Congenital chylothorax in a male infant persisted for 10 weeks despite repeated thoracocenteses and dietary regimens which included total parenteral nutrition for 37 days and a peroral semielementary diet with medium-chain triglyceride content for 19 days. Thoracotomy disclosed a small leak in the thoracic duct. The duct was ligated above and below the leak, as attempted repair was unsuccessful. There was no recurrence of pleural effusion after the operation and no distal lymphoedema was observed.
The effect of hypothermia during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on cerebral histopathology, blood-brain barrier permeability to serum proteins and water content was evaluated. Pigs were subjected to non-pulsatile CPB for 2 h at either normothermia or hypothermia, and a group of anaesthetised pigs served as normothermic controls. The histopathology was assessed on paraffin embedded sections. The permeability of the cerebral vessels was studied by immunocytochemical demonstration of extravasated serum proteins. The cerebral water content was assessed by specific gravity measurements. The histological studies demonstrated hydropic degeneration of the brain parenchyma and perivascular swelling of the astrocytic endfeet throughout both white and gray matter in the normothermic CPB group. Similar changes were not encountered during hypothermic CPB, which suggests a beneficial effect of decreased temperatures on brain tissue during CPB. Neither normothermic nor hypothermic CPB induced significant changes in the cerebrovascular permeability or in the specific gravities.
Reduction of pump flow during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) reduces the formation of microemboli and trauma to the blood components, reduces both rewarming of the heart and the noncoronary collateral flow, and improves surgical exposure. Recent studies indicate that a reduction in pump flow, even at normothermia, does not increase the incidence of postoperative cerebral dysfunction. We examined the cerebral consequences of 2 h of normothermic CPB in pigs carried out at pump flows of either 70 ml/kg per min or 50 ml/kg per min, and compared the results with those of a nonperfused control group. We measured the regional cerebral glucose metabolism and the regional capillary diffusion capacity simultaneously in ten different brain regions. Brain morphology, the blood-brain barrier permeability to serum proteins and the regional cerebral water content were also determined in the same animals. Glucose metabolism decreased significantly in both CPB groups (P < 0.001), and significant differences were found between the capillary diffusion capacities of the three groups (P < 0.05), with decreases in eight out of ten brain regions examined in the 50 ml/kg per min group. The results indicate that a reduction of pump flows from 70 ml/kg per min to 50 ml/kg per min is deleterious to the brain, and that a pump flow of 70 ml/kg per min itself has an injurious effect, when normothermic CPB is carried out for 2 h without the use of vasoactive drugs to maintain the blood pressure. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) rather than pump flow seemed to determine the adequacy of the cerebral perfusion.
Patients treated surgically for hiatus hernia and reflux symptoms may still have reflux symptoms at follow-up examination, even though relapse of the hernia cannot be demonstrated on X ray. In an attempt to explain the causes of surgical failures, a group of 13 patients with persisting reflux symptoms after a modified Belsey MK IV repair for sliding hiatus hernia and reflux symptoms underwent intraluminal oesophageal manometry, acid clearing test, and 12-h continuous pH recording in the lower part of the oesophagus. None of the patients had radiological relapse of the hernia. The results of these tests, pre- and post-operatively, were compared with the results obtained in a group of successfully treated patients and with normal subjects. No differences of clinical importance could be demonstrated between the two patient groups with regard to the preoperative test results. Postoperatively, the 'failures' had low sphincter pressure, prolonged acid clearing, and pathological acid reflux. The tests seem of little value in the prediction of symptomatic failures, but do to some extent explain the symptoms of surgical 'failures'.
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