Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2014
Comparative StudyComparison of a Trigger Tool and voluntary reporting to identify adverse events in a paediatric intensive care unit.
Reduction of adverse events depends on accurate detection. The utility of a Trigger Tool to detect and classify severity of adverse events in an intensive care unit of a paediatric university hospital was compared to voluntary reporting. Sixty patient records were randomly selected from 314 admissions over three months. ⋯ Of the 56 events rated similarly by both investigators, 13 (23%) were insignificant, 19 (34%) were minor, 17 (30%) were moderate, 4 (7%) were major and 3 (6%) were catastrophic. Only four adverse events had been reported voluntarily, of which two were detected using the Trigger Tool. Whereas the Trigger Tool is a simple, efficient and robust method, voluntary reporting is inadequate and captures very few adverse events in the intensive care unit environment.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2014
Case ReportsManagement of severe hypercapnia post cardiac arrest with extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal.
Normocapnia is recommended in intensive care management of patients after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. While normocapnia is usually achievable, it may be therapeutically challenging, particularly in patients with airflow obstruction. ⋯ These are simpler and less invasive than conventional extracorporeal devices. We report the first case of using a novel, extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal device in Australia on a patient with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest where mechanical ventilation failed to achieve normocapnia.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2014
Letter Case ReportsTracheal tube compression in an obese patient.