Pancoast syndrome consists of signs and symptoms resulting from a tumor affecting the pulmonary apex and adjacent structures. The process is typically caused by a neoplasm. The majority of cases of Pancoast syndrome are caused by bronchogenic carcinoma. The most commonly found histologic subtypes are adenocarcinoma and epidermoid carcinoma. There have been very few reports of small cell lung carcinoma in the genesis of Pancoast syndrome. We describe the case of a patient with Pancoast syndrome caused by small cell lung carcinoma and discuss the aspects related to the diagnosis and treatment.
OBJECTIVE:To establish, in a case-control study, the early mortality and long-term survival after surgical correction of sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm, compared to controls who underwent standard, nonruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. PATIENTS AND METHODS:From January 1992 to December 2002, 465 patients underwent infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. Of those, 13 had sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm (2.8%). These cases were compared to 26 controlsin which surgical repair was performed immediately preceding or succeeding each one of the sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm surgeries. RESULTS: Age, sex, risk factors for atherosclerosis, associated disease, and cardiac ischemia were similar between groups. Patients with sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm presented a higher incidence of lumbar pain than controls (92.3% versus 3.9%; P < .001); fever and weight loss were detected in 5 (38.5%) patients with SAAA and in none of controls (P = .0022). Mean red blood cell transfusion was greater for sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm than controls (1,516 ± 697 vs. 773 ± 463 mL (P = .0003). Postoperative complications were similar between groups. Early mortality was 7.7% for sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm and 0% for controls. Five-year survival was significantly lower for sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm (68.4%) than for controls (84.4%, P = .04). CONCLUSION: We conclude that sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm presents diagnostic and surgical challenges that can be adequately managed, achieving early postoperative mortality and complication rates that are similar to standard abdominal aortic aneurysm. However, patients with sealed rupture abdominal aortic aneurysm present higher mortality in the long term compared with patients having standard abdominal aortic aneurysm.
One of the measures adopted to reduce or prevent intestinal bacterial translocation (BT) in patients who are in hemorrhagic shock consists of prophylactic antibiotics. This study attempted to assess the effectiveness of administering systemic antibiotic to suppress BT in rats submitted to hemorrhagic shock. Sixty-eight male Wistar rats were divided into two experiments. In experiment 1 (n = 28), the animals were randomly divided into three groups: group I (n = 7), sham operation; group II (n = 11), constituted by animals that were submitted to hemorrhagic shock by removing 40% of the volemia, and were resuscitated after 40 min of sustained shock, replacing the previously removed blood; and group III (n = 10), animals that, besides hemorrhagic shock and volemic replacement, received 50 mg/kg of sodium ceftriaxone intravenous 1 min after blood readministration. Mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) for culture tests and segments of the small bowel were removed for histopathological studies 1 day after the operation in the three groups. In experiment 2, the same procedures were performed, except the laparotomy for removing MLN and segments of jejunal and ileal bowel, but the animals were followed during 7 days, in order to evaluate the mortality rate. In the control group (group I), the bacteriological assessment of the MLN was negative in all cases. Only 40% of the animals treated with antibiotics after hypovolemic shock (group III) presented positive bacteriological exams of the MLN, and this rate was 90% in the group of animals that did not receive this substance (group II) (p < .05). Escherichia coli was the bacteria identified most frequently in culture tests (92.8%). The villosities atrophy and inflammatory infiltrate of the lamina propria were the most common histological changes in the bowel, although the intensity was similar in groups II and III (p > .05), but more intense that in group I (p < .05). The mortality rates in groups I, II, and III 7 days after hypovolemic shock were 0%, 20%, and 20%, respectively. Prophylactic antibiotics significantly reduced the presence of bacteria in the MLN in situations of hypovolemic shock, in rats. This was probably related to a lower BT. However, this aspect did not modify the mortality rate of the animals. Also, the possibility that BT may not have a significant influence in this outcome should be considered.
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