J Formos Med Assoc
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Airway intubation injuries occur frequently but are often neglected because of spontaneous regression. Although most airway injuries that result from intubation resolve without sequelae, severe complications can develop even when initial symptoms of upper airway obstruction are absent. This retrospective study assessed the clinical features, flexible bronchoscopic findings, and clinical outcomes in children with airway intubation injuries. ⋯ The results of this study indicate that flexible bronchoscopy is a simple, safe, and useful technique for the diagnosis and follow-up of airway intubation injury. It should be performed on all patients who have symptoms of upper airway obstruction after extubation as well as those who have undergone long-term or emergency intubation.
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This clinical report is based on retrospective observation of the outcome and effects of patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) with bupivacaine infusion administered at home to five patients with intractable herpetic neuralgia. All patients had severe pain (9 or 10 visual analogue scale [VAS]points) confined to the affected dermatomes, which was refractory to medication. The interval between zoster onset and PCEA application ranged from 27 to 60 days (mean, 37.2 d). ⋯ No deleterious effects were found during PCEA therapy. After discontinuation of PCEA, two patients did not complain of pain but still had slight paresthesia, one of them required low-dose antidepressant for 17 days; three patients continued to have occasional sharp pain (VAS, 2-3) and required low-dose antidepressant and analgesic as-needed for one to six months. These results suggest that PCEA with bupivacaine infusion provides effective pain relief in patients with intractable herpetic neuralgia and is a feasible and effective home treatment modality with limited side effects.