Presse Med
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Preoperative skin preparation. A prospective study comparing a depilatory agent in shaving].
Two types of pre-operative skin preparation were compared in a prospective randomized study conducted on 100 patients undergoing elective surgery: 51 patients were shaven (group I) and 49 were prepared with a depilatory agent. In all cases skin preparation was performed on the eve of the operation. Bacterial density, measured immediately before surgery by application of a contact agar preparation was 493 +/- 928 CFU in group I and 386 +/- 670 CFU in group II (NS). ⋯ In addition, the depilatory agent proved bactericidal against 3 pathogenic strains (S. aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and E. coli). Depilation with a chemical agent seems to be a satisfactory method of pre-operative skin preparation. It is more rapid than shaving, it can be applied to areas not easily accessible to razors, and it can often be carried out by the patient himself.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Laryngeal edema after extubation. Do corticosteroids play a role in its prevention?].
The role of corticosteroids in the prevention of post-extubation laryngeal oedema was evaluated in a randomized study of 276 patients under mechanical ventilation. Fifty per cent of the patients received methylprednisolone 40 mg intramuscularly and intravenously. ⋯ Thus, the incidence of laryngeal oedema was not modified by corticosteroids. Regular prescription of corticosteroids does not seem to be useful before extubation of patients intubated with large volume, low-pressure balloon tubes.
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Spinal analgesia, a new method for relieving refractory cancer pain, was tested in 19 patients. A catheter was installed in the subarachnoid (17 cases) or peridural (2 cases) space and connected to a subcutaneous site of injection. ⋯ In 11 patients pain was relieved throughout the course of the malignant disease, with doses that did not exceed 6 mg in 7 patients and 10 mg in the remaining 4 patients. The most severe complications were leakage of the cerebrospinal fluid in 1 case, meningitis after 18 months of injection in 1 case and displacement of the catheter in 3 cases.
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The intracranial pressure of 31 patients with bacterial meningitis, in a comatose state and with a score lower than 6 on Glasgow's scale, was monitored by means of an extradural captor in order to detect intracranial hypertension and optimize its treatment. All patients had intracranial hypertension during the first 48 hours. ⋯ Twenty (64%) of the patient survived, 15 of them without sequelae. Monitoring intracranial pressure in patients with bacterial meningitis and coma makes it possible to optimize treatment and shows that a less than 50 mmHg brain perfusion pressure is associated with a 100% death rate.