Journal of pediatric surgery
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Controversy surrounds the justification of a second course of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for patients that deteriorate after initial decannulation. The authors' experience with a small number of patients requiring recannulation led them to investigate the results of a second ECMO course from all institutions that report to the ELSO registry. ⋯ A small subset of patients may require recannulation and a second ECMO course. Although survival may be achieved in more than one third of these patients, complication rates are increased during the second course. Specifically, neurologic, infectious, renal, and metabolic complication rates are increased. Long-term consequences of recannulation are unknown. Selection criteria identifying patients that may benefit from recannulation have not been established.
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The purpose of this study was to quantify pathologic lesions of the kidney found incidentally during the workup of a blunt renal trauma. ⋯ Pathologic lesions of the urinary tract are uncommon; however, they may complicate an otherwise negligible renal trauma. The diagnostic and therapeutic approach to blunt renal trauma must be modified in these cases. A high index of suspicion must be maintained when a patient presents with gross hematuria with a minimal force blunt abdominal trauma.
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One hundred ninety-three cannulation procedures for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) have been performed at the authors' institution from 1994 to now. Before 1996, their practice had been to position these catheters exclusively by clinical assessment and chest radiograph. Since then, the authors have utilized intraoperative ultrasound guidance during cannulation procedures to confirm proper tip position. This retrospective analysis was undertaken to establish whether this practice has reduced the rate of surgical repositioning of ECMO catheters in these patients. ⋯ Based on these findings, the authors advocate the use of intraoperative ultrasound imaging to optimize the position of ECMO catheters. This high rate of initial success helps avoid the potential morbidity of ECMO circuit malfunction, repeat neck dissection, and catheter manipulation in these critically ill, anticoagulated patients.
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Surgical stress produces changes in the immune status of patients. In adults, major surgery causes immunosuppression, whereas minor operations stimulate immune responses. In children, the immunologic response to surgery has not been elucidated completely. The authors investigated the effects of minor surgery on immune response by analyzing neutrophil and monocyte phagocytosis and oxidative burst activity. ⋯ This study shows that minor surgery in children induces immune activation by increasing neutrophil and monocyte phagocytosis and oxidative burst activity. Further studies are required to understand the molecular basis of these findings.
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This study investigated the roles of moderate hypothermia and extraluminal oxygenated perfluorcarbon (PFC) on intestinal metabolism after ischemia-reperfusion. ⋯ Whole-body moderate hypothermia protects the small intestine from reperfusion injury as measured both biochemically and histologically. Extraluminal oxygenated PFC administration during ischemia did not protect the intestine from reperfusion injury in this model.