Arch Surg Chicago
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Preoperative tests of coagulation function have been suggested to detect patients who are likely to have abnormal bleeding during and after surgery. A study was designed to determine the yield of prothrombin time (PT) and partial thromboplastin time (PTT), both in discovering patients who are at risk for abnormal bleeding and in inducing changes in patient care or outcome. Of 750 patients on three surgical services, 611 (81%) patients had no indication of a bleeding disorder on history or physical examination. ⋯ One (0.2%) of the 480 patients might have benefited from the test result (this patient required a second operation to control arterial bleeding). The prolonged PT or PTT was of no apparent clinical importance in the remaining 12 patients without indications of bleeding disorders preoperatively. The low yield of the PT and PTT in detecting unsuspected bleeding disorders preoperatively was further obscured by the larger number of apparently false-positive results.
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A retrospective case review of 34 men was undertaken to evaluate the relationship between preoperative volume loading and renal function before, during, and after abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery. Volume expansion was guided by either central venous pressure (CVP) in 12 patients or pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) measurements in 22 patients. ⋯ The age range, vascular risk factors, aneurysm size, and preoperative renal function were similar. The data indicate that (1) PAWP is a more accurate monitor for volume expansion than CVP and (2) when volume replacement is optimal, abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery is not associated with postoperative renal insufficiency.
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Thrombocytopenia (platelet count, 5,000 to 96,000/cu mm; average platelet count, 48,000/cu mm) developed in 31 patients while they were receiving prophylactic or therapeutic heparin sodium therapy. Twenty-one of these patients had associated thromboembolic complications that contributed to the deaths of eight patients. ⋯ Cessation of heparin administration was associated with avoidance or remission of the thromboembolic complication and immediate improvement of the thrombocytopenia. Platelet count monitoring during heparin therapy remains the most effective means for the identification of this disorder before the development of the thromboembolic complications.
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Hemodilution-induced reductions of the intravascular protein concentration in patients and experimental animals with intact capillaries do not lead to pulmonary edema, despite significant increases in the amount of extravascular water in the systemic interstitial space. The protective factors are a drop in the extravascular concentration of protein, a rise in interstitial tissue pressure, and an increase in lymph flow. ⋯ Whether capillaries are intact or injured, prevention of increases in capillary hydrostatic pressure is the most important factor in preventing pulmonary edema. Administration of hypertonic fluids may provide a useful method of limiting total fluid infusion and reducing cell swelling after blood loss.
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Postoperative atelectasis has been treated with inspiratory maneuvers in an attempt to increase functional residual capacity. We compared the effect of intermittent positive pressure breathing (IPPB), incentive spirometry, and 5-cm H2O positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) applied with a face mask on the transpulmonary pressure (PL) at the end of expiration of eight patients 24 to 34 hours after aortocoronary bypass graft insertion. ⋯ After IPPB, expiratory PL fell below control values and then returned toward, but did not reach, control values After PEEP was discontinued, expiratory PL returned to control values within the next 30 minutes. The results suggest that face-mask PEEP will increase functional residual capacity, that incentive spirometry has little or effect, and that IPPB may decrease lung volume after treatment.