J Trauma
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Despite multiple inquiries, there are no available tests to definitively detect blunt myocardial injury. The evaluation of patients with chest wall injuries without other indications for intensive care unit (ICU) admission has ranged from a single emergency department electrocardiogram (ECG) to 72 hours of continuous electrocardiographic monitoring. Recently, signal-averaged ECG and serum cardiac troponin T have demonstrated clinical utility in the evaluation of ischemic heart disease. The purpose of this study is to determine the ability of these diagnostic tests to predict the occurrence of significant electrocardiographic rhythm disturbances for patients with chest wall injuries and no other indication for ICU admission. ⋯ 1. The best predictors for the development of significant electrocardiographic changes are an admission ECG abnormality and an elevated serum troponin T level. 2. Both tests have high specificity with low to moderate sensitivity. 3. Patients with normal ECGs may develop clinically significant events. 4. CPK-MB and echocardiograms continue to be poor predictors of significant electrocardiographic events.
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Use of mechanical ventilation is associated with several major complications despite its lifesaving potential. Timely discontinuation of mechanical ventilation is critical to control of duration of intensive care unit stay and reduction of complications associated with mechanical ventilation. Difficulty in discontinuation (or weaning) of patients from mechanical ventilatory support is in part attributable to inadequate understanding of the mechanisms responsible for unsuccessful outcome and a lack of guidelines regarding the optimal approach to the process of discontinuation of mechanical ventilation. ⋯ In either case, the above weaning techniques appear to be superior to intermittent mandatory ventilation in separating patients from mechanical ventilatory support. Based on available clinical trials, pressure support ventilation or T-piece trials appear to be the preferred methods for discontinuation of mechanical ventilatory support. A method using a simple T-piece trial technique is described.
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Clinical utility of human polymerized hemoglobin as a blood substitute after acute trauma and urgent surgery.
We have previously documented the safety of 1 unit (50 gram) of human polymerized hemoglobin (Poly SFH-P) in healthy volunteers. This report describes the first patient trial to assess the therapeutic benefit of Poly SFH-P in acute blood loss. Thirty-nine patients received 1 (n = 14), 2 (n = 2), 3 (n = 15), or 6 (n = 8) units of Poly SFH-P instead of red cells as part of their blood replacement after trauma and urgent surgery. ⋯ Twenty-three patients (59%) avoided allogeneic transfusions during the first 24 hours after blood loss. Poly SFH-P effectively loads and unloads O2 and maintains total hemoglobin in lieu of red cells after acute blood loss, thereby reducing allogeneic transfusions. Poly SFH-P seems to be a clinically useful blood substitute.
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Trauma registries are an essential but expensive tool for monitoring trauma system performance. The time required to catalog patients' injuries is the source of much of this expense. Typically, 15 minutes of chart review per patient are required, which in a busy trauma center may represent 25% of a full-time employee. We hypothesized that International Classification of Disease-Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes generated by the hospital information system (HI) would be similar to those coded by a dedicated trauma registrar (TR) and would be as accurate as TR ICD-9 codes in predicting outcome. ⋯ We conclude that in our hospital TR data on individual injuries can be replaced by HI data without loss of predictive power. ISS based on the MacKenzie dictionary should be abandoned because it is much less predictive of outcome than ICISS.