The primary limitation of the laryngeal mask airway (LMA) is that it does not reliably protect the lungs from regurgitated stomach content. We describe three cases of aspiration associated with the LMA, including the first brain injury, the first death, and the first associated with the intubating LMA, and review the 20 specific case reports of aspiration associated with the LMA that we were able to find described in the literature.
Maintaining the safety procedures the bilateral endobronchial intubation is an important and successful method in carina near tracheal rupture, perioperatively and for long-term ventilation.
Toxic-shock-syndrome (TSS) is an acute febrile, exanthematous illness caused by toxins such as toxic-shock-syndrome-toxine-1 (TSST-1) and other endotoxines from staphylococcus aureus with an incidence of 0,5 per 100.000 inhabitants. Patients with menstrual toxic-shock-syndrome (menstrual-TSS) usually have TSS associated with menstruation and use of a vaginal device such as tampons. Other patients with non-menstrual toxic-shock-syndrome (non-menstrual-TSS) have a focus of staphylococcal infection such as a surgical wound infection or soft tissue abscess. TSS usually presents with fever, pharyngitis, diarrhoea, vomiting, myalgia and may progress rapidly (within hours) to signs of hypovolaemic hypotension and shock. In some cases TSS is associated with multisystem failure including shock, renal failure, myocardial failure and adult respiratory distress syndrome. In its acute phase the diagnosis of TSS is often uncertain because of its initial symptoms are non-specific and numerous conditions need to be considered in the differential diagnosis. But obviously less incidence, the signs and symptoms of toxic-shock-syndrome should be recognised early to permit successful therapy. The site of infection should be adequately drained and treated with antimicrobial therapy. Possible complications including ARDS and myocardial failure require a thorough understanding of its underlying pathophysiology to ensure appropriate intensive-care treatment. Only if appropriate therapy is instituted as early as possible, most of patients will be able to survive their toxic-shock-syndrome. In other cases TSS can be a rapidly progressive and perhaps lethal ending disease because of possible multiple organe failure such as ARDS.
Severe thoracic trauma is always an important risk factor for the development of acute pulmonary failure. The course is often complicated by barotrauma or volutrauma. We report on a 48-year-old patient who was transferred to us nine days after a bicycle accident because of a severe disturbance of gas exchange and atelectasis of the left lung refractory to therapy. The left lung could not be ventilated even after separate artificial ventilation on each side with positive end expiratory pressure. After administration of surfactant (50 mg Exosurf per kg body weight) and continued separate artificial ventilation on each side, there was a complete re-expansion of the left lung with an increase of the arterial pO2 value from 65 mm Hg to 416 mm Hg with a FIO2 of 1,0 and a decrease of the intrapulmonary venous admixture from 34% to 12% within a few hours. The extravascular pulmonary fluid was unaffected by the administration of surfactant (200 ml solution). The administration of surfactant preparations may be a new therapeutic approach in treatment of ARDS patients.
We report a 47-year-old male patient with fulminant ornithosis who developed severe respiratory failure leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) complicated by gastrointestinal, neurological and renal symptoms. ARDS was successfully treated by extracorporeal lung assist. As leukocytosis is typically absent in ornithosis, C-reactive protein, interleukin 6 and procalcitonin were used as infection parameters in order to monitor clinical development. The English-language literature on severe cases of ornithosis requiring respiratory support over the past 30 years is reviewed.
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