Journal of critical care
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Journal of critical care · Jun 2015
ReviewRisk stratification in acute pulmonary embolism with heart-type fatty acid-binding protein: A meta-analysis.
Heart-type fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABP) has emerged as a new biomarker in risk stratification of patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE). We performed a meta-analysis of studies in patients with acute PE to assess the prognostic value of elevated H-FABP for short-term adverse outcomes. ⋯ This meta-analysis indicates that elevated H-FABP levels are associated with increased risk of 30-day complicated clinical course, mortality, and RVD.
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Journal of critical care · Jun 2015
ReviewIntravenous immunoglobulin in critically ill adults: When and what is the evidence?
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) use is growing dramatically internationally due to the increasing numbers of acute and chronic conditions that may benefit from IVIg. Patients with conditions that may benefit from IVIg might require intensive care unit (ICU) admission, supporting the need to review IVIg use in the critical care setting. The most common clinical indications for IVIg in adults that may require ICU admission and are commonly supported under clinical practice guidelines are Guillain-Barré syndrome, myasthenia gravis and Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, inflammatory myopathies, and primary or secondary immunodeficiency diseases complicated by severe bacterial sepsis. ⋯ The evidence for IVIg use in sepsis and septic shock remains controversial and insufficient to recommend its routine use. Intravenous immunoglobulin is expensive and also carries risks of adverse effects, including common and benign infusion-related reactions, as well as relatively rare and more serious problems, such as thromboembolic events, renal failure, and aseptic meningitis. In this article, we review the literature on conditions requiring ICU admission and IVIg, and we classify them as supported, emerging, or unsupported indications based on the available evidence and guidelines for clinical use of IVIg.
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Journal of critical care · Jun 2015
Review Meta AnalysisDoppler-based renal resistive index for prediction of renal dysfunction reversibility: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Doppler-based renal resistive index (RI) might help in distinguishing transient from persistent acute kidney injury (AKI). The main objective of these systematic review and meta-analysis was to investigate the diagnostic performance of RI in predicting short-term reversibility of AKI. ⋯ These results suggest that an elevated RI may be a predictor of persistent AKI in critically ill patients. Further studies are warranted, however, to clarify the exact test performance given the marked heterogeneity among the included studies.
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The human body is a tightly controlled engineering miracle. However, medical training generally does not cover "control" (in the engineering sense) in physiology, pathophysiology, and therapeutics. A better understanding of how evolved controls maintain normal homeostasis is critical for understanding the failure mode of controlled systems, that is, disease. ⋯ Control systems are ubiquitous in physiology, although often unrecognized. Here we provide selected examples of the role of control in physiology (heart rate variability, immunity), pathophysiology (inflammation in sepsis), and therapeutic devices (diabetes and the artificial pancreas). We also present a high-level background to the concept of robustly controlled systems and examples of clinical insights using the controls framework.
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Major complications associated with cardiac surgery are still common and carry great prognostic significance. β-Blockers, statins, antiplatelets, and renin-angiotensin system (RAS) blockers are current medical interventions to prevent cardiovascular complications in cardiac surgery. Renin-angiotensin system blockers include angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers, and antialdosterones. Several lines of evidence support the cardioprotective effects of RAS blockers: they reduce ischemic events and improve outcome in heart failure independently of their effect on heart function and blood pressure. ⋯ Results from clinical trials and observational studies are conflicting, and they raise more questions than answers. Further studies are needed to examine whether RAS blockers reduce mortality and major complications in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. In this review, we discuss the use of RAS blockers in the setting of cardiac surgery, underlying the potential benefits in reducing postoperative complications.