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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The technical problems, early complications and short-term results of a tension-free method of 1098 inguinal hernia repairs in 1017 patients have been assessed. The operation was conducted under local anaesthesia, and the inguinal canal floor was reinforced by a polypropylene mesh. Patients were discharged home the same day. There was no mortality, no urinary complications and one case of venous thrombosis. There was one recurrence after a primary hernia repair and two patients have developed recurrences after repair of a recurrent hernia. The overall sepsis rate was 0.9% and 1% of patients had persistent neuralgia. No prosthesis required removal. In all, 49.6% of office workers returned to work in 1 week or less and 61% of manual workers in 2 weeks or less. The major advantages of the tension-free mesh repair under local anaesthesia are simplicity, substantial cost savings and very low rates of complications.
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PMID:Tension-free mesh hernia repair: review of 1098 cases using local anaesthesia in a day unit. 854 Jun 80

Patch repair using a PTFE prosthesis was performed in 111 patients over a 5-year period for treatment of incisional hernias (64 cases), inguinal hernias (41 cases, including 29 recurrences), umbilical hernias (4 cases), epigastric hernias (2 cases), lumbar hernias (1 case) and abdominal wall defects after resection for endometriosis (2 cases). The surgical technique was limited to simple patch closure of peritoneomuscular defects without myoplasty. Follow-up was evaluable for every patient and 84 cases have been reviewed clinically by 2 surgeons. 83 patients (86 patches) were followed for at least 1 year (74.8%). Post operative mortality was nil. Morbidity was 17.5% (20 cases, including 14 hematomas, 2 intraperitoneal bleedings, 3 cases of local sepsis, 1 hydrocele). Recurrence rate was 42.2% for incisional hernia repair (27 cases) and 14.6% after inguinal hernia repair. Three out of 4 umbilical hernias and 1 out of 2 epigastric hernias recurred. 14 patients underwent reoperation for recurrent hernia (11 incisional and 3 inguinal). Absence of fibrotic reaction around the PTFE prosthesis was noted in every case and appeared to be the main factor of recurrence. Our experience suggests that patch technique with PTFE prosthesis should be abandoned for the repair of abdominal wall defects.
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PMID:[Failure of the treatment of eventrations and hernias with the PTFE plate (111 cases)]. 773 91

Between April 1985 and April 1993, 100 consecutive men underwent lower urinary tract reconstruction after cystectomy. An ileal low pressure reservoir using the Goodwin cup-patch principle was combined with an afferent ileal tubular segment. The early complication rate was 11%, including 2 postoperative deaths due to septicemia. After a median followup of 27 months (range 3 to 96) 14 patients required surgery for late complications (intestinal obstruction, urethral stricture or tumor recurrence, hernia or ureteral stenosis). A total of 32 patients died of metastatic bladder cancer and 7 died of other causes. The functional capacity of the bladder substitute was increased to the desired 450 to 500 ml. after 3 to 12 months, which was paralleled by improving urinary continence. After 1 year 92% of the patients were continent by day and after 2 years 80% were continent at night. Upper tract surveillance with excretory urography, renal ultrasound and serum creatinine estimation has shown 4 left ureteral strictures but not significant upper tract deterioration or ureteral recurrence. Significant reflux was not observed during video urodynamics unless the reservoir was overfilled. During voiding, by outlet relaxation and straining if necessary, the intra-abdominal pressure increase with straining acted equally on the reservoir and ureters. Therefore, unlike voiding with a normal bladder, no isolated intravesical pressure increase occurred and, thus, there was no reflux from the reservoir. The combination of an ileal low pressure reservoir with an afferent isoperistaltic ileal segment and an open end-to-side ureteroileal anastomosis allows for radical cancer surgery with resection of the ureters where they cross the iliac vessels and minimizes the risk of ureteral stenosis. The unidirectional peristalsis of the ureters and the afferent tubular ileal segment seem to protect the upper urinary tract sufficiently. The surgical technique is straightforward and allows for later conversion to an ileal conduit if necessary. The functional results of the bladder substitute are comparable to other similar reservoir techniques, provided that the patients are carefully selected, well rehabilitated and meticulously followed.
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PMID:Experience in 100 patients with an ileal low pressure bladder substitute combined with an afferent tubular isoperistaltic segment. 777 55

