Journal of the American College of Surgeons
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Electrosurgical injuries occur during laparoscopic operations and are potentially serious. The overall incidence of recognized injuries is between one and two patients per 1,000 operations. The majority go unrecognized at the time of the electrical insult and commonly present three to seven days afterward with fever and pain in the abdomen. Since these injuries appear late the pathophysiology remains speculative. ⋯ An awareness of the hazards of diathermy together with an understanding of the mechanisms of injury should enable the surgeon to dissect tissue and to achieve hemostasis, while at the same time decreasing the risk of serious complications to the patient.
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Review Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Glucose infusion instead of preoperative fasting reduces postoperative insulin resistance.
In severe catabolic states, such as burn injury, sepsis and accidental injury, a state of marked insulin resistance is encountered. Insulin resistance is also present after elective surgical treatment, more pronounced with increasingly greater magnitude of operation performed. Results of recent animal experiments have shown that even short periods of food deprivation, reducing carbohydrate reserves, alter responses to stress. ⋯ Postoperatively, M values decreased by 55 +/- 3 percent (control group) and by 32 +/- 4 percent (glucose group) (p < 0.01). Plasma levels of insulin, c-peptide, glucagon, growth hormone, catecholamines and cortisol in connection with clamps were similar in both groups preoperatively and postoperatively. The present results indicate that active preoperative carbohydrate preservation may improve postoperative metabolism because postoperative occurrence of insulin resistance was reduced with preoperative glucose infusion.