The traditional management of acute cholecystitis is initial conservative treatment with antibiotics followed by elective cholecystectomy. Although early cholecystectomy has often been advocated, there has been only one randomized controlled clinical trial comparing the two methods of treatment. This paper reports the preliminary results of such a trial in which 32 patients have been studied so far.
Of the 17 patients managed conservatively, there was a misdiagnosis in 2 (11.8 per cent). In the remaining 15 patients with acute cholecystitis 3 (20 per cent) required urgent operation because of failure of medical treatment. Elective cholecystectomy was not technically difficult.
Of the 15 patients treated by early cholecystectomy, there was a misdiagnosis in 1 (6.8 per cent). Surgery was technically difficult in 2 patients but cholecystectomy was possible in all. The former 2 patients required blood transfusion, but in the remainder the estimated blood loss was only slightly more than in the elective group.
There was no mortality in either group nor any complication directly attributable to the biliary surgery. The incidence of minor postoperative complications was only slightly greater in those treated by early operation. The length of postoperative stay was similar in both groups but those treated conservatively spent an average of 11 more days in hospital.
The preliminary results indicate that those treated by early cholecystectomy spend less time in hospital and avoid the complications of failed conservative treatment without the added risk of increased postoperative mortality and major complications.
Elective ventilation describes the procedure of transferring selected patients dying from rapidly progressive intracranial haemorrhage from general medical wards to intensive care units for a brief period of ventilation before confirmation of brain stem death and harvesting of organs. This approach in Exeter has led to a rate of kidney retrieval and transplant higher than has been achieved elsewhere in the United Kingdom, with a stabilisation of numbers on patients on dialysis. Recently doubt has been cast on the legality of our practice of elective ventilation on the grounds that relatives are not permitted to consent to treatment of an incompetent person when that treatment is not in the patient's best interests. We are thus faced with the dilemma of a protocol that is ethical, practical, and operates for the greater good but which may be illegal. This article explores various objections to the protocol and calls for public, medical, and legal debate on the issues.
Summary
This analysis was performed to define the incidence of pretransplant microbial contamination of donor kidneys, and to assess the resultant morbidity including infections requiring therapy, and graft loss. Case records of all 638 renal allograft recipients patients transplanted in our centre during the period June 1990 to October 2000 were studied. All the recipients were given a single dose of intravenous antibiotics at the time of induction of anaesthesia. A total of 775 microbiology reports on perfusion fluid, kidney swabs and ureteric tissue were retrieved. Fifty‐eight of 638 (9.1%) patients were transplanted with a graft that showed preoperative contamination. 18 of these 58 patients (31%) subsequently required antibiotic treatment. Thirty of 32 patients who received kidney contaminated with skin flora had a benign course (i.e. no unexplained, no positive blood cultures or graft infection). By contrast, seven of nine recipients with grafts whose perfusion fluid yielded lactose fermenting coliforms (LFCs) required antibiotics and three of nine of them suffered graft loss as a result. Two of these patients had bacteraemia caused by LFC, and one died. Three of five patients with positive cultures due to yeast required treatment with antifungals. None of the four patients who had graft contaminated by Staphylococcus aureus became infected. One‐year 49/58 (85%) of these patients survived with functioning graft. Overall 1‐year patient survival was 53/55 (92%). These data suggest that contamination of renal allografts by LFCs or yeasts need to be treated preemptively before the onset of clinical manifestations. By contrast, contamination with skin contaminants does not pose a risk to the graft.
413with an anterior repair which, in turn, will reduce the risk of a direct recurrence.It is now 80 years since Bassini (1888) first described his operation and founded a principle of repair which, but for its ease of execution and the adaptability of nature, would have been abandoned years ago. If the problem of inguinal hernia is to be solved, we must seek a new principle of repair rather than yet another variant of the posterior repair operation. The operation I propose takes no longer to perform than the standard Bassini and gives uniformly good results with no complications-a finding by no means unique in the annals of the inguinal hernia. It is therefore my sincerest wish that the operation will be given as wide a trial as possible in the hope that it may one day be submitted to the acid test of impersonal statistical review, for no operation can be considered of value which cannot achieve success in the hands of all who wish to use it.
In groups of transplant patients taking different immunosuppressive regimens, regression analysis of urinary NAG against urinary protein can identify the separate effects of drug-related tubular injury or hyperfunction from that of proteinuria.
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