30 results match your criteria: "National Trauma Centre[Affiliation]"

[Esophageal injury following blunt thoracic trauma. A case report and review of the literature].

Unfallchirurg

December 2012

Trauma Surgical Unit, National Trauma Centre, University Central Military Hospital, Rr. Lord Bajron, Laprake, Tirana, Albania.

The aim of this article was to raise the awareness of the difficulties physicians face in the diagnosis and treatment of esophageal perforation following blunt thoracic trauma. We present a case of esophagus perforation following blunt chest trauma in the course of a motorcycle accident. Within 24 h the patient was admitted to the University hospital, and presented with progressive pain, subfebrile temperature, leukocytosis and pneumomediastinum.

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A 36-year-old male patient with posttraumatic cervical cord damage and resultant quadriparesis, demonstrated hypotension and periods of bradycardia. For most of his two-month stay in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), he was dependent on dopamine support to maintain hemodynamic stability. Keeping in mind evidence from the literature, that electrostimulation of acupoints Neiguan (PC - 6) and Jianshi (PC - 5) has therapeutic efficacy in restoring hypotension, we treated this patient with two six-hour periods of electrostimulation at these acupoints.

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Airway management in trauma.

Indian J Anaesth

September 2011

Department of Anesthesia and ICU, National Trauma Centre, Muscat, Oman.

Trauma has assumed epidemic proportion. 10% of global road accident deaths occur in India. Hypoxia and airway mismanagement are known to contribute up to 34% of pre-hospital deaths in these patients.

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In this paper, the authors describe an anesthetic technique for a child with Apert syndrome, presenting to the operating room for a syndactyly separation. The anesthetic approach is innovative for the clinic and is a combination of intravenous anesthesia and two regional techniques (axillary block and transversus abdominis plane block, respectively). They were performed under ultrasound guidance and provided analgesia in the two body regions, which were to be operated.

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An Unnoticed Broken Sheathed Metallic Stylet in an Endotracheal Tube: A case report.

Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J

April 2010

Department of Anesthesia & ICU, Khoula Hospital, National Trauma Centre, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman.

Article Synopsis
  • A 58-year-old patient underwent surgery for a femoral neck fracture and was intubated using a stylet.
  • After 15 minutes, the anesthesiologist discovered that a broken piece of the stylet had been left inside the endotracheal tube.
  • The foreign body was successfully removed using Kocher's forceps without any prior indication of its presence.
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