Anästhesiologie, Intensivmedizin, Notfallmedizin, Schmerztherapie : AINS
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Jan 2024
[Potential of AI for the Treatment of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)].
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is still associated with high mortality rates and poses a significant, vital threat to ICU patients because this syndrome is often detected too late (or not at all), and timely therapy and the fastest possible elimination of the underlying causes thus fail to materialize. Artificial Intelligence (AI) solutions can enable clinicians to make every minute in the ICU work for the patient by processing and analyzing all relevant data, thus supporting early diagnosis, adhering to clinical guidelines, and even providing a prognosis for the course of the ICU. This article shows what is already possible and where further challenges lie in this field of digital medicine.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Jan 2024
[ARDS Diagnostics and Treatment after the Coronavirus Pandemic - Everything as it was?].
ARDS is a syndrome that can develop as a result of various underlying diseases. For a long time, the prevailing belief was that the course of the disease was comparable regardless of the underlying disease. However, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, it was suspected that there were different manifestations that could be treated more individually and thus reduce the high mortality rate of ARDS, which has remained unchanged for years. ⋯ It is therefore to be expected that the diagnosis and treatment of non-COVID-related ARDS will also have to be individualised according to such phenotypes in the future. However, as long as the effectiveness of such strategies has not been proven in clinical trials, the current recommendations for ARDS therapy will remain valid for the time being. However, the adjustments already formulated in this context to individual pathophysiological conditions with regard to respiratory mechanics, ventilation-perfusion distribution and possible cardiac dysfunction should be made more meticulously than has usually been the case to date.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Apr 2022
Review[Hemodynamic Monitoring in the ICU: the More Invasive, the Better?]
Less invasive or even completely non-invasive haemodynamic monitoring technologies have evolved during the last decades. However, the invasive devices such as the pulmonary artery catheter and transpulmonary thermodilution technologies are still the clinical gold standard in terms of advanced haemodynamic monitoring, especially in the treatment of critically ill patients. The current data situation regarding the early use of continuous haemodynamic monitoring in this patient population, specifically flow-based variables such as stroke volume to prevent occult hypoperfusion, is overwhelming. ⋯ Given the fact that perioperative morbidity and mortality are higher than anticipated, anaesthesiologists and intensivists are in charge to deal with this problem. The recent advances in minimally invasive and non-invasive haemodynamic monitoring technologies may facilitate a more widespread use in the operating theatre and in critical care patients. This review evaluates the significance of invasive, minimally- and non-invasive monitoring devices and their specific haemodynamic variables in this particular field of perioperative medicine.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Dec 2023
Case Reports[Asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 Infection and "in situ split" Liver Resection with Fatal Outcome - A Case Report].
We report the perioperative course of a 47-year-old patient who underwent a two-stage liver resection for bilobar metastatic colorectal carcinoma. The respiratory asymptomatic patient was tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by PCR detection one day before the second surgical procedure. ⋯ With an initial clinical suspicion of vascular liver failure, postmortem pathologic examination revealed the underlying cause of death to be COVID-19-related myocarditis with acute right heart failure. Individual multidisciplinary risk assessment should be considered very critically when deviating from the "7-week rule" because the benefit is difficult to objectify, even in oncologic patients.
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Although admission to an intensive care unit during pregnancy is rare, pregnant women may become critically ill due to either obstetric or non-obstetric illness. Whilst critical illness due to obstetric reasons during the peripartum period (e.g. peripartum haemorrhage, HELLP-syndrome) is more common, it is also important to know how to care for critically ill pregnant women with non-obstetric illness (e.g. infection, cardiovascular diseases, neurological diseases, trauma). ⋯ The use of different drugs is inevitable in critical care, knowing which drugs are safe to use during the different stages of pregnancy is essential. Caring for mother and unborn child in the ICU is a challenge, open communication, ethical considerations and interdisciplinary as well as multiprofessional collaborations should be key points when caring for critically ill pregnant patients.