Literature DB >> 3877174

Increased susceptibility of patients with cervical cord lesions to peptic gastrointestinal complications.

C A Soderstrom, T B Ducker.   

Abstract

The incidence and risk factors in the development of hemorrhaging and perforating gastrointestinal (GI) lesions in 408 patients with cervical column/cord injury were studied retrospectively. Most injuries were caused by blunt trauma (94.1%). Male patients predominated (83.6%); the mean patient age was 35.8 years. Of the 408 patients, 190 (46.6%) had complete cord deficits, 111 (27.2%) had incomplete deficits, and 107 (26.2%) were intact. Admission shock (systolic BP less than 100 mm Hg) was present in 31.6% and 20.7% of patients with complete and incomplete lesions, respectively, and in 4.7% of those intact. Patients with complete deficits received corticosteroids for 2 days; patients with incomplete deficits received them for 7 to 10 days. Eleven of the 107 intact patients (10.3%) received steroids. All patients received standard antacid therapy. Nine patients without previous GI disease developed peptic ulcerations: six gastric and three duodenal lesions (six were perforated) that required surgical intervention; all occurred in patients with complete deficits. Both the 4.7% incidence of the lesions in those patients compared with the other victims of cervical trauma and an estimated 0.1% incidence among more than 6,000 other seriously injured patients are significant (p less than 0.005, p less than 0.001). Steroids were not an ulcerogenic factor.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3877174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  4 in total

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Review 2.  Current guidelines on stress ulcer prophylaxis.

Authors:  M Tryba; D Cook
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  1997-10       Impact factor: 9.546

3.  A case of quadriplegia with gastric perforation.

Authors:  Sankalp Dwivedi; Amit Agrawal; Manisha Bhatt; Surya Pratap Singh
Journal:  J Emerg Trauma Shock       Date:  2010-07

Review 4.  Acute hemorrhagic rectal ulcer syndrome: a new clinical entity? Report of 19 cases and review of the literature.

Authors:  Chang-An Tseng; Li-Tzong Chen; Kun-Bow Tsai; Yu-Chung Su; Deng-Chyang Wu; Chang-Ming Jan; Wen-Ming Wang; Yong-Sang Pan
Journal:  Dis Colon Rectum       Date:  2004-05-04       Impact factor: 4.585

  4 in total

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