Scorpion stings in Brazil are important not only because of their incidence but also for their potential ability to induce severe, and often fatal, clinical situations, especially among children. In this report we present the clinical and laboratory data of 4 patients victims of scorpion stings by T. serrulatus, who developed heart failure and pulmonary edema, with 3 of them dying within 24 hours of the sting. Anatomopathologic study of these patients revealed diffuse areas of myocardiocytolysis in addition to pulmonary edema. The surviving child presented enzymatic, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic changes compatible with severe cardiac involvement, which were reversed within 5 days. These findings reinforce the need for continuous monitoring of patients with severe scorpion envenoming during the hours immediately following the sting.
Severe scorpion envenoming is characterized by cardiocirculatory failure which may lead to pulmonary oedema. These are the major causes of death among victims of scorpion stings. Involvement of the heart has been attributed to the massive release of catecholamines and/or to a direct toxic effect of the venom on cardiac fibres, while pulmonary oedema has been considered to be of cardiogenic or non-cardiogenic origin. We present here the clinical, laboratory, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic data of 12 victims of severe Tityus serrulatus stings. These patients had important echocardiographic evidence of moderate to severe left ventricular (LV) dysfunction with diffuse LV hypokinesia and reduced ejection fraction. Seven developed pulmonary oedema. The clinical course of all the patients was satisfactory and the laboratory, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic changes returned to normal, usually within 1 week of the sting. The important alterations detected by echocardiography as early as during the 1st few hours after the sting, taken together with the enzymatic and electrocardiographic data, confirm that LV dysfunction is responsible, either alone or in combination with other factors, for the cardiac insufficiency and pulmonary oedema encountered in scorpion envenoming.
Background: Double-chambered right ventricle is a rare congenital disease frequently misdiagnosed in the adult patient. An anomalous muscle band divides the right ventricle in two cavities causing variable degree of obstruction. Although echocardiography is considered a useful method for the diagnosis of this pathology in children, it has been recognized the transthoracic scanning limitation in adults.
The objective of this paper was to describe the outcomes in patients submitted to arterial switch operation and to analyze the predictors of in-hospital mortality and further need of re-operation at a single-center institution. Between September 1995 and January 2014, 128 consecutive arterial switch operations were performed. Surgical mortality during this period was analyzed retrospectively, and a follow-up analysis of the survivors was conducted. Surgical era, cardiopulmonary bypass time (p = 0.001), and diagnosis category (p = 0.025) influenced in-hospital mortality. The estimated overall survival for the 91 hospital survivors was 96.8, 96.4, and 96.2 % at 5, 10, and 15 years, respectively. The median follow-up time was 67 months (range 0.71-222 months). Three patients (5 %) presented severe aortic regurgitation. Right ventricle outflow tract systolic gradient by echocardiography was above 60 mmHg in 2 %. Late re-interventions occurred in 12 (13 %) patients with mean time of 64 ± 34 months after the initial procedure. Actuarial freedom from re-interventions at 5, 10, and 15 years was 96.4, 69.7, and 61.9 %, respectively. Arterial switch operation remains the procedure of choice in patients with transposition of great arteries. It can be performed even in middle-volume institutions, leading to the same middle- and long-term outcomes of high-volume institutions. Early high mortality rate may occur due not only to learning curve, but also to cardiopulmonary bypass time and ventricular septal defect closure.
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