxia of non-vital organs. Systemic oxygenation and organ-specific indices can guide the choice of therapy to optimize resuscitation of the macro- and microcirculation in critically ill patients in the emergency department.