IntroductionHematology patients admitted to the ICU frequently experience respiratory failure and require mechanical ventilation. Noninvasive mechanical ventilation (NIMV) may decrease the risk of intubation, but NIMV failure poses its own risks.MethodsTo establish the impact of ventilatory management and NIMV failure on outcome, data from a prospective, multicenter, observational study were analyzed. All hematology patients admitted to one of the 34 participating ICUs in a 17-month period were followed up. Data on demographics, diagnosis, severity, organ failure, and supportive therapies were recorded. A logistic regression analysis was done to evaluate the risk factors associated with death and NIVM failure.ResultsOf 450 patients, 300 required ventilatory support. A diagnosis of congestive heart failure and the initial use of NIMV significantly improved survival, whereas APACHE II score, allogeneic transplantation, and NIMV failure increased the risk of death. The risk factors associated with NIMV success were age, congestive heart failure, and bacteremia. Patients with NIMV failure experienced a more severe respiratory impairment than did those electively intubated.ConclusionsNIMV improves the outcome of hematology patients with respiratory insufficiency, but NIMV failure may have the opposite effect. A careful selection of patients with rapidly reversible causes of respiratory failure may increase NIMV success.
Pulmonary venous vascular complications after lung transplantation are rare and a major cause of morbidity and mortality unless diagnosed and treated early. The epidemiological, diagnostic, and management characteristics of 33 patients (two of them in our hospital) with post-transplant pulmonary vein obstruction published in the literature were reviewed. We consider of utmost importance to differentiate stenosis from thrombosis as the cause of the obstruction. The angiography, considered the gold standard for diagnosis, was replaced by transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in 79% of the cases, but no echocardiographic diagnostic criteria were defined. A diameter of the pulmonary veins, with 2D/color TEE, <0.5 cm, peak systolic flow velocity (PSFV) >1 m/s, pulmonary vein-left atrial pressure gradient (PVLAG) >/=10-12 mmHg, non-permeable flow through the stenosis and the presence of thrombus at that level, must lead us to suspect this complication. Higher mortality rates were found in unilateral procedures and in women. We consider that TEE must be carried out as part of the intraoperative routine or within the first 24 h of the post-operative period.
Cardiac contusion following blunt chest trauma is not rare, and the works in the literature report incidence rates between 5 and 50%. Traffic accidents are the most frequent cause of cardiac contusion followed by violent fall impacts, aggressions and the practice of risky sports. The spectrum of post-traumatic cardiac lesions varies greatly, ranging from no symptoms to decrease in cardiac function. Cardiogenic shock is a rarely encountered manifestation of blunt cardiac contusion. We review our experience of cardiac contusion after blunt chest trauma, and we describe two very severe cases that manifested as cardiogenic shock. We emphasize an early diagnosis by continuous electrocardiographic monitoring, serial electrocardiograms, echocardiography, serum determination of biochemical cardiac markers, radionuclide imaging and coronary angiography. The treatment includes continuous monitoring of cardiac rhythm, use of inotropic drugs, insertion of a catheter in the pulmonary artery for continuous assessment of cardiac output and, in extreme cases, the insertion of a contrapulsation balloon to maintain haemodynamics until improvement of cardiac function.
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