Articles: trauma.
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Dissection of the internal carotid artery is often caused by trauma to the face or neck. It usually has a delayed onset neurological presentation, a partial middle cerebral artery territory syndrome, 'normal' early CT scan, MRI evidence of middle cerebral artery occlusion, progressive partial or complete neurological recovery, and duplex scan evidence of a reestablished lumen in the internal carotid artery after 10 weeks. A case is reported of a dissection of the right internal carotid artery in a patient with severe facial trauma. ⋯ The patient was anticoagulated and over the next two weeks made a slow recovery, using her left hand effectively and walking unaided. Four months after the accident a duplex scan revealed that the right carotid artery lumen was patent with normal arterial flows. Five months after the accident the patient had returned to work.
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To discuss the clinical indications and complications of non-invasive ventilation. ⋯ Non-invasive ventilation using the modes of CPAP, PSV, BiPAP and NIPPV should be considered in patients with respiratory disorders who remain in acute respiratory failure despite conventional therapy, before considering invasive mechanical ventilation.
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To discuss the reasons why 250 ml 7.5% hypertonic saline was chosen as a pre-hospital resuscitation fluid for head injured patients in a multicentred, prospective, randomised controlled trial investigating its long term effects on central nervous system outcome. ⋯ Pre-hospital resuscitation of head injured and hypotensive trauma patients using hypertonic saline, has the potential to reduce long term cerebral injury and reduce social and financial costs to the community.
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Africa's first conference on emergency medicine was held in October 1998 in Johannesburg, South Africa. Attended by 305 delegates from 13 countries, it was an important milestone in the development of Africa, emergency medicine's last frontier. ⋯ A session reviewing the activities of traditional healers was not only terrifyingly revealing, it also upset and offended a segment of the African audience. The conference ended positively with the creation of the Emergency Medicine Society of South Africa, a step toward recognition of emergency medicine as a specialty in Africa.