Acta anaesthesiologica Belgica
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Venous air embolism is a major hazard during surgical procedures in the sitting position and is known to cause acute pulmonary edema in animal experiments (6, 7, 17). In man some cases of pulmonary edema immediately following air embolism have been described (10, 15, 16). In this case report we present a patient that developed pulmonary edema which became apparent several hours after the occurrence of air embolism.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Belg · Jan 1987
ReviewResuscitation and evaluation of victims of blunt multisystem trauma.
The initial management of hemodynamically unstable polytrauma patients can be challenging. Although there are other possible causes of hypotension, such as tension pneumothorax, CNS injury and hemopericardium, in the vast majority of blunt trauma victims shock is due to blood loss. Whereas the diagnosis of circulatory collapse is clearcut, the rapid identification and control of the bleeding source may not be a straightforward matter. ⋯ In concert with respiratory management, other members of the trauma team should secure adequate vascular access, resuscitate the patient and perform a physical examination. Physical findings dictate the order of further diagnostic and therapeutic maneuvers. In unstable patients the potential need for urgent surgical intervention must not be overlooked.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Belg · Jan 1987
A new patient registration method for intensive care department management.
A new method to describe intensive care department performance is presented. The method is a complication of available administrative and medical data, completed with a severity of illness measure (Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation, APACHE) and the registration of nursing care intensity. The development of this latter patient stratification system (Intensive Care Activity Score, INCAS) is described. The performance of the method is demonstrated by a study of 200 consecutive admissions.
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After a brief review of the supraspinal and spinal effects of morphine, the reference substance for studies on analgesia, the authors expose a synthesis of the recent literature regarding neurotransmitter involvement in pain perception and transmission. From these data, some future prospects for pain treatment research are identified.