Swiss medical weekly
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Modern imaging techniques allow early and precise diagnosis of spinal diseases. Their sensitivity and specificity are variable, but in general they are more complementary than competitive. After emphasizing the different patterns which characterize the late evolution of diagnostic imaging, the author reviews the indications and limits of plain films, bone scintigraphy, computed tomography, and in particular of magnetic resonance, in trauma, degenerative lesions, inflammations, infections and tumors of the spine.
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After blunt chest trauma, myocardial contusion is frequently suspected, but diagnostic criteria are difficult to define and commonly accepted recommendations for duration and form of patient monitoring are lacking. We therefore conducted a retrospective review of the hospital records of 50 consecutively hospitalized patients with the diagnosis of myocardial contusion after blunt chest trauma, and analyzed the pathological laboratory, ECG and echocardiography findings as well as the associated injuries and cardiac-related complications. The average injury severity score was 25 +/- 8. ⋯ The minimum program we recommend for diagnosis and monitoring should include enzyme levels (CPK, CPK-MB) and ECG controls. Echocardiography may be necessary as well. If during the initial compulsory 24 hour monitoring of ECG and hemodynamics no complications occur, further monitoring is not necessary.
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Swiss medical weekly · Oct 1992
[The effect of first aid and care times on the clinical course and treatment results in multiple trauma. Initial interim results of an interdisciplinary trauma registry in the St. Gallen district hospital].
To date little is known about the influence of variable rescue (i.e. transportation/preclinical care) and clinical care times on the clinical progress and outcome of patients suffering injuries ranging from average to severe. Having examined this question within the framework of an ongoing study of trauma, we present the first provisional results and compare them with existing documentation. ⋯ The database for the assessment of standard times is still inadequate. For a reliable analysis, a total number of at least 500 patients is necessary (beta error acceptable). Our own data and the meagre results of other studies support the supposition that it is not the absolute time-lapse which has prognostic significance but the qualified medical assistance provided within a critical, individual, but extremely variable time-span. The increased employment of highly qualified emergency staff and a more efficient "triage", in the sense of a clearly directed trauma regionalization, could thus lead to optimization of trauma care.