Arch Surg Chicago
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Double gloving. Protecting surgeons from blood contamination in the operating room.
Health care workers, particularly surgeons, understand the importance of preventing contamination from blood of patients infected with deadly viruses. One of the most common areas of contamination is the hands and fingers due to the failure of glove protection. There are varying opinions regarding the frequency of glove failure, the necessity of wearing two gloves for added protection, and the ability to operate when wearing two gloves. ⋯ Overall, the glove failure rate (blood contamination of the fingers) was 51% when one glove was worn and 7% when two gloves were worn. Acceptability was 88% in the group who agreed to wear two gloves, and 88% of these did not perceive that tactile sense was significantly impaired. We believe that double gloving should be, and can be, used routinely during major surgical procedures to protect surgeons from blood contamination.
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Intravenous lipopolysaccharide (LPS) decreases superior mesenteric arterial blood flow and increases ileal mucosal permeability in pigs. We tested the hypothesis that these phenomena can be ameliorated by pretreatment and posttreatment with ibuprofen. Pentobarbital-anesthetized immature swine were mechanically ventilated (fraction of inspired oxygen, 0.5) and infused with Ringer's lactate (RL) solution (0.8 mL/kg per minute). ⋯ Among survivors only, CEDTA/CUREA increased significantly over time in both endotoxic groups, but not in nonendotoxic controls. Treatment with ibuprofen transiently blocked LPS-induced mesenteric hypoperfusion. These data indicate that mediators other than cyclooxygenase-derived metabolites of arachidonic acid are responsible for the adverse effect of LPS on mesenteric permeability to hydrophilic solutes in this porcine model.
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Hemorrhagic shock causes a severe suppression of cellular immunity and an increased susceptibility to sepsis that may be due to increased release of prostaglandin E2 by macrophages. Since chloroquine inhibits the secretion of prostaglandin E2 by macrophages in vitro, the effects of chloroquine administration in vivo following hemorrhagic shock on macrophage prostaglandin E2 secretion and on depressed cellular immunity were examined. Inbred C3H/HeN male mice, aged 6 to 8 weeks, were bled to a mean blood pressure of 35 mm Hg, which was maintained for 60 minutes, and adequately, resuscitated. ⋯ Chloroquine treatment attenuated depression of splenocyte functions and reduced prostaglandin E2 release. Furthermore, chloroquine treatment decreased the mortality of septic mice after hemorrhage to levels comparable with those of sham-operated mice. Thus, chloroquine may be a useful adjunct in the clinical setting for the treatment of shock-induced immunodepression and increased susceptibility to sepsis following hemorrhage.
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Paranasal sinusitis is a complication of nasotracheal intubation. Of 99 nasally intubated adult patients who survived 48 hours after being burned, 22 who were intubated for more than 7 days underwent a computed tomographic scan of all paranasal sinuses, with timing dictated by the patient's clinical condition. Eight patients had computed tomographic and clinical findings consistent with sinusitis. ⋯ A subgroup of patients with preexisting sinus disease made up 50% of the patients with sinusitis; early conversion to an oral airway or a tracheostomy should be considered in such patients. Only one patient required surgical drainage of the sinuses. The frequency and morbidity of sinusitis in nasotracheally intubated burn patients does not justify the risk of routine conversion to an oral airway.
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Major hepatic vein and retrohepatic vena caval injuries are often fatal because of massive uncontrollable hemorrhage. Children with these injuries can be identified by their unique and dramatic clinical presentation and the selective use of computed tomographic imaging. Volume resuscitation promotes abdominal wall tamponade and hemodynamic stability until the abdomen is opened, at which point there may be sudden exsanguination before vascular control can be obtained. ⋯ Management in this sequence provides rapid vascular control and improves the efficiency of hepatic exclusion. To date, five children with major hepatic vascular injuries have been treated with the sternotomy-first approach and four have survived; an atriocaval shunt was used on two occasions. Although sternotomy before laparotomy improves the efficiency of hepatic exclusion and may offer improved survival, accurate preoperative case selection limits its routine use.