Articles: postoperative-complications.
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Comparative Study
Infectious complications with the use of cyclosporine versus azathioprine after cadaveric kidney transplantation.
Infectious complications within 1 year of cadaveric kidney transplantation were compared in 45 patients treated with azathioprine, prednisone, and antilymphocyte globulin and 38 patients treated with cyclosporine and prednisone. Although there was no difference in the 1 year patient or graft survival rate, cyclosporine-treated patients had significantly fewer wound infections, infection-related transplant nephrectomies, and infection-related graft failures than azathioprine-treated patients. The cyclosporine-treated diabetic recipients had more nonviral pneumonias and opportunistic infections but fewer cases of infection-related transplant nephrectomy than did the azathioprine-treated diabetic patients. Our data suggest cyclosporine is associated with reduced infectious morbidity after cadaveric kidney transplantation in nondiabetic patients.
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Surgical treatment of supracondylar fractures of the femur has become commonplace. A variety of surgical implants are available. In carefully chosen patients treated with appropriate surgical technique, early motion and good knee function can be obtained with open reduction and internal fixation. ⋯ Fourteen additional patients were treated for nonunions, with 13 patients achieving union at an average time of 36.5 months from the date of injury. Six patients underwent quadricepsplasties for residual knee stiffness. Only 16 patients were returned to their preinjury ambulatory status.
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Comparative Study
Vomiting after ophthalmic surgery. Effects of intra-operative antiemetics and postoperative oral fluid restriction.
The usefulness of intra-operative antiemetics and postoperative oral fluid restriction in the prevention of vomiting following anaesthesia for ophthalmic surgery, was studied in 200 patients. They were allocated into four groups of 50 and given either saline (as control), droperidol, metoclopramide or prochlorperazine. Oral intake was restricted postoperatively in half of the patients of each group. ⋯ Restriction of oral fluids did not decrease the incidence of vomiting but demonstrated that approximately half of those patients who vomit do so with their first postoperative oral intake. Vomiting was observed more frequently after non intra-ocular surgery than after intra-ocular surgery (37% cf. 16%, p less than 0.01) and postoperative analgesics were required by more non intra-ocular patients than by intra-ocular patients (25% cf. 5%, p less than 0.001). Squint patients vomited most frequently (48%) and most frequently required postoperative analgesia (35%).