European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
-
Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A comparison of the prognostic value of neuron-specific enolase serum levels and somatosensory evoked potentials in 13 reanimated patients.
Thirteen patients resuscitated after circulatory arrest due to cardiopulmonary aetiologies were studied with regard to survival and outcome. Exclusion criteria were known central nervous system disorders or death secondary to cerebrovascular accident. The serum level of neuron-specific enolase (NSE), presumably a reliable marker of neuronal death, was measured by enzyme immunoassay in peripheral blood samples over the course of 4 days at 12 h intervals. ⋯ In conclusion, pathological SSEPs and increased NSE levels are of comparable prognostic value. They may well be complementary investigations. The neuron-bound enzyme NSE is a biochemical marker which varies with the extent of neuronal damage, while absence of the cortical potentials may indicate neurophysiological loss of function.
-
We report the case of a 32-year-old male who presented to the emergency department with left-sided chest pain associated with burning epigastric discomfort and radiation to the back. Similar symptoms had prompted his visit to another emergency department 1 week earlier. He was discharged from that institution after a negative upper gastrointestinal series. ⋯ Aortic dissection is rarely seen in young, healthy individuals. Atypical clinical representations are reviewed. The emergency department work-up of aortic dissection is discussed.
-
Hypothermia is a frequent event in trauma patients and appears to be related to post-traumatic organ dysfunction, although in elective surgery hypothermia is known to prevent ischaemia reperfusion injury. Retrospectively we have analysed data from 641 trauma patients treated in our institution between 1988 and 1993. On admission to hospital the core temperature (cT) was > 34 degrees] C in the majority (64%) of patients, followed by 23.6% with a cT < 34 degrees C and 12.4% with a cT < 32 degrees C. ⋯ It also showed that hypothermia is not an independent prognostic factor for post-traumatic mortality. The different effect of hypothermia in trauma compared with elective surgery may be due to a lack of energy-storing phosphates like adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Further current investigations will identify the role of ATP in trauma-related hypothermia.
-
Multimodality evoked potentials (EPs), linear electroencephalograms and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores were recorded within 24 h of cardiac arrest in 62 patients who were comatose following cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The cardiac arrest had a cardiac cause in 35 patients and a non-cardiac cause in 27 patients. The Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) scores were established 6 months after resuscitation. ⋯ However, while all patients who regained consciousness had normal EPs, not all patients in whom EPs were recordable survived. The GCS score showed a higher sensitivity and correlation with GOS score than EPs, but it was associated with a high percentage of false positive results, and its specificity was only 67%. The combination of the GCS score with EPs may be a promising strategy to counterbalance the respective limits of these methods and to reduce the loss of information due to sedation and myorelaxation, which impede clinical examination but not EP results.
-
This retrospective study was conducted to evaluate whether an observation unit (OU) attached to the emergency department (ED) of a tertiary care hospital in India is safe, is effective in minimizing hospitalization of acutely ill patients and is acceptable to the patients. Of 115,916 patients who attended the ED, 11,130 (9.6%) were observed in the OU. ⋯ Twenty-four patients left the hospital against medical advice, and three patients died in the OU. It is concluded that an OU in the ED is safe in treating acutely ill patients, is effective in reducing substantially the number of patients requiring admission to the hospital, and is acceptable to the patients.