Arch Surg Chicago
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Outcome and cost-effectiveness of perioperative enteral immunonutrition in patients undergoing elective upper gastrointestinal tract surgery: a prospective randomized study.
Perioperatively administered enteral immunonutrition will improve early postoperative morbidity and cost-effectiveness after gastrointestinal tract surgery. ⋯ The perioperative administration of an enteral immunonutrition significantly (P = .05) decreased the early occurrence of postoperative infections and reduced substantially the treatment costs of the complications after major upper gastrointestinal tract surgery.
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Previously, we showed that mesenteric lymph generated following hemorrhagic shock increases endothelial cell permeability and contributes to lung injury. It has also been shown that lymph produced at the site of burn injury plays a role in altering pulmonary vascular hemodynamics. In addition, previous experimental work has suggested that organs and tissues distant from the injury site may contribute to pulmonary dysfunction. One explanation would be that gut-derived inflammatory factors (in addition to those produced locally at the site of injury) are reaching the pulmonary circulation, where they exert their effects via the gut lymphatics. ⋯ The results of this study support the hypothesis that gut-derived factors carried in the mesenteric lymph contribute to burn-induced lung injury and may therefore play a role in postburn respiratory failure and suggest that intestinal bacterial overgrowth primes the host such that when animals are exposed to a second stimulus (such as thermal injury) an exaggerated response occurs.
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Among factors postulated to affect outcome in sepsis is the gender of the patient, with a suggestion that females may have lower mortality. This study tested the hypothesis that female patients admitted to the surgical intensive care unit with a documented infection have a lower mortality rate. ⋯ Female gender is an independent predictor of increased mortality in critically ill surgical patients with documented infection.
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In response to traumatic injury or infection, human neutrophils are directed to the site of injury or infection by CXC chemokines that signal via 2 receptors, CXCR-1 and CXCR-2. In vitro studies have shown preferential loss of CXCR-2 expression and function after exposure to interleukin 8, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP), C5a, and tumor necrosis factor alpha. ⋯ CXCR-2 expression and function are preferentially down-regulated in severely injured patients. Our data suggest that there are multiple mechanisms, in addition to receptor down-regulation, that play a role in the loss of migration and calcium flux in human neutrophils after injury.
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Comparative Study
Analysis of aminoglycosides in the treatment of gram-negative infections in surgical patients.
Antibiotic regimens containing aminoglycosides result in a similar outcome compared with non-aminoglycoside regimens in the treatment of gram-negative infections in surgical patients. ⋯ Despite a younger age and similar severity of illness, patients with gram-negative infections treated with aminoglycosides were associated with a higher mortality rate, although this may be related to selection bias in the use of aminoglycoside agents. The mortality rate associated with gram-negative pneumonia was also higher in patients treated with aminoglycosides, despite a similar severity of illness. Future randomized studies are necessary to reanalyze the role of aminoglycosides in treating surgical patients with gram-negative infections, particularly pneumonia.