RESUMEN
Combat medical care results in limited resource availability, which can prompt creativity in treatment of otherwise common conditions. A postoperative intra-abdominal abscess is not an uncommon occurrence following traumatic hollow viscous injury in the deployed environment, but treatment is often limited to surgical drainage only. Herein, we describe a novel use of a dual-lumen central venous catheter to obtain percutaneous drainage of a postoperative intra-abdominal abscess.
Asunto(s)
Absceso Abdominal/cirugía , Trastornos de Combate/cirugía , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos del Sistema Digestivo/efectos adversos , Drenaje/métodos , Complicaciones Posoperatorias , Abdomen/cirugía , Absceso Abdominal/diagnóstico por imagen , Absceso Abdominal/etiología , Afganistán , Humanos , Masculino , Personal Militar , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
Psychosurgery emerged in the late 1930s as a powerful therapeutic tool with great promise for psychiatry. Because of initial favorable case reports and studies, some influential support, and the need to aid thousands of returning World War II veterans with mental disabilities, the prefrontal lobotomy was widely implemented. It soon fell into disrepute through unfavorable reports of personality changes and neurologic sequelae, equivocal large-scale reports, and the introduction of major ataractic drugs and other treatment modalities. Psychosurgery has persisted in the form of restricted cerebral lesions, most stereotactically placed for relatively few mental illnesses. Evidence suggests that contemporary procedures are associated with minimal side effects and greater efficacy, but more extensive, better controlled studies are necessary.