Intensive care medicine
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This review presents the rationale for and main results of coagulation inhibitor substitution during experimental and human sepsis. Activation of the contact system induces activation of the classical complement pathway with generation of anaphylatoxins, of the kinins pathway and of fibrinolysis. Physiologic inhibition depends on the C1-inhibitor (C1-Inh.). ⋯ During sepsis, protein C activity is significantly reduced, either by acute consumption or by thrombomodulin down-regulation, and increased levels of plasma C4bBP inhibit protein S. Infusion of activated protein C and protein S substitution both protect animals from the lethal effects of bacteria. Combining these different coagulation inhibitors should be carefully studied before its use in septic patients is recommended.
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Intensive care medicine · Nov 1995
ReviewThe delivery of aerosolized steroids from MDIs with nozzle extensions: quantitative laboratory evaluation of a method to improve aerosol delivery to intubated patients.
Pulmonary deposition of aerosolized drug from a metered dose inhaler (MDI) is low with intubated patients. In the laboratory, extension of the MDI nozzle to the endotracheal tube tip has been shown to increase the delivered dose of albuterol. The objectives of this study were to determine the dose of aerosolized steroid (beclomethasone and triamcinolone) delivered through a MDI nozzle extension, the effect of nozzle extension length and number of actuations on the delivered dose, and particle size delivered through the nozzle extension. ⋯ A high proportion of aerosolized steroid was delivered with a MDI actuated through a nozzle extension. The proportion delivered through the nozzle extension was significantly less with longer nozzle extensions and with fewer actuations, but this may not be clinically important. Although particle sizes were smaller from longer nozzle extensions, all were within the respirable range. These results suggest that steroids can be delivered efficiently using a MDI nozzle extension.
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Intensive care medicine · Nov 1995
Editorial Comment ReviewWasted efforts and dyssynchrony: is the patient-ventilator battle back?