Scandinavian cardiovascular journal : SCJ
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The surgical management of pleural empyema and post-traumatic clotted haemothorax is described. The study included 15 cases of post-thoracotomy empyema, 23 of empyema of other aetiology and five of post-traumatic haemothorax. Chest-tube drainage was the first measure in most cases. ⋯ One patient with VATS debridement subsequently required thoracotomy and lobectomy for lung abscess. All the others with VATS or decortication recovered without complications. During follow-up there was no mortality or recurrence of empyema.
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Scand. Cardiovasc. J. · Jan 1999
Pulmonary blood flow distribution in lobar hypoxia--influence of cardiac output and nitric oxide inhalation.
Inhaled NO is reported to be less effective in patients with ARDS if cardiac output is high (> 10 L/min). It has also been demonstrated that increased blood flow and increased shear stress cause an enhancement of endogenous NO production. In one-lung ventilation and regional hypoxia, nitric oxide (NO) delivered to the ventilated lung may decrease blood flow to the nonventilated lung and improve arterial oxygenation. ⋯ The decrease in mean pulmonary artery pressure and PaO2 seen during NO inhalation to the hypoxic lobe did not correlate with the level of cardiac output. When NO was delivered to the oxygenated parts of the lungs, no significant effect on relative lobar perfusion or arterial oxygenation was observed, either at raised or at lowered cardiac output. The findings give no further evidence to show that variations in cardiac output alter the effect of NO inhalation.
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Scand. Cardiovasc. J. · Jan 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialIntraluminal papaverine with pH 3 doubles blood flow in the internal mammary artery.
Seventy-five patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting were randomized to receive injections of papaverine solution or isotonic saline or no injection into the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) used as graft. Blood flow in the LIMA was measured twice-after dissection of the pedicle and before anastomosis to the coronary artery. ⋯ The pH of the papaverine solution was only 3, and we advise that surgeons check and correct pH in the papaverine solutions they use, in order to avoid endothelial damage to the LIMA. Based on these results we can recommend papaverine injection into the arterial graft only if the initial flow is low.
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Scand. Cardiovasc. J. · Jan 1999
Clinical TrialPulmonary function in chronic heart failure. Changes after heart transplantation.
To investigate the impact of chronic heart failure on pulmonary function in heart transplant recipients, pulmonary function was evaluated in 41 consecutive patients (mean age 43 years, range 15-57 years) before and 6 months after successful heart transplantation. The pulmonary function tests included measurements of forced vital capacity [FVC], forced expiratory volume in 1.s [FEV1], FEV1/FVC ratio, total lung capacity [TLC], and diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide [TLCO] and KCO [TLCO per l alveolar volume]. Compared to pretransplant values, spirometry after transplantation revealed modest improvements in FVC (from 77 +/- 16 to 88 +/- 21% of predicted [%pred]; p < 0.001) and FEV1 (from 75 +/- 16 to 85 +/- 22%pred; p < 0.001), whereas the FEV1/FVC ratio was unchanged (81% +/- 11 and 80% +/- 10; p = NS). ⋯ Multiple regression analysis revealed that high pretransplant TLCO %pred (p = 0.02) and FVC %pred (p = 0.04) were associated with a less favorable outcome concerning posttransplant TLCO %pred. Although normalization of FEV1, FVC and TLC can be anticipated after correction of severe chronic left ventricular failure by heart transplantation, the pronounced concomitant decline in diffusion capacity observed in this study may be explained by underlying pulmonary disease caused by factors other than long-standing heart failure. Our findings support the notion that pulmonary function abnormalities attributable to chronic heart failure should not preclude consideration for heart transplantation.
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Scand. Cardiovasc. J. · Jan 1999
Case ReportsFatal pulmonary embolism after atrial septal defect closure in a paediatric patient.
A four-year-old girl died of massive acute bilateral pulmonary embolism 11 days after direct closure of a secundum atrial septal defect (ASD II), despite postoperative anticoagulation until the patient was ambulatory. An autopsy showed thrombotic deposits on the suture line of the ASD closure, bilateral 90% occlusion of the pulmonary arteries, and haemorrhagic ulcerative ischaemic colitis of the descending colon and the sigmoid.