Our purpose was to assess the usefulness of diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI for the detection of ischaemic brain damage in patients with suspected vasospasm after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). We studied 11 patients admitted with a ruptured aneurysm of the anterior circulation and suspected of intracranial vasospasm on clinical examination and transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD). All were investigated by technetium-hexamethyl-propylene amine oxime (Tc-HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and diffusion and perfusion-weighted MRI (DWI, PWI) within 2 weeks of their SAH. Trace images and TTP maps were interpreted by two examiners and compared with clinical and imaging follow-up. PWI revealed an area of slowed flow in seven patients, including four with major and three with minor hypoperfusion on SPECT. In two patients, PWI did not demonstrate any abnormality, while SPECT revealed major hypoperfusion in one and a minor deficit hypoperfusion in the other. Two patients with high signal on DWI had a permanent neurological deficit.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the physiologic effects of a bedbath on critically ill patients. METHODS: Thirty hemodynamically stable coronary artery bypass graft patients were studied less than 24 hours after surgery in a repeated measures, quasi-experimental design. Study sites were the medical/surgical and coronary intensive care units of a large community hospital in the south-central United States. Two bedbaths consisting of bathing and turning phases were given to subjects early (mean, 3.6 hours) and late (mean, 18.5 hours) in the immediate postoperative period. Mixed venous oxygen saturation (Svo2) and heart rate were recorded at 1-minute intervals before, during, and for 5 minutes after each bedbath. RESULTS: Mean Svo2 decreased from baseline during the bathing phase of early and late bedbaths 1.6% and 1.9%, respectively, whereas mean heart rate increased from baseline 3.2% and 1%, respectively. During the turning phase, mean Svo2 decreased from baseline 9.2% and 12.1%, respectively, whereas mean heart rate increased from baseline 5.2% and 1.8%, respectively. Svo2 declined to less than 53% in 10 (33%) subjects during both early and late bedbaths. The most severe decreases in Svo2 occurred during early bedbaths and were usually associated with coughing, shivering, and/or agitation. CONCLUSIONS: Early bedbaths caused more dramatic declines in Svo2 than late bedbaths. Coughing, shivering, and agitation accentuated Svo2 declines and could be prevented by waiting to bathe coronary artery bypass graft patients until 1 day postoperatively. Routine bathing, at least in the early postoperative period, should be reconsidered.
Background: In clinical randomized controlled trials (RCTs), decompressive surgery (DS) for malignant middle cerebral artery (MMCA) infarcts leads to a 50% absolute risk reduction in mortality, and improves the 1-year functional outcome. The reproducibility of these results in routine practice has never been evaluated. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the results of DS for MMCA in practice are similar to those observed in the surgical group of RCTs. Methods: We prospectively included the first 31 patients who underwent DS for MMCA. They were screened based on similar criteria as in the meta-analysis. The primary outcome was a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of ≤4, and secondary outcomes were mRS of ≤3 and death at 1 year. Results: Thirty-one patients underwent DS for MMCA. The 1-year mRS was ≤4 in 22 patients (71.0%) and ≤3 in 16 (51.6%). Seven patients died (22.6%). Conclusion: This observational study showed that DS for MMCA in a center without previous experience provides similar results as those obtained in the surgical arm of RCTs.
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