RESUMEN
Esophageal perforation and mediastinal gas gangrene developed in a 55-year-old male after the endoscopic ethanol injection of a Mallory-Weiss ulcer. Initially, extensive gangrene of the esophagus and the mediastinum was treated by esophagectomy; however, an abundance of Clostridium perfringens in the Gram stain verified the presence of gas gangrene. Subsequently, the patient was transferred to a hyperbaric oxygen center, wherein a total of seven hyperbaric treatments were administered. The patient survived, and 4 months later, after having undergone several reoperations because of pleural empyema, mediastinal abscess, splenic rupture, and acalculous cholecystitis, was discharged and is still surviving.
Asunto(s)
Perforación del Esófago/cirugía , Gangrena Gaseosa/cirugía , Mediastinitis/cirugía , Perforación del Esófago/diagnóstico , Perforación del Esófago/etiología , Estudios de Seguimiento , Gangrena Gaseosa/diagnóstico , Humanos , Oxigenoterapia Hiperbárica , Masculino , Mediastinitis/diagnóstico , Persona de Mediana Edad , Reoperación , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos XRESUMEN
We compared Ringer's acetate-gluconate solution with 6% dextran-70 infused during rewarming after coronary bypass surgery. In a randomized study, 18 patients received 56 +/- 15 ml/kg of crystalloid (group 1), and 14 patients received 16 +/- 6 ml/kg of dextran (group 2). Data were taken at the following intervals: 4 to 5 h after terminating the cardiopulmonary bypass, after rewarming, the next morning on controlled ventilation and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) breathing, and after extubation. The patients were followed for 14 days. Prophylactic nitroglycerin infusion may have increased the need for plasma expansion. After volume loading, the stroke index increased in both groups, but the left ventricular stroke work index increased in group 2 only. After transition to the CPAP mode, hydrostatic pressures increased, more in group 2, doubling the pulmonary shunt flow. Pulmonary extravascular thermal volume did not change in either group. We conclude that hemodynamic stability occurred faster with dextran, and ventilatory weaning was somewhat easier with crystalloid.