During the last 12 years, 20 patients with significant airway injuries have been treated for lesions involving the trachea, larynx, and/or bronchus. Fourteen of the injuries were the result of ...penetrating wounds, nine gunshot wounds, and five stab wounds. Six patients presented with blunt trauma, four as a result of motor vehicle accidents, one from a clothesline injury, and one from a crush injury. Sixteen of the 20 were males; average age was 29.6 years. Eleven patients had injuries involving only the trachea, six had isolated laryngeal injuries, two had bronchial injuries, and one patient had a combined injury of the trachea and larynx. Eleven had subcutaneous emphysema, four had hemoptysis, and three stable patients experienced sudden respiratory arrest while being evaluated for the repair of their injuries. Twelve patients required immediate intubation or tracheostomy. Most airway injuries were closed primarily. In one instance segmental resection of a perforated trachea and primary anastomosis was necessary. Two patients died after proper management of the airway injury. One died of an associated brain stem injury and the other of profuse hemorrhage from a liver injury. Of the 18 surviving patients, all but two recovered totally without residual impairment. Described here is a protocol for the evaluation and immediate treatment of airway injuries that is consistent with the guidelines of the Subcommittee of Advanced Trauma Life Support of the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma. Aggressive initial management, high index of suspicion for injury, and meticulous repair of the injured airway are equally important steps in the successful management of these patients.
We previously reported that 27% of 92 cholecystectomized patients had pigment stones (Am J Dig Dis 19:585-590, 1974). Using standard biochemical methods, we found that cholesterol accounted for an ...average of 77% of the dry weight of cholesterol stones, but that unconjugated bilirubin represented a mean of only 7% of pigment stones. This quantitation of pigment stones was limited because approximately 66% of their weight was insoluble. To characterize pigment and cholesterol stone composition further, we used infrared spectroscopy--a technique requiring neither crystallinity nor solubilization--to quantitate pigment, carbonate, and cholesterol in gallstones. Other organic and inorganic components of stones were measured by standard methods. By infrared spectroscopy, two types of pigment stones were identified: carbonate-containing and noncarbonate pigment stones. Carbonate pigment stones contained significantly more calcium, carbonate, and phosphate, but less pigment than noncarbonate stones. Compared to our initial report, the total measured components of all pigment stones were increased 6-fold from 10 to 63%. Cholesterol was the major component of cholesterol stones by chemical assay or infrared spectroscopy. Among five cholesterol stones with limited solubility, 80% of the insoluble residue was identified as cholesterol by infrared spectroscopy. This study extends our knowledge of pigment stone and cholesterol stone composition by the use of quantitative infrared spectroscopy in conjunction with standard biochemical methods; furthermore, it confirms that pigment and cholesterol stones differ in composition and form by different mechanisms.
This study was designed to compare Nd:YAG laser to fibrin glue, electrocautery, and avitene in the management of superficial splenic injury. Six dogs were submitted to laparotomy. A #11 blade scalpel ...was used to sharply excise the splenic capsule inflicting four 1" x 1" superficial injuries on each spleen. The lesions were treated. All animals had a second laparotomy ("first relaparotomy"); 2 dogs each were reexplored on postop days 3, 7, and 14. Morphologic and histologic observations were made. A third and final relaparotomy was performed on all dogs at 21 days with repeated morphologic and histologic assessments. Hemostatic times, grades of adhesions, and microscopic changes were not significantly different among the various treatments (P > 0.25). Capsular plaque formations were significantly different at the first relaparotomy (P < 0.01) and at final relaparotomy (P < 0.05). Both adhesions and capsular plaque formation were least at fibrin glue-treated sites, whereas Nd:YAG (1.06 microns) was most effective for average hemostatic time (mean = 109.67 s). Electrocautery produced the greatest necrosis at treatment sites. We conclude that all modalities are effective in controlling hemorrhage.
In January 1981, informal surveillance of acute histoplasmosis in Indianapolis, Indiana, revealed a marked increase in disease activity for the last quarter of 1980. Fifty-one patients with onset of ...acute histoplasmosis during this period were identified through review of hospital admissions, emergency room visits, and serologic records at Indianapolis hospitals and the Indiana State Board of Health. In a retrospective case-control study, the authors found a significant association between developing acute histoplasmosis during this period and working or attending classes in a 2 sq mi (5.2 sq km) area encompassing the Indiana University-Purdue University campus (p = 0.015, Fisher's exact test). A review of construction activities on or near the campus during the epidemic period suggested that the probable source of infection was excavation activity for a large new indoor swimming complex (natatorium). Skin tests and serosurveys of students on campus by a newly developed radioimmunoassay for histoplasmal immunoglobulin M antibodies supported the association of infection with exposure to this site (p less than 0.05).
One hundred twenty-nine consecutive patients underwent isolated aortic valve replacement with the Hancock porcine xenograft between July, 1974, and December, 1976. The hospital mortality rate was 3.9 ...percent. No patient was treated with anticoagulants, and valve-related complications were extremely rare. The smaller prosthetic sizes (19 and 21 mm. stent diameter) should be used with extreme caution, and the 19 mm. prosthesis should probably never be used in the audult patient. Two methods of managing the small aortic root are emphasized: one to avoid using the smaller prosthetic size in adults and the other to alter greatly the root size in children who have a hypoplastic aortic annulus. Acceptable calculated orifice sizes and left ventricular--aortic (LV-Ao) pressure gradients may be obtained with the 23 mm. or larger prostheses. Actuarial survival curves show 92 percent of patients alive and well at 24 months' follow-up.
Nineteen patients with Hancock Modified Orifice prosthesis (HMO-250), size 19 to 23 mm, were recatheterized 6 to 16 months following aortic valve replacement (AVR). Although hemodynamic ...characteristics varied widely, HMO-250 compared favorably to the standard model 243 (less than 0.05). Mean peak resting gradient across HMO-250 was 14.8 torr at rest and rose to 26.8 torr with exercise. Systolic gradients for HMO-250, both resting and exercise, were improved for 21 mm (p less than 0.01), but not for 23 mm. Increasing the patient's body surface area (BSA) correlated with increasing gradients for 23 mm (p less than 0.05), but was unrelated to 21 mm. Effective orifice areas were similarly found to be improved with 21 mm HMO-250 but unchanged for 23 mm. Use of the 21 or 23 mm size HMO for AVR is supported only when the patient's body surface area is less than 1.8 m2. If the body surface area is greater than 1.8 m2, annulus enlargement and a larger size bioprosthesis should be employed. Use of 19 mm porcine xenograft for AVR is not supported.