Intensive care in patients with esophagoplasty

Intensive care in patients with esophagoplasty

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Title: Intensive care in patients with esophagoplasty
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Article_Title: Intensive care in patients with esophagoplasty
Authors: Teodora OLARIU1, Harry GROSMANN2, C. ONITA1
Affiliation: 1 “Vasile Goldis” Western University Arad, Romania
2 Institut für Psychotherapie und Hypnose Hanau, Germany
Abstract: ABSTRACT. Esophagoplasty is a large operation consisting in replacing the oesophagus with portions of the digestive tube (colon, stomach, intestine thin), with two-stroke operators (abdominal and cervical), anaesthetic risk and quantify the scale Bucharest 6-7.
Intensive therapy is performed on patient esophagoplasty IT department and consists of: general treatment – therapy support, prevention and treatment of complications in clinical monitoring and paraclinical; local treatment addressed surgical side – dressing wounds, monitoring drains, removal of wires. On the IT department of Municipal Hospital Arad I followed period years 2002-2007 a group of 9 male patients who were undergoing surgery for esophagoplasty of which: 5 cases for ingestion of caustic soda and 4 cases for tumours of the esophagus. The study conducted following the therapy applied to IT department of Municipal Hospital Arad we conclude that the morbidity and mortality rates were similar to literature data.
Keywords: esophagoplasty, intensive therapy, anaesthetic risk
References: Curley FJ, Smyrnios NA: Routine Monitoring of Critically Ill Patients, Critical Care Medicine, 2003
Irwin RS, Rippe JM: Procedures and Techniques, Intensive Care Medicine, The Fifth Edition, 2003
Mower WR, Sachs C, Nicklin EL, et al: A comparison of pulse oximetry and respiratory rate in patient screening. Respir Med 90:593, 1996
Gutierrez G: Advances in ICU monitoring, Critical Care Medicine, 1992
Paulus DA: Noninvasive blood pressure measurement, Med Instrum, 1981
Read_full_article: pdf/vol12/iss2/JMA12-2-09Olariu.pdf
Correspondence: Teodora Olariu, Department of Intensive Care, „Vasile Goldis” Western University of Arad, no. 1 Feleacului St., Arad, Romania, Email: olariu_teodora@yahoo.com

Read full article
Article Title: Intensive care in patients with esophagoplasty
Authors: Teodora OLARIU1, Harry GROSMANN2, C. ONITA1
Affiliation: 1 “Vasile Goldis” Western University Arad, Romania
2 Institut für Psychotherapie und Hypnose Hanau, Germany
Abstract: ABSTRACT. Esophagoplasty is a large operation consisting in replacing the oesophagus with portions of the digestive tube (colon, stomach, intestine thin), with two-stroke operators (abdominal and cervical), anaesthetic risk and quantify the scale Bucharest 6-7.
Intensive therapy is performed on patient esophagoplasty IT department and consists of: general treatment – therapy support, prevention and treatment of complications in clinical monitoring and paraclinical; local treatment addressed surgical side – dressing wounds, monitoring drains, removal of wires. On the IT department of Municipal Hospital Arad I followed period years 2002-2007 a group of 9 male patients who were undergoing surgery for esophagoplasty of which: 5 cases for ingestion of caustic soda and 4 cases for tumours of the esophagus. The study conducted following the therapy applied to IT department of Municipal Hospital Arad we conclude that the morbidity and mortality rates were similar to literature data.
Keywords: esophagoplasty, intensive therapy, anaesthetic risk
References: Curley FJ, Smyrnios NA: Routine Monitoring of Critically Ill Patients, Critical Care Medicine, 2003
Irwin RS, Rippe JM: Procedures and Techniques, Intensive Care Medicine, The Fifth Edition, 2003
Mower WR, Sachs C, Nicklin EL, et al: A comparison of pulse oximetry and respiratory rate in patient screening. Respir Med 90:593, 1996
Gutierrez G: Advances in ICU monitoring, Critical Care Medicine, 1992
Paulus DA: Noninvasive blood pressure measurement, Med Instrum, 1981
*Correspondence: Teodora Olariu, Department of Intensive Care, „Vasile Goldis” Western University of Arad, no. 1 Feleacului St., Arad, Romania, Email: olariu_teodora@yahoo.com