Infected pancreatic necrosis is the most lethal form of pancreatic infections. We have compared our results of open packing and closed catheter drainage after surgical debridement in 20 patients between 1978 and 1993. There were 18 men and 2 women, ages 18 to 72 (mean 54 years). Pancreatitis was attributed to alcohol in eight patients, gallstones in four, surgery in four, hyperlipidemia in one, and was unknown in one. The most common infectious organisms were Strep. viridans, E. coli, Staph aureus, and Candida albicans. Surgical debridement and closed catheter drainage without lavage was the initial treatment in nine patients. Seven of 9 (78%) required reoperation for recurrent abscess and necrosis. Procedure related morbidity was 70 per cent and overall mortality was 44 per cent. Sepsis was the cause of death in three patients and multi-system organ failure in one patient. Surgical debridement and open packing was performed in 11 patients. Each patient had scheduled reoperations for repeat debridement and packing an average of 10 times over 21 days. Procedure-related morbidity was 73 per cent and overall mortality was 18 per cent. One patient died of cardiac failure and one of multisystem organ failure. Retroperitoneal hemorrhage and recurrent abscesses were more frequent after closed drainage, whereas gastric fistula and incisional hernia were more frequent after open packing. Ventilator dependence, pancreatic and intestinal fistula, and organ failure occurred at the same rate. In conclusion, surgical debridement and open packing, with planned redebridement and packing, is more effective in controlling the septic process than is closed catheter drainage of infected pancreatic necrosis.
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PMID:Closed drainage versus open packing of infected pancreatic necrosis. 779 43

Wound infection is a frequent complication and is related to various parameters: type of surgery, patient's age, nutritional status, associated diseases, length of surgery and hospital stay, use of prosthesis and drainage and finally surgeon's ability. The frequency of wound infection is reported between 1.5%-5.1% after "clean surgery" and the greatest source of microbial contamination is due to GRAM positive cocci either aerobic or anaerobic. The Authors present their experience of ultra short-term prophylaxis with Teicoplanin in 375 patients undergoing major ambulatory surgery. Median age was 49 years (15-87 ys); patients over 65 years were 22%. Hernias of the abdominal wall and varicose veins represent the diseases most commonly operated on. In 30% of the cases the patients selected for major ambulatory surgery were in II and III classes according to the standards of the American Society of Anaesthesiologists (A.S.A.). The ultra short-term prophylaxis with Teicoplanin was administered as follows: 400 mg, i.v., thirty minutes pre-operatively. The operations were performed under local or loco-regional anaesthesia. The choice of Teicoplanin was based on the strong bactericidal activity on GRAM positive cocci, including the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections, and on the long activity of the drug. The results were considered according to the American College of Surgeons scheme: no wound infection was observed and excellent local and general drug's tolerance were noticed. Ultra short-term prophylaxis in ambulatory surgery was chosen for the following reasons: large use of prosthesis, major risk of sepsis in older patients and at last for a badly accepted infective complications in outpatient surgery.
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PMID:[Teicoplanin in the prevention of wound infections in major ambulatory surgery]. 797 37

