Mayo Clinic proceedings
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Mayo Clinic proceedings · Dec 1988
Idiopathic cyclic nausea and vomiting--a disorder of gastrointestinal motility?
Eight patients (five men and three women) with previously unexplained recurrent cyclic episodes of nausea and vomiting are described. In these patients, the symptoms developed a mean of once every 3.2 months and persisted a mean of 3.5 days. None of the patients had an identifiable cause of their symptoms on conventional diagnostic tests. ⋯ Gastric hypomotility was substantiated in five patients, small bowel dysmotility in six, delayed gastric emptying in two, and gastric dysrhythmia in two. The data demonstrate that abnormal gastrointestinal motility occurs during an asymptomatic state in patients with cyclic episodes of nausea and vomiting. Because all patients with this syndrome had abnormal gastrointestinal motility but normal results of other gastrointestinal studies, idiopathic cyclic nausea and vomiting may be related to altered gastrointestinal motility.
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Mayo Clinic proceedings · Sep 1988
Review Comparative StudySurgical pathology of the tricuspid valve: a study of 363 cases spanning 25 years.
Surgical pathologic features of the tricuspid valve were reviewed in 363 patients who had undergone tricuspid valve replacement at our institution during the period 1963 through 1987. Valves were purely regurgitant in 74%, stenotic and regurgitant in 23%, and purely stenotic in 2%; two valves were neither stenotic nor regurgitant. Among 269 purely insufficient tricuspid valves, the four most common causes were postinflammatory disease (41%), congenital disorder (32%), pulmonary venous hypertension (21%), and infective endocarditis (4%). ⋯ This trend may reflect the decreasing incidence of acute rheumatic fever reported in Western countries. During the same time interval, the relative frequency of congenital heart disease as a cause of tricuspid dysfunction increased from 7% to 53%, and it is currently the most common cause in our surgical population. This finding apparently reflects changes in patient referral practices and the development of new operative procedures.
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In an effort to shorten the hospital stay after implantation of a permanent cardiac pacemaker, some physicians have begun performing pacemaker implantation on an ambulatory basis. To assess the potential safety of shortening the duration of hospitalization after pacemaker implantation, we reviewed the complications that occurred in 100 consecutive patients after pacemaker implantation and noted the time after the implantation when the complications occurred. ⋯ Complications that necessitated noninvasive programming occurred as long as 72 hours after implantation, and all could have been safely corrected at the time of follow-up had the patient been dismissed at the 24-hour period. Although we do not believe that ambulatory pacemaker implantation should be routinely implemented at this time, the practice of dismissing patients at 24 hours after pacemaker implantation and scheduling subsequent outpatient follow-up seems to be safe and effective.
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Mayo Clinic proceedings · Dec 1987
Comparative StudyThe effects of intraoperative blood salvage and induced hypotension on transfusion requirements during spinal surgical procedures.
Spinal surgical procedures, such as placement of Harrington rods for correction of scoliosis, are associated with considerable perioperative blood loss and, hence, with the risks associated with homologous blood transfusions. To test the hypothesis that intraoperative autologous blood transfusions could decrease the amount of homologous blood needed in such operations, we conducted a two-part study: (1) a retrospective review of 142 patients in whom blood salvage was not used and (2) a prospective review of 28 patients who received autologous transfusions. Intraoperative autologous transfusion reduced the amount of homologous blood required by more than 50% (5.1 versus 2.0 units; P less than 0.001). ⋯ Induced hypotension in 81 of the 142 patients who did not receive autologous transfusions did not decrease the homologous blood transfusion requirements from those needed by the normotensive patients. We conclude that intraoperative autologous transfusion significantly reduces the need for homologous blood products in patients who undergo spinal surgical procedures. Induced hypotension, which did not affect transfusion requirements in our study, should be further evaluated in a blinded, prospective study.