The influence of the type of intracranial lesion on the final outcome in a consecutive series of 277 severely head-injured patients was analyzed. Patients were studied with computerized tomography (CT) and underwent continuous measurement of intracranial pressure. They received identical treatment according to a standardized protocol. Outcome of patients with either epidural hematoma (38 cases), subdural hematoma (56 cases), brain contusion (87 cases), or diffuse brain damage (96 cases) was rather heterogeneous, and serial CT scanning allowed the authors to outline eight consistent anatomical patterns in the whole series which have stronger prognostic significance than the four major lesion categories mentioned above. Patients with pure extracerebral hematoma (19 cases), single brain contusion (45 cases), general brain swelling (41 cases), and normal CT scans (28 cases) had a significantly better outcome than patients developing acute hemispheric swelling after operation for a large extracerebral hematoma (27 cases), patients with multiple brain contusion, either unilateral or bilateral (74 cases), and patients with diffuse axonal injury (43 cases). These anatomical patterns are interesting because, in addition to having clinical and physiopathological significance, they provide useful prognostic information and facilitate improved therapeutic decision-making in severely head-injured patients.
In patients with an acute epidural hematoma, reducing the anisocoria-surgery interval below 90 minutes is significantly associated with a better outcome (p = 0.0238, Fisher's exact test).
Trichosporon species are emerging pathogens capable of causing severe infections in immunocompromised patients. In this paper, we report a case of systemic infection in a liver transplant patient caused by Trichosporon asahii to show the etiologic agent's aggressiveness and poor therapeutic results with the different antifungals employed.
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