Since 1986, we have cared for 17 patients whose abdomen could not be closed because of bowel edema and loss of abdominal wall compliance. These patients were managed by a technique of visceral packing with the intestines kept in place by a combination of rayon cloth, gauze packs, and retention sutures. This packing was changed in the operating room under general anesthesia until the edema was sufficiently resolved to allow for closure. Two patients died within 24 hours of operation from irreversible shock. The remaining 15 patients had their fascia successfully closed with an average of two additional anesthetics. There was one case of fasciitis associated with the development of an intra-abdominal abscess and one patient died of late sepsis. There was no early postoperative ventilatory compromise or acute oliguric renal failure. Other direct complications have been minor with no enterocutaneous fistulae, dehiscence, or incisional hernia. Visceral packing of posttraumatic abdominal wounds circumvents expected complications of intraperitoneal hypertension and enhances the chance for survival. Its ease and low morbidity also lends itself to a wide variety of other uses.
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PMID:The technique of visceral packing: recommended management of difficult fascial closure in trauma patients. 811 32

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been used in neonates for a variety of disease states including congenital diaphragmatic hernia, meconium aspiration syndrome, sepsis, and postoperative cardiac compromise. To our knowledge, ECMO has not been employed prior to cardiac catheterization in critical aortic stenosis (CAS). We report a neonatal case of CAS where ECMO was used early as a form of left ventricular assist to achieve adequate systemic perfusion and oxygenation and reduce myocardial ischemia. The patient was maintained on ECMO during subsequent attempts at cardiac catheterization, balloon valvuloplasty, and operative valvotomy.
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PMID:ECMO for left ventricular assist in a newborn with critical aortic stenosis. 811 71

Reports have focused on the perceived benefit of a new method of managing pancreatic necrosis and sepsis: leaving the abdomen packed open after debridement, the "marsupialization" technique. We have continued to treat infected pancreatic necrosis with aggressive pancreatic debridement and drainage, closure of the abdomen, and prompt reoperation as often as necessary if further sepsis is identified. We report 52 consecutive patients with infected pancreatic necrosis operated upon between July, 1972 and March, 1990. Postoperative organ failure and APACHE II scoring correlated with survival. Patients with APACHE II scores less than 15 had an operative mortality rate of 4 per cent, whereas patients with scores greater than 15 had a 44 per cent mortality rate. We recognize that no two retrospective series are truly comparable, but in comparison to published reports on the open technique, fascial closure after pancreatic debridement appeared to produce fewer wound complications (only one dehiscence and one incisional hernia) and fewer trips to the operating room.
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PMID:Fascial closure in the management of infected pancreatic necrosis. 816 Oct 76

In a retrospective review we analysed alveolar-arterial oxygen difference (AaDO2) as an entry criterion for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in neonates with several forms of acute respiratory insufficiency. Although for meconium aspiration syndrome, respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis, and idiopathic pulmonary hypertension of the newborn we found values in accordance with the literature, patients with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) met 80% mortality criteria with significant lower AaDO2 values. Several patients died before ever reaching usual entry criteria for ECMO, because serious lung deterioration makes AaDO2 values unreliable. Awaiting classical ECMO entry criteria for patients with CDH may at least partially explain the lower survival rate for ECMO in CDH.
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PMID:Do we use the right entry criteria for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in congenital diaphragmatic hernia? 822 83

Following a brief review of the main method of prosthetic repair used for inguinal hernia: Lichtenstein, Stoppa, Rives, etc, the authors propose an original technique consisting in the placement of a marlex patch below the trasversalis fascia, in a pre-peritoneal site, using a classical inguinal access route. The prosthesis is fitted round the spermatic funicle and fixed with a single stitch to the pubis and with a few others, in resorbable material, to the posterior face of the trasversalis fascia. Above it, plastic surgery is performed to bring the triple stratum closer to the reflexio of the inguinal ligament. The prosthesis is kept in place by positive abdominal pressure. The method outlined here has been used in 71 cases of primary or recurrent inguinal hernia. Follow-up lasted for 1-24 months and showed the low morbidity (4.5%) due to sepsis of the surgical wound, which did not require reoperation, and only 1 case of recurrent hernia which was probably caused by the incorrect positioning of the prosthesis.
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PMID:[Inguinal hernia repair with marlex mesh in a preperitoneal site using the classical inguinal access]. 824 77


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