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  • Byskov Pham posted an update 9 hours, 16 minutes ago

    Aim The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of surgical site infiltration prior to giving incision, with ketamine, fentanyl, and ropivacaine, on perioperative hemodynamic parameters, pain, and any adverse outcomes. Methods The study was carried out on 68 patients divided into four groups of 17 each. After intubation, the study drug was infiltrated subcutaneously at the surgical site, seven min before incision, by the surgeon who was unaware of the injectate. Hemodynamic variables were monitored and recorded during the intraoperative period and postoperative period at one, two, four, six, eight, 12, and 24 hours. The level of sedation was assessed using the Ramsay sedation score (RSS). The fetal outcome was assessed by the APGAR (Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, and Respiration) score at one, five, and 10 minutes. Results The mean visual analog scale (VAS) scores were significantly (p less then 0.05) lower in group A as compared to other groups for most of the postoperative period. Hemodynamic stability was also significantly better with group A as compared to other groups during the perioperative period. The fetal outcome was comparable between the study groups with the APGAR scores similar between the groups at 10 min. However, significantly lower APGAR values were seen in group C as compared to the other study groups, at one and five minutes. Conclusion Ketamine infiltration resulted in a better hemodynamic profile, a significantly longer duration of the postoperative pain-free interval, and more sedation in the postoperative anesthesia care unit (PACU). It did not affect the fetal wellbeing, as discernable from the APGAR scores.IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD) is a cluster of rare fibroinflammatory diseases that more commonly affect organs such as major salivary glands, biliary tree, periorbital tissues, kidneys, lungs, lymph nodes, retroperitoneum, and less frequently, meninges, aorta, prostate, thyroid gland, pericardium, and the skin. The clinical picture mainly depends on the affected organ and the effects on the surrounding organs, however, the histopathologic findings are very similar regardless of the organ affected. Most patients have a subclinical presentation of the disease and the only clinical manifestation is related to the anatomic location of the disease, whereas some patients may have constitutional symptoms such as weight loss and are often misdiagnosed as having other pathologies (i.e., malignancies, other inflammatory conditions, etc.). Up to 40 percent of patients can have symptoms of allergy or asthma. Patients often have diseases confined to one organ but multiorgan involvement is not uncommon. Patients with multiple organs involvement can have an elevation of up to 30-40 upper limit of normal serum IgG4 concentration; patients with fewer organ involvement can have normal serum IgG4 concentration despite histopathologic findings of the disease. L-Histidine monohydrochloride monohydrate supplier Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF) is a commonly encountered subtype of IgG4-RD. Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis accounts for approximately 70 percent of cases and can be divided into IgG4-RD and non-IgG4-RD. Most cases of RPF are incidental findings on radiology studies but should be suspected in any patients complaining of back pain and flank pain, with new-onset kidney dysfunction.”Person-in-the-barrel” syndrome is a descriptive term for bilateral arm (brachial) paresis in the absence of lower extremity (crural) weakness or bulbar (medullary) weakness. This phenomenon is associated with various descriptive terms such as “distal field infarction”, “flail limbs”, and “cruciate paralysis”. Arriving at a specific diagnosis is a fascinating exercise in anatomical localization. Strategic lesions involving the watershed zones of the motor frontal lobes and the pyramidal decussation at the cervico-medullary junction are the classic sites of injury. However, peripheral causes such as motor neuron disease, mononeuritis multiplex (vasculitis), bilateral brachial plexopathy, and critical illness myopathy have been sporadically reported and can stochastically inflict the motor nerves or muscles of the upper extremities. In this report, we present a case of vasculitis with weakness restricted to the upper extremities and also delve into the neuropathological mechanisms of “person-in-the-barrel” syndrome.Stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT) has been applied to treat cardiac arrhythmias, but our institution had not yet implemented this technique. Here, we explain how we used implementation science and knowledge translation to provide cardiac SBRT to a critically ill patient with malignancy-associated refractory ventricular tachycardia. We reviewed the critical factors that enabled the implementation of this urgent treatment, such as the context of the implementation, the characteristics of the intervention, and the stakeholders. These principles can be used by other radiation programs to implement novel treatments in urgent settings, where the gold standard process of planning and developing policies and protocols is not possible.Background Cerebral vasospasm has been monitored by conventional angiography or transcranial Doppler (TCD). While angiography is the most accurate and reliable method for detection, TCDs are a noninvasive alternative to monitor onset and resolution of vasospasm. We aim to determine whether alternative TCD parameters rather than Lindegaard ratio lead to an improved method to diagnose and potentially prevent cerebral vasospasm. Methods A total of 103 consecutive patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) were retrospectively reviewed and TCD studies were performed during the first 14 days post-bleed or longer if indicated. Multivariate logistic regression models were developed using significant univariate characteristics. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves evaluated the mean middle cerebral artery (MCA), peak systolic MCA (PSV MCA), and end diastolic MCA (EDV MCA) velocities as well as ratios when compared to the ipsilateral extracranial internal carotid artery (ICA). The area under the curve was calculated to compare accuracy for symptomatic vasospasm. Results Thirteen patients (12.6%) were observed to develop cerebral vasospasm. Aneurysm location (p = 0.51), Hunt and Hess grade (p = 0.44), Fischer grade (p = 0.87), comorbidities, age (p = 0.67), or gender (p = 0.41) did not appear to have any effect in predicting the presence of vasospasm. ROC curves demonstrated that MCA EDV appeared to be slightly better compared to MCA velocity in predicting symptomatic vasospasm. PSV MCA/extracranial ICA and the EDV MCA/extracranial ICA ratios appeared to be an improvement to the Lindegaard ratio in the prediction of symptomatic vasospasm. Conclusion The utility of peak systolic and end diastolic velocities, instead of the classically referenced mean velocities and Lindegaard ratio, may improve diagnostic sensitivity of cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage.

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