Abstract

Massive and submassive pulmonary embolisms (PE) have been diagnosed by clinical suspicion according to the criteria of low, intermediate and high probability subgroups, depending on symptoms (sudden dyspnea, chest pain, syncope), signs (tachycardia, hypotension, elevated central venous pressure), electrocardiogram (right ventricle strain, right bundle branch block, S1Q3), laboratory data (hypoxia, hypocapnia, elevated plasma D-dimer, lactate dehydrogenase, fibrin degradation products) and echocardiography (right ventricular dilatation, paradoxical septal motion, pulmonary hypertension) in a patient with predisposing risk factors and diagnostic confirmation via ventilation perfusion lung scan. The latter was not done for all patients as it is diagnostic in only 30–50% of cases, and the remaining 50–70% nondiagnostic scans may represent a probability for underlying PE of between 4% and 66% depending on clinical circumstances. Because of its invasive nature and technical complexity, pulmonary angiography (PA), the golden diagnostic standard, was not a routine procedure. We hereby report our experience with emergency PA in clinically suspected cases of PE to highlight its merits and the limitations of clinical examination. We studied 18 patients with clinically suspected PE (six male, 12 female; mean age 49.5 years). Predisposing factors included heart disease in two patients, diabetes mellitus in five patients, polytrauma in three patients and autoimmune disease (i.e. Behcet disease) in one patient. Four patients were dehydrated and bedridden. Following clinical evaluation, elctrocardiogram and chest X-ray, all patients were subjected to routine laboratory evaluation, arterial blood gas measurement and specific coagulation profile (fibrin, fibrin degradation products, D-dimer). All patients were then subjected to first-pass radionuclide angiography. PA was done in all patients within a mean period of 2 days (day 0–day 4). Following acute imaging, PA revealed the presence of PE in only eight patients in the form of distal cutoff and/or filling defects, while 10 patients had negative PA for PE. Compared with patients with negative PA, those with positive findings were more frequently hypotensive (50% vs 20%), more hypoxic (100% vs 90%), more congested (100% vs 80%) with more positive echocardiographic data (85% vs 60%). They also exhibited significant scintigraphic evidence of impaired RV ejection fraction than patients with negativeve PA (80% vs 20%).

Highlights

  • In contrast to conventional surgical tracheostomy, percutaneous dilational tracheostomy (PDT) in different variants is spreading rapidly in intensive care units today

  • Summary Our study demonstrated that LS is a good alternative to restore cardiac contractile function when combined with NE

  • The use of AVP may lead to further deteriorate sepsis-related myocardial dysfunction even when combined with a positive inotropic agent

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Summary

Introduction

In contrast to conventional surgical tracheostomy, percutaneous dilational tracheostomy (PDT) in different variants is spreading rapidly in intensive care units today. The objectives of the current study were (1) to assess the prognostic significance of plasma concentrations of NSE for early prediction of outcome in patients at risk for anoxic encephalopathy after cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), and (2) to compare the prognostic information provided by NSE measurements with that provided by conventional risk indicators (clinical neurological examination and computerised tomography [CT] scan of the brain). Independent pulmonary ventilation was introduced in the 1930s and allows the utilization of different ventilatory strategies for each lung to improve gas exchange, respiratory mechanics or both in patients with heterogeneous lung diseases It is not clear whether the lower inflection point (LIP) on the inspiratory limb or the point of maximum curvature (PMC) on the deflation limb of the pressure–volume (PV) curve should be used for the positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) setting in acute lung injury (ALI). The long-term outcome, health-related quality of life (HRQL), and ICU and hospital costs of medical ICU patients were assessed

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