ABSTRACT
Abstract Introduction: We investigated the clinical course and outcomes of patients submitted to cardiovascular surgery in Brazil and who had developed symptoms/signs of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the perioperative period. Methods: A retrospective multicenter study including 104 patients who were allocated in three groups according to time of positive real time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2): group 1, patients who underwent cardiac surgery > 10 days after positive RT-PCR; group 2, patients with a positive RT-PCR within 10 days before or after surgery; group 3, patients who presented positive RT-PCR > 10 days after surgery. The primary outcome was mortality and secondary outcomes were postoperative complications, intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay, and postoperative days of hospitalization. Results: The three groups were similar with respect to age, the European System of Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation score, and comorbidities, except hypertension. Postoperative complications and death were significantly higher in groups 2 and 3 than in group 1, and no significant difference between groups 2 and 3 was seen. Group 2 showed a high prevalence of surgery performed as an urgent procedure. Although no significant differences were observed in ICU length of stay, total postoperative hospitalization time was significantly higher in group 3 than in groups 1 and 2. Conclusion: COVID-19 affecting the postoperative period of patients who underwent cardiovascular surgery is associated with a higher rate of morbidity and mortality. Delaying procedures in RT-PCR-positive patients may help reduce risks of perioperative complications and death.
Subject(s)
Humans , COVID-19 , Brazil , Retrospective Studies , Perioperative Period , SARS-CoV-2ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To evaluate whether scintigraphy with technetium-99m-labeled ceftizoxime ((99m)Tc-CFT) can differentiate mediastinitis from aseptic inflammation associated with sternotomy. METHODS: Twenty female Wistar rats were randomly distributed into four groups: S (control) -partial upper median sternotomy with no treatment; SW (control) - sternotomy and treatment of sternal wounds with bone wax; SB - sternotomy and infection with Staphylococcus aureus; SWB - sternotomy with bone wax treatment and bacterial infection. Scintigraphy with (99m)Tc-CFT was performed eight days after surgery and images were collected 210 and 360 min after infusion of the radiopharmaceutical. RESULTS: No animals exhibited clinical signs of wound infection at the end of the experiment, although histological data verified acute inflammatory response in those experimentally infected with bacteria. Scintigraphic images revealed that tropism of (99m)Tc-CFT to infected sternums was greater than to their non-infected counterparts. Mean counts of radioactivity in bacteria-infected sternal regions (SB and SWB) were significantly higher (p = 0.0007) than those of the respective controls (S and SW). CONCLUSION: Scintigraphy with technetium-99m-labeled ceftizoxime is a method that can potentially detect infection post sternotomy and differentiate from aseptic inflammation in animals experimentally inoculated with S. aureus.
Subject(s)
Ceftizoxime/analogs & derivatives , Mediastinitis/diagnostic imaging , Organotechnetium Compounds , Sternotomy/adverse effects , Sternum/diagnostic imaging , Surgical Wound Infection/diagnostic imaging , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Radionuclide Imaging , Random Allocation , Rats, Wistar , Reproducibility of Results , Staphylococcal Infections/diagnostic imaging , Staphylococcus aureus , Sternum/microbiology , Surgical Wound Infection/microbiologyABSTRACT
PURPOSE:To evaluate whether scintigraphy with technetium-99m-labeled ceftizoxime (99mTc-CFT) can differentiate mediastinitis from aseptic inflammation associated with sternotomy.METHODS:Twenty female Wistar rats were randomly distributed into four groups: S (control) -partial upper median sternotomy with no treatment; SW (control) - sternotomy and treatment of sternal wounds with bone wax; SB - sternotomy and infection with Staphylococcus aureus; SWB - sternotomy with bone wax treatment and bacterial infection. Scintigraphy with 99mTc-CFT was performed eight days after surgery and images were collected 210 and 360 min after infusion of the radiopharmaceutical.RESULTS: No animals exhibited clinical signs of wound infection at the end of the experiment, although histological data verified acute inflammatory response in those experimentally infected with bacteria. Scintigraphic images revealed that tropism of 99mTc-CFT to infected sternums was greater than to their non-infected counterparts. Mean counts of radioactivity in bacteria-infected sternal regions (SB and SWB) were significantly higher (p = 0.0007) than those of the respective controls (S and SW).CONCLUSION:Scintigraphy with technetium-99m-labeled ceftizoxime is a method that can potentially detect infection post sternotomy and differentiate from aseptic inflammation in animals experimentally inoculated with S. aureus.
Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Ceftizoxime/analogs & derivatives , Mediastinitis , Organotechnetium Compounds , Sternotomy/adverse effects , Sternum , Surgical Wound Infection , Disease Models, Animal , Random Allocation , Rats, Wistar , Reproducibility of Results , Staphylococcus aureus , Staphylococcal Infections , Sternum/microbiology , Surgical Wound Infection/microbiologyABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Intrathoracic meningocele is a rare pathology, almost always associated with neurofibromatosis type I and with a few cases related in the literature. In the majority of cases cysts are small or asymptomatic, and the surgery is indicated when big or symptomatic cysts are present. We report a case of giant intrathoracic cysts surgically extirpated through out thoracotomy. CASE: A 59-year-old male with familiar Von Recklinghausen's disease which developed thoracic radicular pain after a fall. On examination he presented some difficulty in walking fast and dyspneia on small efforts. The chest plain x-ray showed the presence of 3 huge left side intrathoracic cysts (10 to 15cm). The patient was submitted to a surgical treatment and complete extirpation of the cysts was performed through a left side thoracotomy. During the surgery a fourth smaller cyst was detected and also extirpated. Evolution was uneventful and the patient remains well in these last 12 years. This finding of intrathoracic cysts related to neurofibromatosis type I is rare and is probably unique in the literature the presence of 4 huge cysts in one side of the thorax.
Subject(s)
Meningocele/complications , Neurofibromatosis 1/complications , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Meningocele/surgery , Middle Aged , Neurofibromatosis 1/surgery , Thorax , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Intrathoracic meningocele is a rare pathology, almost always associated with neurofibromatosis type I and with a few cases related in the literature. In the majority of cases cysts are small or asymptomatic, and the surgery is indicated when big or symptomatic cysts are present. We report a case of giant intrathoracic cysts surgically extirpated through out thoracotomy. CASE: A 59-year-old male with familiar Von Recklinghausen's disease which developed thoracic radicular pain after a fall. On examination he presented some difficulty in walking fast and dyspneia on small efforts. The chest plain x-ray showed the presence of 3 huge left side intrathoracic cysts (10 to 15cm). The patient was submitted to a surgical treatment and complete extirpation of the cysts was performed through a left side thoracotomy. During the surgery a fourth smaller cyst was detected and also extirpated. Evolution was uneventful and the patient remains well in these last 12 years. This finding of intrathoracic cysts related to neurofibromatosis type I is rare and is probably unique in the literature the presence of 4 huge cysts in one side of the thorax
Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Meningocele , Neurofibromatosis 1 , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Meningocele , Neurofibromatosis 1 , Thorax , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
Os autores relatam um caso de granuloma de colesterol da ponta do rochedo, em um paciente do sexo feminino, de 74 anos, que se apresentou clinicamente com alteração de nervos cranianos (V, VI, VIII). O diagnóstico foi feito pela ressonância magnética de encéfalo, que identificou lesão com hipersinal em T1 e em T2, sem realce após administração de contraste paramagnético endovenoso. A via subtemporal extradural permitiu acesso direto à ponta do rochedo, com exerése total da lesão. A paciente evoluiu satisfatoriamente no pós-operatório, com melhora da sintomatologia.
Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Aged , Cholesterol , Granuloma, Foreign-Body/diagnosis , Petrous Bone/pathology , Granuloma, Foreign-Body/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Tomography, X-Ray ComputedABSTRACT
Os autores relatam 2 casos de hérnia de disco lombar na infância diagnosticados pela tomografia computadorizada (TC) e ressonância nuclear magnética (RM). Ambos os pacientes eram do sexo masculino, com idade de de 1 ano e 8 meses e 10 anos, e antecedentes de trauma na coluna lombar. No primeiro caso, a protrusao era no nível L3-L4 e, no outro, L4-L5. O tratamento clínico foi tentado sem sucesso e ambos os pacientes foram submetidos à hemilaminectomia. O disco protruso foi extirpado, a raiz descomprimida e os pacientes permaneceram assintomáticos. Revisao da literatura mostra quao rara é esta ocorrência.