A 37-y-old male was admitted to the ICU because of meningitis and respiratory failure with epileptic seizures. Spinal fluid grew Streptococcus salivarius. Prior to presentation the patient underwent surgical excision of a chronic toe ulcer, performed under spinal anaesthesia, which raised the suspicion of iatrogenic origin of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Generally, only the type of operation is used to estimate the need for perioperative homologous blood transfusion. This study quantified the extent to which the estimation could be improved if, in addition, simple patient characteristics were taken into account.
Methods: Retrospective data on 24 509 consecutive adult surgical patients were used to derive and validate three models to predict perioperative homologous transfusion.
In many patients, a 'type and screen' procedure is routinely performed before surgery. However, most patients are not transfused after all. Can we predict, which surgical patients will and will not be transfused, to reduce the number of these investigations? We studied 1482 consecutive surgical patients with intermediate risk for transfusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cardiothorac Anesth
December 1989
The efficacy of nicardipine and nitroprusside in preventing poststernotomy hypertension was compared in two groups of 45 patients undergoing coronary artery surgery. Patients were anesthetized with fentanyl, 100 micrograms/kg, and oxygen. Group N received nicardipine at an initial rate of 3 micrograms/kg/min.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was designed to evaluate the myocardial protective effect of nicardipine (NIC) in patients with normal left ventricular (LV) function (control vs. NIC treatment group) and impaired LV function (control vs. NIC treatment group) during extracorporeal circulation for coronary artery surgery.
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