Publications by authors named "Caco C"

Purpose: There is no randomized trial comparing low-molecular weight heparin (LMWH) and unfractionated heparin (UFH) for thromboprophylaxis in medical-surgical ICU patients. The primary objective of this randomized pilot study on LMWH vs UFH was to assess the feasibility of conducting a large randomized trial with respect to timely enrollment and blinded study drug administration, practicality of twice-weekly lower limb ultrasounds to screen for deep venous thrombosis, LMWH bioaccumulation and dose adjustment in renal insufficiency, and recruitment rates for a future trial in medical-surgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Its additional goals were to evaluate the suitability of the exclusion criteria and to document the range of research activities that precede accrual of patients into a trial to plan multisite management.

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Ultrasound is routinely used for the assessment and diagnosis of testicular torsion. It has proven to be a reliable and necessary diagnostic tool for the urologist. Problems, however, can arise in the form of misdiagnosis when the basic pathophysiology and clinical presentation of testicular torsion are not clearly understood.

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Stroke secondary to atherosclerotic disease remains one of the leading causes of death. Ischemia from severe, flow limiting stenosis due to atherosclerotic disease involving the extracranial carotid arteries is implicated in approximately 20-30% of strokes. An estimated 80% of strokes are thromboembolic in origin, often with carotid plaque as the embolic source, usually involving the internal carotid artery within 2 cm of the carotid bifurcation.

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Background: Adult participants in randomized controlled trials often have better outcomes than patients who are eligible but not enrolled.

Objective: To examine whether newborn infants who were allocated to placebo in an investigational drug trial had better outcomes than infants who were eligible but not randomized (eligible NR).

Study Design: During a randomized controlled trial of antithrombin therapy in premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome, data were collected prospectively on all 76 infants in the eligible NR group.

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Neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) is associated with decreased plasma activity of antithrombin (AT) and increased formation of thrombin. We tested whether AT reduces thrombin formation, improves gas exchange, and decreases the duration of mechanical ventilation and supplemental oxygen. One hundred twenty-two infants were randomized to pasteurized AT concentrate or to placebo.

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Cardiac rhabdomyomas are associated with tuberous sclerosis, but their identification in utero is uncommon. The authors report a case of multiple cardiac masses discovered in utero by prenatal ultrasonography at about 30 weeks gestational age. Follow-up included neonatal echocardiography, ultrasonography and computed tomography of the head.

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A multicenter prospective, randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine whether early use of platelet concentrates would reduce the incidence or extension of intracranial hemorrhage or both in sick preterm infants with thrombocytopenia. The effects on bleeding as reflected by the amount of blood product support administered and a shortened bleeding time were assessed as secondary outcomes. Premature infants with a platelet count < 150 x 10(9)/L within the first 72 hours of life were randomly assigned to receive either conventional therapy or conventional therapy plus platelet concentrates (10 ml/kg).

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Objective: To determine which sonographic findings predict intestinal damage in fetuses with gastroschisis, and to develop objective criteria that may be useful in selecting candidates for preterm delivery.

Methods: Twenty-four consecutive fetuses at two perinatal centers were assessed retrospectively or prospectively. Maternal, perinatal, and sonographic data were recorded and correlated with postnatal outcome.

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Embryologically, cloacal exstrophy is thought to result from persistence and subsequent rupture of the infraumbilical cloacal membrane during the fifth embryonic week. We report a case of cloacal exstrophy in which a prenatal diagnosis was made prior to rupture of the cloacal membrane. A routine ultrasound at 17 weeks' gestation demonstrated monoamniotic twins.

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Intravascular and intra-alveolar thrombin generation may exacerbate the pulmonary hypertension and surfactant dysfunction that characterize the neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Although low levels of the most important thrombin inhibitor, antithrombin III (AT III), have been reported in infants with RDS, direct evidence of increased intravascular thrombin generation has been lacking. Accordingly, the objective of this study was to determine whether thrombin generation is increased in severe neonatal RDS.

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A fetus of 23-weeks gestation presented with polyhydramnios, and was found on sonography to have a large anterior cervical teratoma. At 26 weeks the mother went into premature labor and the membranes ruptured; at this time the uterus was of 32-weeks size secondary to polyhydramnios. A cesarean section was performed through a low transverse uterine incision, and the fetal head and shoulders were delivered with the cord intact.

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To compare the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of compression ultrasonography (US) in postoperative orthopedic patients with those of (a) impedance plethysmography in postoperative patients and (b) compression US in symptomatic outpatients, the authors performed an investigator-blinded cohort study. One hundred thirty-four consecutive inpatients who had undergone elective knee-replacement surgery or surgery for a fractured hip and 65 consecutive outpatients with clinically suspected venous thrombosis who had undergone venography were evaluated. Compression US allowed detection of 11 of 21 (52.

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Intestinal obstruction is often diagnosed prenatally by ultrasound, providing an opportunity for prenatal counseling, genetic investigation, and planned delivery at a perinatal center. We describe a patient with typical features of fetal bowel obstruction, who was found at birth to have congenital chloride diarrhea. A 25-year-old white woman had marked polyhydramnios; multiple dilated, fluid-filled loops of intestine were seen in the fetal abdomen on prenatal ultrasound.

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Pregnancy can be detected early using transvaginal ultrasonography and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) measurements. The purpose of this study was to correlate serum hCG levels with transvaginal gestational sac measurements. The mean sac diameter (MSD) and gestational sac diameter (GSD) were calculated as the mean and cube root of the product, respectively, of three sac dimensions taken at right angles.

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Objective: To establish normal parameters in early pregnancy through transvaginal ultrasonography so that gestational age can be determined and to correlate the sonographic findings with serum human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) levels calibrated against the first international reference preparation standard.

Setting: Infertility clinic.

Patients: Thirty-five women with normal intrauterine pregnancy.

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Neonatal alloimmune thrombocytopenia is an uncommon but important cause of thrombocytopenia in infants. Because of the severity of the thrombocytopenia, some of these infants will have intracranial hemorrhage with resultant long-term disability. Obstetricians and neonatologists have recommended delivery by caesarean section and the rapid institution of appropriate treatment for the infant; however, it is theoretically possible that a hemorrhagic event could precede the delivery and consequently not be prevented by these perinatal interventions.

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Lissencephaly, hydrocephalus, and eye abnormalities characterize patients with the Walker-Warburg syndrome, an uncommon autosomal recessive condition. Encephaloceles occur in about 50% of patients. We describe the prenatal diagnosis of this condition based on the ultrasonographic findings of retinal detachment, hydrocephalus, and an encephalocele in a fetus not known to be at risk.

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Between 1979 and 1986 an abnormality of the urinary tract was diagnosed by prenatal ultrasound examination in 93 fetuses. Postnatal investigation at a large teaching hospital showed a definite abnormality in 85 infants, 66 of whom were boys. An obstructed urinary tract, usually requiring surgery, was present in 46 infants.

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