Treatment of Crotalid Envenomation

Autor: Eleanor E. Buckley, Mahlon Z. Bierly
Rok vydání: 1966
Předmět:
Zdroj: JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 195:575
ISSN: 0098-7484
DOI: 10.1001/jama.1966.03100070119035
Popis: Arecent communication, "Treatment of Snakebite,"1which recommends "cryotherapy," and claims that "no harm is done to an [envenomated] extremity packed infreshwater ice for... six days in the absence of vascular impairment," warrants some comment, particularly in the light of conflicting published concepts.2 The communication referred to contains a direct quotation: "The big advantage of cryotherapy is its reversibility. In the temperature range of 15 C to 0 C, tissue temporarily shows all of the physiologic inhibitory effects of freezing without producing permanent destruction." This is lifted, inaccurately, and out of context, fromMedical World Newsof Sept 25, 1964, pp 79-86. The term used in the article in Medical World News is "cryosurgery," not "cryotherapy," the surgeon uses a probe chilled by liquid nitrogen or some other coolant to perform various types of operations. The subsequent sentence is as follows, "This phenomenon allows the surgeon to
Databáze: OpenAIRE