Discomfort during the period of waiting before elective surgery can be reduced if patients are prepared with a carbohydrate-rich drink, compared with preoperative oral intake of water or overnight fasting. Visual analog scales can provide useful information about preoperative discomfort in elective surgery patients.
Serum levels of cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHA) and its sulfate (DHAS), 4-androstene-3,17-dione (A-4), 17-alfa-hydroxy-progesterone (17 OHP), testosterone (T, only in males), unconjugated (E1) and total estrone (tE1 greater than 85% estrone sulfate) were studied in six male and two female patients before, during and up to 30 days after aortic graft surgery. All steroids except 17 OHP decreased following induction of anesthesia but, except for testosterone, rose again during surgery to preoperative levels or slightly above. Extremely high peak values for E1 and tE1 and a less pronounced peak for cortisol were noted on postoperative day 2; after that, the levels of these steroids returned to normal. The levels of 17-OHP, DHA and DHAS decreased after surgery and were below preoperative values from postoperative day 4 to day 16 or (DHAS) day 30. In males, 17 OHP showed a pronounced peak 30 min after initiation of surgery, but decreased after that to below preoperative values. Testosterone levels decreased further during surgery and remained very low until postoperative day 16. Major surgical trauma has a rapid, profound and long-lasting effect on gonadal activity, as judged from decreased testosterone levels, while the effect on adrenal steroids is less pronounced. Adrenal delta 4 and delta 5-steroids showed different patterns in the postoperative period, indicating differences in their regulation. The highly elevated estrogen levels on postoperative day 2 probably reflect either transiently elevated peripheral aromatization or decreased estrogen metabolism rather than increased levels of substrate steroids (A-4). The biological significance of this remains to be elucidated.
This study shows that improvements in arterial oxygenation in response to inhaled NO may show great inter- as well as intraindividual variability, and that improvements in arterial oxygenation occur without any measurable lowering of the pulmonary artery pressure.
Trauma induces changes in the serum lipoprotein pattern in man. A characteristic apolipoprotein, named apolipoprotein T existing in its isoforms T-I to T-IV, in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction of serum, also appears in response to trauma. In this report eight patients operated on for abdominal aortic aneurysms were studied concerning the time dependency in changes of serum lipoproteins and the appearance of apolipoprotein T. Blood samples for lipoprotein analysis were taken preoperatively, postoperatively on days 1, 2, 4, 6 and thereafter twice a week until discharge from the hospital. The serum lipoprotein concentrations were compared with those from a group of healthy men. The most striking abnormalities were found in serum VLDL where both concentrations of triglycerides and cholesterol decreased during the first 2 days by more than 50%, compared to the initial level, and remained low for about 1 week. Also the concentration of LDL cholesterol in serum decreased about 40% from the preoperative value during the first days. Serum HDL cholesterol either increased during the first 2 days in those patients with a low preoperative concentration or stayed on a subnormal level during the first 4 days. After day 4 the serum HDL cholesterol decreased and reached the minimum level on days 10 to 13. Already on day 1 after trauma apolipoprotein T had reached a high level in order to stay high for several weeks. The apolipoprotein T isoforms had different appearance with time and varied independently of serum cholesterol in HDL.
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