We undertook a retrospective study of 36 victims of high-voltage electrical contact injuries to determine the incidence and possible source of elevated creatine kinase (CK)-MB enzyme in their serum. ...Only two sustained myocardial infarctions (one late) according to history, electrocardiographic findings, and clinical course. Serum lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme levels were abnormal but revealed no myocardial infarction patterns. Creatine kinase total activity, however, reached 1.5 to 1,140 times normal in 92% and the CK-MB level was abnormal in 50% despite the low incidence of myocardial damage. Skeletal muscle CK and CK-MB levels in four nonelectrically injured patients were comparable to those in normal muscle while CK and CK-MB activity was elevated in six such electrical injuries. There was a gradient in CK-MB activity with greatest CK-MB activity in "normal" muscle near the injury site, lesser amounts in border tissue, and least in the worst-injured site. We conclude that myocardial injury is uncommon in high-voltage electrical injury and skeletal muscle injured by high electrical voltage is stimulated to produce, as well as release, CK-MB.
One hundred eleven patients with burns who were age 60 years or older were treated from January 1984 through December 1992. Twenty-nine patients had pulmonary failure defined as 7 or more days of ...ventilatory support from the day of burn. The mortality rate for these patients was 41%; only four were discharged to home. The mortality rate for patients without pulmonary failure was 11%. Billing information was analyzed for 102 of the 111 patients. Charges for patients without pulmonary failure were two to three times greater than reimbursement. Charges for patients with pulmonary failure were 4 to 14 times greater than reimbursement. Reimbursement for elderly patients with burns is inadequate. Altering the Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG) definition of extensive burn to reflect the severity of injury in the geriatric population is one step toward reimbursement reform. Patients who require 7 or more days of ventilatory support after burn injury should be reimbursed under a separate DRG category or should have a DRG modifier.
This is the first case report of the clinical use of intraoperative streptokinase to promote free flap salvage. A latissimus dorsi free flap was mobilized to cover a scalping type injury. After 4 1/2 ...hours of ischemia and recurrent thrombosis, streptokinase was perfused into the thoracodorsal artery (7,500 units of streptokinase in 30 cc of normal saline). The free flap was exposed to this concentration of streptokinase for 10 minutes followed by drainage of the venous effluent in order to avoid possible deleterious systemic effects of the streptokinase. Good flow throughout the free flap resulted, and the flap remained viable, providing good coverage for the patient's skull. Controversies regarding the no-reflow phenomena and the use of various thrombolytic agents are discussed.
Information concerning selenium status in thermal injury patients is limited. Therefore, both serum selenium concentration and 24 h urinary excretion of selenium were evaluated throughout the ...hospital course for 23 patients with partial and full skin thickness thermal burns. Serum selenium levels were depressed throughout the hospital course in the majority of patients, and only two patients' serum selenium levels had reached the normal range by discharge. Urinary selenium losses were essentially within normal range throughout the same period and thus were not responsible for the observed depression in serum selenium levels. A possible antagonistic relationship between selenium and silver is discussed.
Extensive scalping injuries offer a unique challenge for tissue coverage because of the wide expanse of bone and lack of deep soft tissue or significant perforating vessels. For smaller injuries, ...pedicle flaps offer ideal coverage. Larger defects can be covered by omental flaps. Coverage with a free muscle flap followed by split-thickness skin grafting offers optimal long-term coverage. Two new techniques are introduced. The wire-button technique offers stabilization, and the halo frame provides good support and protection for a new free-flap graft and may increase the success rate of flaps in patients with scalping injuries.
The purpose of this study was to assess the influence of thermal injury and the inflammatory process on chemotactic responses of neutrophils to four attractants ...(N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, the complement fragment C5a, interleukin-8, and leukotriene B4) under agarose, expression of Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) adherence receptors on the cell surface, and polymerization of actin in the cell cytoplasm. Circulating neutrophils were isolated from peripheral blood, and exudate neutrophils from fluid collecting under two different wound dressings applied to abrasion sites of healthy subjects and to skin graft donor sites of patients with burns. Burn injury reduced the chemotactic responses of circulating neutrophils to all four attractants, suggesting a "global" defect in chemotactic function. Patient-exudate neutrophils collected under Tegaderm exhibited further decrements in all chemotactic responses, and patient-exudate neutrophils collected under Biobrane were nonmotile. The exudate neutrophils collected under Biobrane expressed high levels of Mac-1 receptors and irreversibly polymerized actin, which may contribute to the nonmotility of these exudate cells.
Nicolau's syndrome, also called embolica cutis medicamentosa, is characterized by well- circumscribed livedoid dermatitis with aseptic necrosis after intramuscular injection. We report the case of a ...45-year-old woman with severe necrosis of the thigh several days after a routine intramuscular injection of hydroxyzine who was transferred to and treated at our Regional Burn Center. Although there has been one case report and numerous voluntarily reported instances of intramuscular hydroxyzine-induced necrosis to the Food and Drug Administration Spontaneous Reporting System, this phenomenon is rare.
Fibrin has classically been considered a defense mechanism of the peritoneal cavity. We have studied the role of purified fibrin in the pathogenesis of intraperitoneal infection. Implantation of 0.5% ...bovine fibrin clots containing 2 X 10(8) E. coli into the rat peritoneal cavity reduces the 24-hour mortality rate from 100% to 0% compared to bacteria in a similar volume of saline solution. However, the 10-day mortality rate with fibrin is 90%; 100% develop intraperitoneal abscesses. Animals receiving sterile clots lyse than over 1 to 2 weeks without abscess formation. As few as 10(2) E. coli per fibrin clot produce abscesses, but 10(7) or more are required to produce death; without fibrin less than 10(7) E. coli neither kill nor produce intraperitoneal infections. Both late death and abscess size with 2 X 10(8) E. coli are directly proportional to the fibrin clot size but not the concentration of fibrin in the clot. Operative debridement of the fibrin at 4 or 24 hours completely eliminates abscess formation in surviving animals. In vitro growth of E. coli is neither stimulated nor inhibited by fibrin or fibrinogen. Fibrin delays systemic sepsis, but the entrapped bacteria cannot be easily eliminated by normal intraperitoneal bactericidal mechanisms and abscess formation occurs. Thus radical peritoneal debridement or anticoagulation may reduce the septic complications of peritonitis.
Between January 1, 1968 and March 1977, 100 of 131 patients who lost their first transplant at the University of Minnesota received a second renal allograft. Overall patient survival in the ...retransplanted group was 10% less than that in the dialysis group. The best results (graft function and patient survival were seen in young patients, nondiabetics, patients who received two sequential living related groups, and in those whose first graft was lost secondary to chronic rejection. The poorest results were seen in older patients (greater than 40 years), diabetics, and patients with acute rejection during the initial graft. Shared donor antigens do not affect graft outcome. These findings, although not the product of a randomized prospective study, may be useful in advising patients of the relative risks of retransplantation or hemodialysis.