Case management of adult patients with acute poisoning in a university-based emergency department to determine the factors that affect duration of hospital stay was assessed. In this survey, data were obtained for the period between January 1, 1997 and December 31, 2002 at the emergency department (ED). Case analyses of 2229 patients older than 14 years of age were reviewed. Of all patients, 725 (32.5%) were male, 801 (35.9%) were younger than 20, and 540 (24.2%) were older than 30 years. Mean ages of patients were 29.3+/-13.2 for the males and 23.8+/-9.6 for the females (P<.001). During the study, the greatest number of patients were admitted in May (11.0%). Suicidal poisoning was the observed etiology in the majority of cases (76.4%). Moreover, the mortality rate due to poisoning was 3.9%. Drug ingestion was the most frequent means of poisoning (59.0%), followed by pesticides (19.0%). The rate of poisoning with multiple drugs has declined over time, whereas the rate owing to psychoactive drugs has increased markedly. The mean length of hospital stay was 2.9+/-1.8 days and the proportion of patients who stayed for longer than 2 days was 44.3%. The mean length of hospital stay was longer for males, those older than 30 years, those who had been poisoned unintentionally, and for confused and unconscious patients and those who had arrived to ED more than 2 hours after the event. This study suggests that morbidity for adult patients with poisoning varied by sex, age, and season. Length of hospital stay was affected by sex, age, arrival time to ED, mode of transport, severity of poisoning, and type of agent.
Caustic products are responsible for the most serious cases of poisoning, which are always emergency cases. In this paper, we review demographic features and endoscopic results of the patients admitted to a university emergency department with a history of caustic substance ingestion between January 2000 and June 2003. Thirty-seven patients were included in this study. Twenty-one of the patients were female and 16 were male. The mean age of the patients was 30.9 +/- 14.7 years. The agents included sodium hypochlorite in 24 patients and hydrochloric acid in 13 patients. All the patients ingested these agents orally. The mean interval time of admission to emergency department after ingestion of caustic agent was 5.4 +/- 5.6 hours. Endoscopy was attempted in 37 patients. Endoscopic results were as follows: grade 0 in 8 (21.6%) patients, grade 1 in 17 (45.9%) patients, grade 2a in 5 (13.5%) patients, and grade 2b in 7 (18.9%) patients. We believe that early signs and symptoms after caustic substance ingestion are not consistent with the extent of damage, and endoscopy is the only reliable method to assess injury. It is important that efforts should be made to educate the public about the dangers of caustic substances so that their threat may be diminished.
In patients with ACS emergency, it is recommended that decompressive laparotomy to be performed even if the IAP falls below 25 mmHg. For patients with IAP levels higher than 25 mmHg, the IAP should be meticulously brought below the cutoff level during the postoperative period.
Background: Onychomycosis has a high prevalance among immunocompromised patients such as diabetics and hemodialysis patients. In the present study, we aimed to investigate the prevalence of onychomycosis among hemodialysis patients with and without diabetes mellitus, and to find out the factors likely to be associated with the development of onychomycosis among hemodialysis patients.
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