6 results match your criteria: "Center for Emergency Surgery[Affiliation]"
Vojnosanit Pregl
November 2010
Clinical Center of Serbia, Center for Emergency Surgery, Belgrade, Serbia.
Background/aim: Injury-induced anergy is one of the key factors contributing to trauma victims' high susceptibility to sepsis. This group of patients is mostly of young age and it is therefore essential to be able to predict as accurately as possible the development of septic complications, so appropriate treatment could be provided. The aim of this study was to assess kinetics of interleukin (IL)-6 and -10, phospholipase A2-II and C-reactive protein (CRP) in severely traumatized patients and explore the possibilities for early detection of potentially septic patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Surg
July 2010
Center for Emergency Surgery, Clinical Center of Serbia, University of Belgrade, Serbia.
Background: Development of abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) in patients with severe acute pancreatitis (SAP) has a strong impact on the course of disease. Number of patients with this complication increases during the years due more aggressive fluid resuscitation, much bigger proportion of patients who is treated conservatively or by minimal invasive approach, and efforts to delay open surgery. There have not been standard recommendations for a surgical or some other interventional treatment of patients who develop ACS during the SAP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVojnosanit Pregl
November 2009
Clinical Center of Serbia, Emergency Center, Center for Emergency Surgery, Belgrade, Serbia.
Background: Recently, a growing number of case reports and case series have suggested that the use of recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) may be effective in treatment of patients with non-hemophilic acquired coagulopathy not responding to conventional treatment such as major surgery, major trauma, sepsis, necrotizing pancreatitis and bleeding due to cerebral arteriovenous malformations.
Case Report: We presented a septic patient with massive, life-threatening bleeding caused by retroperitoneal necrosis, due to severe acute necrotizing pancreatitis. As conservative treatment (blood, plasma, cryoprecipitates and platelet transfusions) failed to induce cessation of bleeding, the patient was urgently operated on.
Pancreas
August 2009
Center for Emergency Surgery, School of Medicine, Surgical Department, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia.
Objectives: Studies on the clinical value of parameters of hemostasis in predicting pancreatitis-associated complications are still scarce. The aim of this prospective study was to identify the useful hemostatic markers for accurate determination of the subsequent development of organ failure (OF) during the very early course of acute pancreatitis (AP).
Methods: In 91 consecutive primarily admitted patients with AP, prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, antithrombin III, protein C, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, D-dimer, and plasminogen were measured in plasma within the first 24 hours of admission and 24 hours thereafter.
World J Gastroenterol
November 2007
Center for Emergency Surgery, Clinical Center of Serbia, School of Medicine, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia.
The ingestion of a foreign body that penetrates the gastric wall and migrates to the liver, where it causes an abscess is uncommon. A case of an ingested rosemary twig perforating the gastric antrum, then migrating to the liver, complicated by hepatic abscess and Staphylococcus aureus sepsis is reported. A 59-year-old man without a history of foreign body ingestion was admitted to our hospital because of sepsis and epigastralgia, which had progressively worsened.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld J Surg
June 2005
Center for Emergency Surgery, Clinical Center of Serbia, School of Medicine, University of Belgrade, Pasteur 2 str., 11000, Belgrade, Serbia & Montenegro.
To evaluate the predictive value of protein C as a marker of severity in patients with diffuse peritonitis and abdominal sepsis, protein C levels were repeatedly determined and compared with serum levels of antithrombin III, plasminogen, alpha(2)-antiplasmin, Plasminogen activator inhibitor, D-dimer, C1-inhibitor, high molecular weight kininogen, and the C5a, C5b-9 fragments of the complement system. We carried out a prospective study from 44 patients with severe peritonitis confirmed by laparotomy and 15 patients undergoing elective ventral hernia repair who acted as controls. Analyzed biochemical parameters were determined before operations and on days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, and 14 after operations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF