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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Common intracranial complications following head injury are meningitis, usually associated with a basilar skull fracture or open-depressed skull fracture; delayed hematoma; hydrocephalus; and vascular injuries. Prophylactic antibiotics are not recommended for the management of basilar skull fractures. The best means of preventing infection from open-depressed skull fractures is operative debridement and thorough irrigation, though recent evidence suggests that select cases can be safely managed without operation. Serial CT scans should be obtained in severely head-injured patients to identify delayed hematomas. CT and MRI scans obtained several weeks or months after severe head injury frequently reveal enlarged ventricles, though only a small percentage of these patients have clinical hydrocephalus. Those that do, often benefit from a shunt. Vascular injuries frequently are not detected until ischemic symptoms develop hours or days after the injury. Recommended treatment for intimal tears or dissection is full anticoagulation, but in those with cerebral contusions or other intracranial lesions, this may present an unacceptable risk for intracranial hemorrhage. Pulmonary infections frequently occur following head injury, and can be associated with admission to the ICU and intubation. A large percentage of these infections are caused by enteric gram-negative organisms, and aggressive treatment with appropriate antibiotics is necessary. Aspiration of gastric contents is common in head-injured patients and is frequently complicated by bacterial superinfection. The routine use of antacids and H2 blocking agents leads to bacterial colonization of the stomach with anaerobes and gram-negative aerobes. Thus, empiric therapy for aspiration pneumonia should include clindamycin. Sinusitis is a frequent cause of fever and leukocytosis in patients with nasotracheal or nasogastric tubes in place for several days and often subsides spontaneously with removal of the tubes. Pulmonary edema is often caused by excessive fluid administration during resuscitation of these patients, and can be avoided by monitoring central venous pressures. Pulmonary edema may also be caused by ARDS, excessive catecholamine release, or primary cardiac failure. Most of these patients will benefit from early intubation and PEEP. Pulmonary emboli most often originate from deep venous thrombi, and there is increasing evidence that prophylaxis with low-dose heparin and pulsating boots can significantly reduce the incidence of both complications.
Erosive gastritis
is found in the majority of severely head-injured patients and may be due to
ischemia
of the gastric mucosa as well as gastric hyperacidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Complications of head injury and their therapy. 182 50
Acute gastric erosions
following hemorrhagic shock (stress ulceration) have been attributed to gastric hyperacidity, altered gastric secretion of mucus and an abnormal permeability of the gastric mucosa to H(+). This report aims at presenting evidence supporting an alternate hypothesis: the event linking shock-induced gastric mucosal
ischemia
to mucosal necrosis is a deficit in gastric mucosal energy metabolism. Our experimental procedure consisted of harvesting the stomachs of rats and rabbits by "stop-freeze" (liquid N(2)) at different intervals after the induction of hemorrhagic shock. Levels of adenosine-phosphates and of glycolytic intermediates in gastric mucosa were measured. We studied the changes in the levels of these substrates produced by shock as well as by factors capable, when combined with shock, of rendering the gastric mucosa more vulnerable to stress ulceration. The influence of shock and of these modifying factors were evaluated by comparison with data from appropriately designed control experiments. In parallel experiments we examined the frequency of stress ulceration (gross and microscopic) under these same standard conditions. There have emerged from these studies a number of observations all based upon data with the highest statistical significance. The data are consonant with the hypothesis stated above: an energy deficit severe enough to cause cellular necrosis is the event linking shock-induced gastric mucosal
ischemia
and stress ulceration.
...
PMID:Gastric mucosal energy metabolism and "stress ulceration". 427 7
Erosive gastritis
and duodenitis resulting from chronic
ischemia
were seen at endoscopy in a 69-year-old woman with classical abdominal angina and severe atheromatous disease of all three splanchnic arteries.
...
PMID:Ischemic gastritis and duodenitis. 738 31
GI bleeding occurs with prolonged exercise and is probably mediated by visceral
ischemia
. It may produce acute hemorrhage, more chronic symptoms with anemia, or result in guaiac-positive conversion with little clinical disease.
Hemorrhagic gastritis
and colitis are the most frequently recognized lesions, and are usually transient and reversible. Acid suppression with cimetidine may be effective in selected patients with recurrent HG, but effective therapy for most patients with this form of GI bleeding is still uncertain. Awareness of the association between GI bleeding and exercise should stimulate further investigations into the pathophysiology and therapy.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal bleeding and the athlete. 830 30