Annals of surgery
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Comparative Study
Detrimental effects of removing end-expiratory pressure prior to endotracheal extubation.
Patients recovering from acute respiratory insufficiency are usually not extubated until they can ventilate adequately while breathing spontaneously at ambient end-expiratory pressure (T-tube). It is hypothesized that this period of T-tube breathing might be detrimental to gas exchange since the endotracheal tube abolishes the expiratory retard produced by the glottis and thereby inhibits the patient's ability to maintain adequate functional residual capacity (FRC). To test this hypothesis, pulmonary function of 17 patients was compared during T-tube breathing and Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) and after extubation. ⋯ A comparison of patients extubated from T-tube with patients extubated from CPAP showed no difference in postextubation shunt, PaO2 or FRC. These data suggest that endotracheal intubation should be accompanied by low levels of CPAP and that patients should be extubated directly from CPAP. The practice of placing patients in T-tube prior to extubation should be abandoned as unnecessary and potentially harmful.
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Injuries to the porta hepatis pose difficult problems in management, and transection of the bile ducts, portal vein and hepatic artery is among the most challenging. Twenty-one patients with severe injuries to the porta hepatis were treated over a ten-year period. Ages ranged from 13 to 56 years, and follow-up was up to nine years. ⋯ Associated injuries to liver, pancreas, kidney and duodenum were common. In four patients there was injury to the main or left or right hepatic artery which was managed successfully by repair or ligation, with or without hepatic lobectomy. By adhering to the principles of management to be outlined, many patients with injury to the porta hepatis will survive, and the long term outcome can be gratifying.
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Assessment of living related donor (LRD) survival statistics offers the opportunity to gauge the effects of recipient characteristics without the perturbations of viability, function, and antigen sharing that are inherent in cadaveric organ grafting. From January 1, 1969 to January 1, 1979, 167 LRD grafts were performed. Crude patient survival at one year is 92% and 84% at five years. ⋯ Cadaveric graft statistics vary with recipient race when adjusted to exclude older patients and diabetics, white recipient one-year graft survival 74%, black 38%. No meaningful difference exists among LRD recipients as to graft function, but there is a trend toward improved black patient survival. This suggests that there is not an inherent difference in immune response to genetically similar grafts, but that the disparate results with racially mixed donor-recipient combinations rests with other factors.