Previous investigations of a treated model of hemorrhagic shock in the rat indicated the frequent occurrence of bacteremia that appeared to derive from the gut. This paper determines the incidence of bacteremia and endotoxemia during the acute shock period and compares this with similar observations in humans in varying degrees of shock. Studies in 26 rats indicated that bacteremia and endotoxemia was present in 50% and 87%, respectively, by the end of 2 hours at a mean arterial pressure of 30 mmHg. Observations in 50 patients admitted to the trauma unit showed that positive bacterial blood cultures were present in 56% when the admission systolic blood pressure was 80 mmHg or less (p less than 0.01 compared with either of the other groups). Endotoxemia was noticed in two such patients. Direct access of bacteria and endotoxin to the blood stream may occur during hemorrhagic or traumatic shock and is the probable cause of subsequent sepsis in traumatized patients when no other source is apparent.
Verrucous‐type oral tumors have been reviewed. This variety of epidermoid carcinoma of the oral cavity presents as a warty growth in patients who have a history of chewing tobacco and poor oral hygiene. They are slow‐growing, locally invasive, and do not metastasize to lymph nodes in our experience. In five of these patients, the microscopic pattern was that of a well‐differentiated squamous cell carcinoma. The others presented the classical histologic pattern of verrucous carcinoma. No difference was found in the behavior of these two groups. Three cases developed anaplastic transformation after irradiation and surgery. A change in the clinical behavior of the tumor was observed in these patients and all three died. There is some possibility that ionizing radiations could be the trigger mechanism in this transformation. The authors feel that surgery is the treatment of choice in early or easily resectable lesions. It would appear unnecessary to perform neck dissection in these patients. Radiation therapy should be used in advanced verrucal‐type lesions in which surgical resection is difficult or not feasible. These patients require frequent and careful observation. The authors believe that this entity deserves further investigation.
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