Medicina intensiva
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Induced hypothermia in neurocritical patients is one of the most promising neuroprotective therapies in the last decade. Unfortunately, the promising results obtained in experimental studies have had an unequal reflection in the different diseases that affect the neurocritical patient. The use of therapeutic hypothermia is clearly established in patients with neurological deterioration after cardiac arrest. ⋯ Induced hypothermia has a role in the intensive care unit. Critical care physicians should be familiar with the physiologic effects, current indications, techniques, and complications of induced hypothermia. This review elaborates on the clinical implications of hypothermia research in traumatic brain injury, anoxic, brain injury, stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage.
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The echocardiography can provide important and relevant information and the critically ill patient presents a challenge for the echocardiographer: from limitations in image acquisition to interpretation in the context of rapid physiological and intervention changes. The most frequent reason for requesting an echocardiogram in the ICU is probably to assess left ventricular function. ⋯ The echocardiography also can be used to monitor the therapeutic interventions. The applications of echocardiography in the critical care setting are reviewed, with special emphasis on the assessment of cardiac physiology.