Cardiovascular surgery (London, England)
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The two most common sites of first rib fracture were at the subclavian sulcus and in the neck of the first rib, posteriorly. Five distinct mechanisms for rib fracture were identified and included: (i) posteriorly directed trauma to the upper thorax or shoulder girdle; (ii) a direct blow to the sternum and anterior chest wall; (iii) a blow fracturing the clavicle; (iv) a strong sudden contraction of the scalenus anticus muscle; and (v) radiographic findings of a first rib fracture without history of trauma. ⋯ First rib fracture associated with concomitant head, thoracic, abdominal, or long bone trauma was associated with vascular injury in 24% of cases. According to this review, specific indications for subclavian artery and aortic arch arteriography in patients with traumatic first rib fracture include widened mediastinum on chest radiography, upper-extremity pulse deficit, posteriorly displaced first rib fracture, subclavian groove fracture anteriorly, brachial plexus injury and expanding hematoma.
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Preoperative evaluation for cardiac risk assessment before peripheral vascular surgery remains controversial. Between January and June 1994, a prospective open study was carried out in 156 patients scheduled for elective vascular procedures (63 carotid endarterectomies, 34 abdominal aortic aneurysms, 29 aortoiliac and 30 infrainguinal reconstructions) to compare the ability of clinical data, dobutamine stress echocardiography, and dobutamine Tc-99m sestamibi tomoscintigraphy to predict postoperative cardiac events. Pharmacological stress testing consisted of incremental dobutamine infusion (+/-1 mg atropine to achieve 85% of age-predicted maximal heart rate, with continuous echocardiographic monitoring, and injection of Tc-99m sestamibi after dobutamine infusion). ⋯ Furthermore, a negative dobutamine stress test was characterized by a high negative predictive value (0.96 for echocardiography; 0.97 for tomoscintigraphy). The study further demonstrated that the cardiac response (ischaemic versus non-ischaemic) to dobutamine stress was concordantly classified by echocardiographic and tomoscintigraphic techniques in 96% of cases. It is concluded that complementary non-invasive cardiac stress testing by dobutamine is indicated only in patients with clinically apparent coronary artery disease.
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of transoesophageal echocardiography monitoring during weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass after intracardiac repair in children. The left ventricular ejection fraction, left ventricular end-diastolic volume and left ventricle wall motion were monitored continuously by transoesophageal echocardiography in controls weaned easily from cardiopulmonary bypass (group A, n = 25), and those weaned with difficulty from cardiopulmonary bypass after mechanically assisted circulation (group B, n = 16). In group A, left ventricular ejection fraction and left ventricle wall motion were within normal range, and did not change significantly during weaning after cardiopulmonary bypass when compared with pre-bypass data. ⋯ Hence, assisted circulation was performed until the data obtained via transoesophageal echocardiography improved with regard to maintenance of fluid balance, catecholamine dosage and assisted pump flow. All cases in group B were weaned safely from cardiopulmonary bypass despite their critical condition. In conclusion, continuous transoesophageal echocardiography monitoring may be a useful tool in children with severe heart failure for safe weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass after intracardiac repair.
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Early detection of colonic ischaemia after aortic grafting is essential if mortality is to be decreased when this complication develops. The aim of this study was to determine changes in the sigmoid colon during and after abdominal aortic grafting using endoluminal pulse oximetry (SmO2). Oxygen saturation was measured on the mucosa (SmO2) and serosa (SsO2) of 20 sequential patients undergoing elective surgery for abdominal aortic aneurysm; intramural pHi was also measured. ⋯ Patients were classified into three groups according to SmO2: group A, no pulse; group B, diminished saturation (< 90%); and group C, normal saturation (> or = 90%). There was significant correlation with the pHi after cross-clamping in all groups. One patient who developed ischaemia of the sigmoid colon demonstrated a prolonged reduction in the SmO2, a decreased perioperative pHi, and an increased oxygen saturation in the inferior mesenteric vein during cross-clamping.