Arterial spasm due to exaggerated sympathetic response is an important mechanism for Raynaud's phenomenon in scleroderma associated often with periadventitial scarring. The results of cervical sympathectomy have been unsatisfactory in the upper limb because of additional sympathetic pathways. Flatt therefore devised a distal sympathectomy by stripping the vessels of their adventitia over a short length of artery. The results of this operation were found by Wilgis in a large series to be poor in patients with scleroderma. A radical distal microarteriolysis including adventitia and surrounding scar is described and the results in 13 patients, 11 with scleroderma, are reported. Minimum follow-up is one year. All patients had relief from pain at rest and healing of painful ulceration. Mild recurrence of small ulcers was seen in only four patients.
This paper reports the results of a pilot study which examined factors associated with chest infection following head and neck surgery. The overall rate of chest infection was 11%, but was 20% in those patients having a tracheotomy. No infection developed in patients with an intact airway. Other factors which emerged as possibly important were the duration of surgery and heavy regular alcohol intake. We recommend that prophylactic antibiotics be continued for at least 48 h in patients requiring a tracheotomy as part of their head and neck surgery. This is against the trend of shorter antibiotic regimens recommended for prevention of wound infections.
The possible relationship between increased blood levels of thromboxane (TXA2) and tissue levels of free radicals during ischaemia was investigated. Rabbit epigastric skin flaps were subjected to 4 h of body temperature ischaemia, then infused with either the TXA2 synthetase inhibitor UK-38,485, the free radical scavenger superoxide dismutase (SOD), or both immediately prior to reperfusion. After 30 min of reperfusion, increases in the tissue levels of xanthine oxidase (XO) and malonyldialdehyde (MDA), both of which are indices of free radical generation and decreases in the tissue levels of SOD were found. SOD treatment completely restored XO, MDA and SOD levels to normal, whereas UK-38,485 only partially improved all three parameters. None of these changes was statistically significant. Effluent blood thromboxane B2 (TXB2) levels from the flap increased significantly (P less than 0.01) after ischaemia and were reduced significantly by both UK-38,485 and SOD (P less than 0.05). Combined UK-38,485 and SOD treatment was no better than treatment with either agent alone. ATP levels and oedema, which decreased and increased respectively due to ischaemia, were not significantly altered by drug infusion. These results suggest that free radical damage may be related to TXA2-generated thrombosis in ischaemia/reperfusion injury.
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