Chest
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Having a strategic plan is important to reach organizational goals. Equally important is knowing how to develop and execute that plan. Also, such plans evolve and are executed in the context of the organization's culture, which is another critical success element. ⋯ If the soil is fouled, no plants will grow, regardless of how appealing the garden plan. This "How We Do It" paper addresses the issue of developing and executing a strategy and then, in a companion piece, the related process of envisioning and cultivating an organizational culture. The strategic planning discussion invokes a "real-win-worth" paradigm to address the real-world case of assuring uniform, best-in-class ICU outcomes across multiple ICUs in a large academic medical center system.
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Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major global health problem and a major contributor to morbidity and mortality following multisystem trauma. Extracranial organ dysfunction is common after severe TBI and significantly impacts clinical care and outcomes following injury. Despite this, extracranial organ dysfunction remains an understudied topic compared with organ dysfunction in other critical care paradigms. In this review, we will: 1) summarize the epidemiology of extracranial multiorgan dysfunction following severe TBI; 2) examine relevant mechanisms that may be involved in the development of multi-organ dysfunction following severe TBI; and 3) discuss clinical management strategies to care for these complex patients.
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Nonexpanding lung is a mechanical complication in which part of the lung is unable to expand to the chest wall, preventing apposition of the visceral and parietal pleura. This can result from various visceral pleural disease processes, including malignant pleural effusion and empyema. Nonexpanding lung can be referred to as trapped lung or lung entrapment, both with distinct clinical features and management strategies. ⋯ Some patients with trapped lung will not experience symptomatic relief with pleural fluid removal. Therefore, misrecognition of trapped lung can result in patients undergoing unnecessary procedures with significant cost and morbidity. We reviewed the current understanding of nonexpanding lung, which included causes, common presentations, preventative strategies, and recommendations for clinical care.
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Primary prevention and interception of chronic lung disease are essential in the effort to reduce the morbidity and mortality caused by respiratory conditions. In this review, we apply a life course approach that examines exposures across the life span to identify risk factors that are associated with not only chronic lung disease but also an intermediate phenotype between ideal lung health and lung disease, termed "impaired respiratory health." Notably, risk factors such as exposure to tobacco smoke and air pollution, as well as obesity and physical fitness, affect respiratory health across the life course by being associated with both abnormal lung growth and lung function decline. We then discuss the importance of disease interception and identifying those at highest risk of developing chronic lung disease. This work begins with understanding and detecting impaired respiratory health, and we review several promising molecular biomarkers, predictive symptoms, and early imaging findings that may lead to a better understanding of this intermediate phenotype.
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Acute illness and hospitalization introduce several risk factors for sleep disruption in children that can negatively affect recovery and healing and potentially compromise long-term cognition and executive function. The hospital setting is not optimized for pediatric sleep promotion, and many of the pharmacologic interventions intended to promote sleep in the hospital actually may have deleterious effects on sleep quality and quantity. ⋯ Therefore, nonpharmacologic interventions to optimize sleep-wake patterns are of highest yield in a vulnerable population of patients undergoing active neurocognitive development. In this review, we briefly examine what is known about healthy sleep in children and describe risk factors for sleep disturbances, available sleep measurement tools, and potential interventions for sleep promotion in the pediatric inpatient setting.