1.Percutaneous Delayed Closure of the Vertical Vein for Severe Left-Sided Heart Failure after Repair of the Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Drainage.
Masahiko IIO ; Katsuhiko MIYAMOTO ; Osamu KURODA ; Tadashi NAKAGAWA ; Noboru INAMURA ; Hikaru MATSUDA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1991;20(9):1524-1527
A 31-day-old infant with total anomalous pulmonary venous drainage (type I-A) suffered from severs left-sided heart failure unable to be weaned from cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) after total repair. By reopening the vertical vein, the CPB was successfully terminated and the sternum was closed primarily. Percutaneous delayed closure of the vertical vein by lifting up the string which had been encircled the vertical vein at the time of repair was performed 3 days after repair. Systemic arterial pressure and left atrial pressure were unchanged after closure of the vertical vein. Postoperative cardiac study revealed satisfactory result and no left-to-right shunt through the vertical vein.
2.A Case of \it{Legionella} Pneumonia Complicated by ARDS, Acute Renal Failure and Shock
Kazuhisa ITOH ; Hideyuki KOBAYASHI ; Satoshi HASEGAWA ; Ken YOSHIDA ; Osamu NAKAGAWA ; Yoichi IWAFUCHI ; Minoru ABE ; Kaoru KUNISADA ; Akira KAMIMURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2006;55(1):18-24
A 55-year-old man visited his neighborhood general practitioner complaining of headache, fever and wet cough on July 7, 2003, but there were no sigins that his symptoms would subside. Since an abnormal shadow was found on chest X-ray on July 11, he was referred to our department and hospitalized on the same day. We started to treat him on the assumption that he had community-acquired pneumonia due-to common pathogens. However, he developed severe hypoxemia, and abnormal shadows rapidly progressed to affect both lungs, which led us to suspect that he had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We identified the pathogen by examining urinary antigens and serum antibodies and diagnosed of his case as Legionella pneumonia. Although he suffered complications of acute renal failure and shock, the respirator was withdrawn after 11 days of controlled mechanical ventilation, as he was steadily recovering from his illness. The patient was discharged from the hospital on September 9. Although the mortality of legionella pneumonia, when complicated by ARDS, acute renal failure and shock as in the present case, has been reported to be as high as 50 to 80%, we consider that the administration of neutrophil elastase inhibitors and steroids was effective against this disorder.
Shock
;
Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult
;
Pneumonia
;
Kidney Failure, Acute
;
Complicated
3.A Case of Legionella Pneumonia Complicated by ARDS, Acute Renal Failure and Shock
Kazuhisa ITOH ; Hideyuki KOBAYASHI ; Satoshi HASEGAWA ; Ken YOSHIDA ; Osamu NAKAGAWA ; Yoichi IWAFUCHI ; Minoru ABE ; Kaoru KUNISADA ; Akira KAMIMURA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2006;55(1):18-24
A 55-year-old man visited his neighborhood general practitioner complaining of headache, fever and wet cough on July 7, 2003, but there were no sigins that his symptoms would subside. Since an abnormal shadow was found on chest X-ray on July 11, he was referred to our department and hospitalized on the same day. We started to treat him on the assumption that he had community-acquired pneumonia due-to common pathogens. However, he developed severe hypoxemia, and abnormal shadows rapidly progressed to affect both lungs, which led us to suspect that he had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We identified the pathogen by examining urinary antigens and serum antibodies and diagnosed of his case as Legionella pneumonia. Although he suffered complications of acute renal failure and shock, the respirator was withdrawn after 11 days of controlled mechanical ventilation, as he was steadily recovering from his illness. The patient was discharged from the hospital on September 9. Although the mortality of legionella pneumonia, when complicated by ARDS, acute renal failure and shock as in the present case, has been reported to be as high as 50 to 80%, we consider that the administration of neutrophil elastase inhibitors and steroids was effective against this disorder.