Total serum IgE was measured in 119 cases of primary glomerular diseases and 33 normal healthy persons. Statistically significant higher levels were noted in minimal change disease (MCD; median: 630 U/ml), IgM nephropathy (IgMN; 618 U/ml), focal glomerulosclerosis (FGS; 373 U/ml) and membranous glomerulonephritis (MGN; 144 U/ml). A higher level of serum IgE was noted in association with more frequent relapse or steroid resistance in MCD and IgMN and in FGS with nephrotic syndrome. A small group of IgA nephropathy with nephrotic range proteinuria was also noted to have extraordinarily high serum IgE. These findings suggest that IgE may play an important role in the pathogenesis of MCD, IgMN, and FGS and may serve as a prognostic indicator in terms of steroid responsiveness in MCD and IgMN.
WSS provides a valuable tool to measure and quantify the medical staff workload during resuscitation as a function of -8.920 + 1.375 ISS + 1.785 RTS + 0.424 Age. The greatest benefit of this methodology is to forecast the expected medical staff workload to allocate sufficient medical manpower to provide the desired trauma care.
In blunt multiple trauma (MT) with head injury (HI) patients, it is difficult to decide whether to proceed with immediate laparotomy or craniotomy. In August 1989, abdominal ultrasonography (US) using a simple US scoring system was introduced for MT and HI patients as an initial rapid screening procedure. In MT and HI patients with a US score > or = 3 (n = 14), urgent laparotomy was the procedure of first choice. However, immediate head CT scan, then emergency craniotomy, may be justified in hemodynamically stable MT and HI patients with a US score < 3 (n = 98). Appropriate decision making can be applied to decide which procedure is most exigent.
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