Arch Surg Chicago
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A systemic proinflammatory response has been implicated in the pathogenesis of organ dysfunction. The effects of surgery, surgical stress, anesthesia, and subsequent intensive care unit (ICU) resuscitation may affect the components of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) score (temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, and white blood cell count). Any SIRS scores calculated within 24 hours after surgery or at the onset of nonoperative resuscitation may overestimate the proinflammatory response itself, making quantitation of SIRS at that time potentially too sensitive. We hypothesized that SIRS attributable to ICU resuscitation can be quantitated, and that SIRS after the first day of therapy in the ICU correlates with several outcomes. ⋯ Systemic inflammatory response syndrome attributable to surgery or surgical stress can be quantitated. Twenty-four hours of ICU resuscitation results in a decline in the SIRS score. The magnitude of the proinflammatory response on the second ICU day may be a useful predictor of outcome in critical surgical illness.
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Recent studies suggest that male sex steroids play a role in producing immunodepression following trauma-hemorrhage. This notion is supported by studies showing that castration of male mice before trauma-hemorrhage or the administration of the androgen receptor blocker flutamide following trauma-hemorrhage in noncastrated animals prevents immunodepression and improves the survival rate of animals subjected to subsequent sepsis. However, it remains unknown whether the most abundant steroid hormone, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), protects or depresses immune functions following trauma-hemorrhage. In this regard, DHEA has been reported to have estrogenic and androgenic properties, depending on the hormonal milieu. ⋯ The finding that DHEA markedly improves the depressed immune functions and survival of animals subjected to subsequent sepsis suggests that short-term treatment with DHEA after trauma-hemorrhage is a safe and novel approach for preventing immunodepression and for decreasing the mortality rate due to subsequent sepsis.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A trial of ciprofloxacin and metronidazole vs gentamicin and metronidazole for penetrating abdominal trauma.
To determine whether a combination of ciprofloxacin hydrochloride and metronidazole hydrochloride would be as effective or more effective than a combination of gentamicin sulfate and metronidazole hydrochloride for preventing infection in patients with penetrating abdominal trauma, to evaluate the factors associated with increased risk of infection, and to determine the serum peak and trough levels of gentamicin with the dosage regimen of 2.5 mg/kg every 12 hours. ⋯ Ciprofloxacin and gentamicin, each in combination with metronidazole, were equivalent in their ability to prevent infections after penetrating abdominal trauma; other factors, especially the receipt of blood transfusions, had much more effect on the incidence of infection. Infection greatly increases the length of hospital stay and hospital charges. The use of an increased dosing regimen of 2.5 mg/kg every 12 hours of gentamicin sulfate was effective at obtaining a therapeutic peak serum concentration.
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Initial cardiovascular responses during sepsis are characterized by hyperdynamic circulation. Although studies have shown that a novel potent vasodilatory peptide, adrenomedullin (ADM), is up-regulated under such conditions, it remains unknown whether ADM is responsible for initiating the hyperdynamic response. ⋯ The results suggest that increased ADM production and/or release plays a major role in producing hyperdynamic responses during early sepsis. Since our previous studies have shown that vascular responsiveness to ADM decreases in late sepsis, maintenance of ADM vascular responsiveness by pharmacological agents during the course of sepsis may prevent transition from the hyperdynamic to the hypodynamic state.