Abstract

ADMINISTRATION of hypertonic solutions for parenteral nutrition necessitates the use of a central venous catheter, a procedure fraught with complications.1We are reporting a case of cardiac perforation, tamponade, and death resulting from this procedure. Report of a Case A 63-year-old woman underwent partial gastrectomy and excision of the distal section of the esophagus in December 1970 for an adenocarcinoma of the gastroesophageal junction. Her immediate postoperative course was uneventful. Preoperatively, her weight was 45 kg (99 lb). Her late postoperative course was complicated by severe dumping symptoms, early satiety, and weight loss. During the subsequent 17 months, in spite of numerous attempts to increase the patient's caloric intake with various oral food supplements, her weight declined to 30 kg (66 lb). Repeated esophagoscopy, biopsy, cytologic studies, and barium contrast examinations of the upper gastrointestinal tract failed to disclose any evidence of recurrent neoplasm. We decided to begin total

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