We report a prospective multi-centre study of the clinical course and hospital management of thoracic empyema in 119 patients (mean age 54.8). The commonest presenting symptom was malaise (75%), 55% were febrile; 31% were previously well with no predisposing condition. Initial treatments were antibiotics alone (5), needle aspirations (46), intercostal tube drainage (61), rib resection (3) and decortication (4). Overall, intercostal drainage was used in 77 patients (16 failed aspirations), surgical rib resection in 24 (1 failed aspirations, 20 failed drainage), and surgical decortication in 28 (6 failed aspirations, 17 failed drainage). Only 4 patients received intrapleural fibrinolytic agents. Aspiration and drainage were likely to fail if the empyema was > 40% of the hemithorax. Median time from treatment start to discharge was: aspirations, 26 days; drainage, 23 days; resection 11 days; decortication, 12 days. Overall 21 patients died (12 with empyema as the major cause); two had been surgically treated. Mortality correlated with age, diabetes, heart failure, and low serum albumin at admission. Infecting organisms, identified in 109 patients (92%) included anaerobes (37), Str. melleri (36), and Str. pneumoniae (28). Six months after discharge, all but six survivors had regained their previous health.
We have compared the symptomatic benefit of air and oxygen at rest in hypoxemic patients with chronic obstructive airway disease (COAD) or interstitial lung disease (ILD). A total of 12 severely disabled patients with COAD (mean +/- SEM, PaO2, 50.3 +/- 3.7 mm Hg) and 10 with ILD (PaO2, 48.0 +/- 3.1 mm Hg) received 28% oxygen and air by Venturi face mask, each gas on two occasions, in a double-blind randomized fashion. SaO2 increased (p less than 0.01) in both groups during oxygen breathing: COAD, 85.1 +/- 2.3% versus 93.1 +/- 1.4%; ILD, 85.5 +/- 1.7% versus 94.7 +/- 0.9%. The patients with COAD stated that air helped their breathing on 15 of 24 occasions and that oxygen helped on 22 of 24 occasions (p less than 0.05). In the patients with ILD the values were 6 of 20 and 13 of 20 occasions, respectively (p less than 0.05). In both groups of patients the severity of breathlessness recorded on a 100-mm visual analog scale was significantly (p less than 0.05) lower during oxygen breathing: COAD, 29.6 +/- 4.5 versus 45.6 +/- 6.0; ILD, 30.2 +/- 5.1 versus 48.1 +/- 4.4. Ventilation measured by magnetometers was significantly lower during oxygen breathing in the patients with COAD (8.2 +/- 1.0 versus 9.3 +/- 1.1 L/min; p less than 0.05), but the difference between oxygen and air in patients with ILD was not statistically significant (9.3 +/- 1.3 versus 11.2 +/- 1.6 L/min; p greater than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
A young woman with ulcerative colitis developed pneumonia, which responded to corticosteroids. Histological examination showed this to be bronchiolitis obliterans organising pneumonia. We are grateful to Professor B Corrin, Brompton Hospital, London, for reviewing the lung biopsy specimen.
1. It is a clinical impression that some patients given oral corticosteroids develop a sense of wellbeing that is 'inappropriate' to improvements in physical health. This has been termed steroid 'euphoria', but unlike steroid‐induced psychosis it has not been documented. 2. To test for the size and frequency of this phenomenon, 20 patients with severe chronic obstructive airways disease (mean FEV1 0.86 l) were given 30 mg of prednisolone for 14 days, after a period of placebo administration in a single‐blind study. 3. Lung spirometry and arterial saturation during exercise were measured serially, together with established measures of mood state. 4. No changes in spirometry or arterial saturation during exercise were detected until 7 days of active therapy. 5. Mood state did not change during the placebo period, but small significant reductions in anxiety and depression were measured after 3 days of prednisolone and before any measurable improvement in lung function. Mood state did not then further improve, despite measurable improvements in lung spirometry. 6. This is evidence that prednisolone may produce a mild 'inappropriate' sense of wellbeing within a population receiving the drug, rather than as an occasional idiosyncratic response.
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