Zentralblatt für Chirurgie
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Review
[Acute abdominal pain in the emergency department - a clinical algorithm for adult patients].
Acute abdominal pain represents the cardinal symptom behind a vast number of possible under-lying causes including several ones that re-quire surgical treatment. It is the most common sur-gical emergency, the most common cause for a surgical consultation in the emergency department and the most common cause for non-trauma related hospital admissions. The golden mis-sion statement is to rapidly identify whether the underlying cause requires an urgent or even immediate surgical intervention. ⋯ Our intention is to devel-op such an algorithm to approach acute abdominal pain from the surgeon's point of view. Based on daily practice and with reference to available literature, it is the aim of this study to define a work flow that simply summarises all steps in-volved and defines the required decision process in order to form the intellectual basis for an evidence-based clinical algorithm. The result is illustrated as a first draft of such an evidence-based algorithm to allow emergency evaluation of adult patients with acute abdominal pain.
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Review Case Reports
[Ethical conflicts in the surgical intensive care setting - impact of ethics consultations].
In surgical intensive care medicine an increase in ethical conflicts regarding treatment plans has been observed due to marked changes in medical possibilities and social epidemiology resulting in intensive care treatment of old and oldest patients following surgery, trauma or transplantation. Without ethical support, physicians, nurses, and families are not able to come to a decision about medical treatment when value conflicts are involved. ⋯ The incidence of ethical conflicts increases even in surgical intensive care units and ethics consultations may help in the integration of ethics principles in clinical practice.
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The creation of a center for interdisciplinary operative intensive care through the fusion of several smaller intensive care units from various specialties is mainly driven by economic reasons. To specify some conditions for making such a fusion less expensive and to identify the impact of larger intensive care units on the quality of patients' treatment and on surgical training are the subjects of this study. ⋯ The concept of an interdisciplinary surgical ICU is obviously most practicable and reasonable if subunits with approximately twelve beds are concentrated in one centre for operative intensive care. This offers an advantage concerning the organisation and for the philosophy of treating special diseases by specialised medical teams. The size maintains the advantage of economies of scale as well the economies of scope and also promises effective logistics. For the management, an experienced intensive care specialist, either an anaesthesiologist or a surgeon should be assigned. All subject-specific advanced skills in intensive care have to be covered by an interdisciplinary continuing education.