J Trauma
-
This study reports on the effects of early cooling on the morphology of partial-thickness burns. After 10% body surface dorsal scald burns at 75 degrees C for 10 seconds, guinea pigs were treated by ice-water immersion at 10 minutes postburn of only the burned surface for 30 minutes. Skin samples from treated and untreated burn wounds were examined at 2, 8, 24, and 96 hours postburn by light and electron microscopy. ⋯ There was also less damage to the dermal microvasculature and less edema fluid compared to untreated burn wounds. At 96 hours, the cooled burn wounds demonstrated minimal dermal hemorrhage and polymorphonuclear leukocytic infiltration, compared to the untreated wounds. These results indicate that on a cellular level, cooling has beneficial effects on the experimental burn wound.
-
Case Reports
Volar fracture-dislocation of the carpometacarpal joint of the index finger treated by delayed open reduction.
Isolated volar fracture dislocation of the carpometacarpal joint of the index finger is a rare injury and has apparently not previously been reported. We are presenting a case treated by delayed open reduction and internal fixation. Satisfactory but not anatomic reduction was obtained. The literature and anatomic factors are discussed.
-
The contribution of the reticuloendothelial system (RES) in pyridoxalated stroma-free hemoglobin (SFH-P) clearance may be insignificant. The magnitude of this is not at present clear. Any compromise of RES function would militate against its potential benefit as an oxygen-carrying resuscitation fluid. ⋯ Shock resuscitation with pyridoxalated stroma-free hemoglobin was equal to or better than all other resuscitation groups evaluated. Tolerance to a standard septic challenge 5 days after resuscitation was no different between resuscitation groups. There appears to be no compromise to host defense in general in tolerating intra-abdominal sepsis 5 days following shock resuscitation with pyridoxalated stroma-free hemoglobin.