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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Computed tomography in diagnostics and treatment decisions concerning multiple trauma and critically ill patients

Ahvenjärvi, L. (Lauri) 06 April 2010 (has links)
Abstract Technical improvements in computed tomography (CT) scanners have provided new possibilities to exploit the resources of this imaging modality in the evaluation of patients with multiple injuries or patients being treated in an intensive care unit (ICU). The purpose of this study was to assess the significance of multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) in diagnostics and treatment decisions concerning multiple trauma and critically ill patients. Findings of MDCT using a dedicated trauma protocol in 133 patients exposed to high-energy blunt trauma were retrospectively evaluated. Diagnostic information about the injuries that would enable planning of treatment was sought. The imaging protocol consisted of axial scanning of the head and helical scanning of the facial bones, cervical spine, thorax, abdomen, and pelvis. Ninety-nine of the patients (74%) had at least one finding consistent with trauma. Nineteen false negative findings and two false positive findings were made. The overall sensitivity of MDCT was 94%, specificity 100%, and accuracy 97%. The reliability of a structured 5-min evaluation of MDCT images from the scanner’s console was prospectively evaluated in 40 high-energy trauma patients. The dedicated trauma protocol covering the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis was used in MDCT scanning. The findings were compared with the final radiological diagnosis of the MDCT data made on a picture archiving and communicating system (PACS) workstation, the operative findings, and the clinical follow-up. The evaluation from the scanner’s console enabled diagnosis of all potentially life-threatening injuries, the sensitivity for all injuries being 60% and specificity 98%. The effects of MDCT on the treatment of patients in a 12-bed medical-surgical ICU were observed prospectively. Sixty-four patients with an ICU stay longer than 48 h had had inconclusive findings with other modalities of radiological imaging. They underwent altogether 82 MDCT examinations. Fifty examinations (61%) resulted in a change in treatment, and 20 (24%) of them otherwise contributed to or supported clinical decision-making. Twelve examinations (15%) failed to provide any additional information relevant to the patient’s treatment. MDCT examination was helpful in general ICU patients, with inconclusive findings with other imaging modalities. CT images of 127 mixed medical-surgical ICU patients were retrospectively reviewed for the previously determined findings. Forty-three of these patients underwent open cholecystectomy, revealing eight cases with a normal gallbladder (GB), 26 with an edematous GB, and nine with necrotic acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC). Abnormal CT findings were present in 96% of all the ICU patients. Higher bile density in the GB body and subserosal edema were associated with an edematous GB. The most specific findings predicting necrotic AAC were gas in the GB wall or lumen, lack of GB wall enhancement, and edema around the GB. The frequent prevalence of nonspecific abnormal imaging findings in the GB of ICU patients limits the diagnostic value of CT scanning.
2

Acute Reactive Acalculous Cholecystitis Secondary to Duodenal Ulcer Perforation

Rahim, Shab E., Alomari, Mohammad, Khazaaleh, Shrouq, Alomari, Ahmed, Al Momani, Laith A. 27 March 2019 (has links)
Acute cholecystitis is the inflammation of the gallbladder, classically caused by gall stones obstructing the cystic duct. In contrast, acalculous cholecystitis is a gallbladder inflammation occurring in the absence of cholelithiasis with a reported prevalence of 10% of all cases of acute cholecystitis. Reactive acalculous cholecystitis is an extremely rare subset of this disease that results from an adjacent inflammatory or infectious intra-abdominal process that may lead to gallbladder stasis, ischemia, and subsequent wall inflammation. Many factors have been associated with acalculous cholecystitis, including (but not limited to) hemodynamic instability, altered immunity, and biliary tree anomalies. Lack of specific signs and symptoms of this particular entity often delays the diagnosis. Herein, we present a rare case of acute, reactive, acalculous cholecystitis secondary to a perforated duodenal ulcer found incidentally during laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
3

Surgically treated acute acalculous cholecystitis in critically ill patients

Laurila, J. (Jouko) 16 May 2006 (has links)
Abstract Acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) is an insidious and increasingly recognized complication of critical illness, whose pathogenesis is poorly understood and clinical picture obscure. Diagnosis is difficult and there is no consensus on treatment. The medical records of all ICU patients who had undergone open cholecystectomy due to AAC during the years 2000–2001 and 2003–2004 were examined for clinical and organ failure data. The indication for open cholecystectomy was a suspicion of AAC based on clinical signs and symptoms of sepsis or deteriorating multiple organ dysfunction without other obvious foci and/or radiological (computed tomography or ultrasound) findings indicative of cholecystitis. A total of 73 patients had operatively treated AAC during the study periods, giving an incidence of 0.9% of all admissions (73/8184) and an incidence of 6.7% among the long-stayers (ICUstay >5 days). The hospital mortality of these patients was 43%. Infection was the most common admission diagnosis followed by cardiovascular surgery. The patients were severely ill, the mean (SD) APACHE II score being 25.5 (6.4) and the mean (SD) SOFA score 10.2 (3.5) on admission. In those patients who had AAC as the only intra-abdominal complication of multiple organ dysfunction, cholecystectomy was followed by a remarkable improvement of individual and total SOFA scores by the seventh postoperative day. The AAC gallbladders were histologically and immunohistologically compared to normal gallbladders and to gallbladders of patients with acute calculous cholecystitis (ACC). The ACC patients were admitted into hospital because of primary acute gallbladder disease, were treated on a normal ward and did not have severe sepsis or multiple organ dysfunction. The typical histopathological features of AAC (34 cases) in the gallbladder wall were bile infiltration, lymphatic dilatation and leucocyte margination of blood vessels, while epithelial degeneration and defects, widespread occurrence of inflammatory cells and extensive and deep muscle layer necrosis were typical features of ACC (28 cases). Tight junction proteins (claudin-1, -2, -3, -4, occludin, ZO-1 and E-cadherin) were uniformly expressed in normal gallbladder epithelium, with the exception of claudin-2, which was present in less than half of the cells. In AAC, the expression of cytoplasmic occludin and claudin-1 was decreased compared to control group. In ACC, the expression of claudin-2 was increased, but the expression of claudin-1, -3 and -4, occludin and ZO-1 was decreased compared to normal or AAC gallbladders. In conclusion, AAC is associated with severe illness, infection, long intensive care unit stay and deteriorating multiple organ dysfunction. Open cholecystectomy is one important contributing factor to reverse the course of multiple organ dysfunction in these patients. Histological and immunohistological studies suggest that AAC is a manifestation of systemic inflammatory disease, while ACC is a local inflammatory and often infectious disease.

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