Annals of surgery
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Severe head injury is associated with a stress response that includes hyperglycemia, which has been shown to worsen outcome before or during cerebral ischemia. To better define the relationship between human head injury and hyperglycemia, glucose levels were followed in 59 consecutive brain-injured patients from hospital admission up to 18 days after injury. The patients who had the highest peak admission 24-hour serum glucose levels had the worse 18-day neurologic outcome (p = 0.01). ⋯ Patients with mean admission peak 24-hour Glasgow Coma Scale scores of 3.5, 6, and 10 had mean admission 24-hour peak serum glucose levels of 252 +/- 23.5, 219.1 +/- 19, and 185.8 +/- 21, respectively (p = 0.05). These relationships were not significantly altered when confounding variables such as the amount of glucose given over the initial 24-hour postinjury period, the presence of diabetes or multiple injuries, and whether patients were given steroids, dilantin, or insulin were statistically incorporated. These data suggest that admission hyperglycemia is a frequent component of the stress response to head injury, a significant indicator of severity of injury, and a significant predictor of outcome from head injury.
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Delayed gastric emptying in patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease may be due to an incompetent distal esophageal sphincter and/or a gastric abnormality. To determine the influence of the Nissen fundoplication on gastric emptying we studied the rate of gastric emptying before and after operation in 25 patients with proved gastroesophageal reflux disease. Nine patients had no gastric pathology, 9 had gastric acid hypersecretion, 5 had gastritis, and 2 had evidence of significant duodenogastric reflux. ⋯ Only two of 20 patients with normal postoperative gastric emptying had postoperative symptoms. Both patients had preexisting gastric pathology. Based on these findings, the side effects associated with Nissen fundoplication are due to the failure to normalize gastric emptying rather than the operation.
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We have administered 1039 courses of high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) to 652 cancer patients. Five hundred ninety-six patients had metastatic cancer that either had failed standard effective therapies or had disease for which no standard effective therapy existed, and 56 patients were treated in the absence of evaluable disease in the adjuvant setting. IL-2 was administered either alone (155 patients) or in conjunction with activated immune cells such as lymphokine activated killer (LAK) cells (214 patients) or tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) (66 patients), with other cytokines such as alpha interferon (a-IFN)(128 patients) or tumor necrosis factor (TNF)(38 patients), with monoclonal antibodies (32 patients), or with the chemotherapeutic agent cyclophosphamide (19 patients). ⋯ The toxic side effects in patients treated with high-dose IL-2 are presented and include malaise, nausea and vomiting, hypotension, fluid retention, and organ dysfunction. Treatment-related deaths were seen in 1% of all treatment courses and in 1.5% of patients. These studies demonstrate that a purely immunologic manipulation can mediate the regression of advanced cancers in selected patients and may provide a base for the development of practical, effective biologic treatments for some cancer patients.
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Comparative Study
Sequential patterns of eicosanoid, platelet, and neutrophil interactions in the evolution of the fulminant post-traumatic adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Thirty multiply injured blunt-trauma patients at high risk for development of ARDS (multisystem trauma including more than one organ or extremity, Injury Severity Score of 26 or more, hypotension and need for 1500 mL or more blood within the first hour after admission, and PaO2 less than or equal to 70 torr) were studied sequentially with blood and physiologic evaluations beginning immediately after injury and every eight hours for eight days, or until death, to study the evolution of the ARDS process. Mixed venous blood samples were obtained for eicosanoids PGE2, PGF2 alpha, thromboxane B2, PGI2 (6-KetoPGF1 alpha) and leukotriene B4 (LTB4). Platelet (PLAT), and neutrophil (WBC) counts were also done and plasma elastase was measured. ⋯ The significant difference in the pattern and sequence of events in ARDS compared to TR and TS patients suggests that in ARDS the earliest event may be related to peripheral release of PGE2 and LTB4 due to platelet activation and lung sequestration with release of PGF2 alpha, and by aggregation and leukocyte adherence with release of elastase. However, fulminant ARDS mortality appears to be related to the subsequent amplification of the LTB4 leukocyte activation with superoxide production that does not achieve significance before the second day after injury and rises to a maximum by day 4 after injury. These data suggest that post-trauma ARDS follows a different evolutionary pattern than that reported in animal models and is also different from that seen in human TS or TR patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Since our report at the 1984 American Surgical Association meeting of 100 pancreas transplants from 1966 through 1983, another 190 have been performed. The current series, begun in 1978, now numbers 276 cases, and includes 133 nonuremic recipients of pancreas transplants alone (PTA), 46 simultaneous pancreas/kidney transplants (SPK), and 97 pancreas tranplants after a kidney transplant (PAK). Duct management techniques used were free intraperitoneal drainage in 44 cases, duct occlusion in 44, enteric drainage in 89, and bladder drainage in 128. ⋯ Only preliminary data is available. In regard to neuropathy, at more than 1 year after transplant in patients with functioning grafts, conduction velocities in some nerves were increased over baseline. In regard to retinopathy, deterioration in grade occurred in approximately 30% of the recipients by 3 years, whether the graft functioned continuously or failed early, but thereafter retinopathy in the patients with functioning grafts remained stable.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)