Patients with suspected acute myocardial infarction and a prehospital point-of-care cardiac troponin T ≥50 ng/l have a poor prognosis irrespective of the final diagnosis. Routine troponin measurement in the prehospital setting has a high predictive value and can be used to identify high-risk patients even before hospital arrival so that they may be re-routed directly for advanced care at an invasive centre.
Objective: Carotid artery stenosis is a complication of neck irradiation. We describe the immediate and long-term results of surgical treatment.Methods: This was a retrospective single centre study. From 1996 to 2009, 24 consecutive patients who had in the past received neck radiation therapy (mean 12 years, 1-41 years) underwent 27 primary carotid artery revascularisation procedures. Six patients (23%) had previous radical neck dissection, three permanent tracheostomies and one cervicoplasty with pectoral muscle flap. Indications for surgery included symptomatic (five transient ischaemic attacks (TIAs), four strokes; 34%) and asymptomatic (18 patients, 66%) stenosis. Four patients had occlusion of the contralateral carotid. General anaesthesia without shunting was used with measurement of stump pressure. Carotid interposition bypass grafting included 23 vein grafts and three Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) grafts.Results: No perioperative deaths or central neurological events occurred. Three patients suffered transient cranial nerve injuries. Eleven patients died during follow-up, mean interval of 28 months (range 6 -120 months), of causes unrelated to surgery. Five patients had recurrent bypass stenosis with one TIA and one stroke. All other surviving patients remained asymptomatic.Conclusion: Despite no comparative study as evidence, we think that the perioperative risk of stroke is at least comparable with the risk encountered for angioplasty procedures.
Evaluation of Radiation during EVAR Performed on a Mobile C-armMaurel B., Sobocinski J., Perini P., Guillou M., Midulla M., Azzaoui R., Haulon S. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2012;43:17-22.
The lack of a standardised measurement of the AAA diameter during the cardiac cycle is a potential major contributor to the variability in ultrasonography measurements.
Intravenous fentanyl caused clinically meaningful pain reduction in most patients and was safe in the hands of ambulance personnel. Many patients had moderate to severe pain at hospital arrival. As the protocol allowed higher doses of fentanyl, feedback on effect and safety should be part of continuous education of ambulance personnel.
Introduction
Crowding of the emergency departments is an increasing problem. Many patients with an exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are often treated in the emergency departments for a very short period before discharged to their homes. It is possible that this treatment could take place in the patients’ homes with sufficient diagnostics supporting the treatment.
In an effort to keep the diagnostics and treatment of some of these patients in their homes and thus to reduce the patient load at the emergency departments, we implemented a prehospital treat-and-release strategy based on ultrasonography and blood testing performed by emergency medical technicians (EMT) or paramedics (PM) in patients with acute exacerbation of COPD.
Method
EMTs and PMs were enrolled in a six-hour educational program covering ultrasonography of the lungs and point of care blood tests. During the seasonal peak of COPD exacerbations (October 2018 – May 2019) all patients who were treated by the ambulance crews for respiratory insufficiency were screened in the ambulances. If the patient had uncomplicated COPD not requiring immediate transport to the hospital, ultrasonographic examination of the lungs, measurements of C-reactive protein and venous blood gases analyses were performed. The response to the initial treatment and the results obtained were discussed via telemedical consultation with a prehospital anaesthesiologist who then decided to either release the patient at the scene or to have the patient transported to the hospital. The primary outcome was strategy feasibility.
Results
We included 100 EMTs and PMs in the study. During the study period, 771 patients with respiratory insufficiency were screened. Uncomplicated COPD was rare as only 41patients were treated according to the treat-and-release strategy. Twenty of these patients (49%) were released at the scene. In further ten patients, technical problems were encountered hindering release at the scene.
Conclusion
In a few selected patients with suspected acute exacerbations of COPD, it was technically and organisationally feasible for EMTs and PMs to perform prehospital POCT-ultrasound and laboratory testing and release the patients following treatment. None of the patients released at the scene requested a secondary ambulance within the first 48 h following the intervention.
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