Der Anaesthesist
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Anesthetists will encounter palliative patients in the daily routine as palliative patients undergo operations and interventions as well, depending on the state of the disease. The first challenge for anesthetists will be to recognize the patient as being palliative. In the course of further treatment it will be necessary to address the specific problems of this patient group. ⋯ In the psychosocial domain, good communication skills are expected of anesthetists, especially during the preoperative interview. Ethical conflicts exist with the decision-making process for surgery and the handling of perioperative do-not-resuscitate orders. This article addresses these areas of conflict and the aim is to enable anesthetists to provide the best possible perioperative care to this vulnerable patient group with the goal to maintain quality of life and keep postoperative recovery as short as possible.
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Observational Study
[Validity of admission diagnoses as process-driving criteria : Influence on length of stay and consultation rate in emergency departments].
Primary care physicians and specialists often refer patients to the emergency department with a specific diagnosis and request for admission. Such an external diagnosis frequently influences the initial evaluation in the emergency department. The present study aimed to evaluate the accuracy of such external diagnoses and to assess the consequences of incorrect diagnoses on length of stay and number of specialty consultations in the emergency department. ⋯ Admission diagnoses made by primary care physicians and specialists who subsequently refer patients to the emergency department are subject to certain inaccuracies. Inaccurate admission diagnoses are associated with an increased length of stay and a considerably higher rate of specialty consultation in the emergency department. Standardized operating procedures, treatment algorithms and triage systems are important to identify such incorrect diagnoses so that these patients can undergo appropriate diagnostic investigation and treatment.
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Uncertainty exists on how to treat patients suffering from accidental hypothermia and on the optimal transport decisions. The aim of this review is to provide an updated evidence-based reference for the pre-hospital and in-hospital management of patients with accidental hypothermia and for the transport decisions required to facilitate treatment. Advances in the efficiency and availability of rewarming techniques have improved the prognosis for patients presenting with hypothermia. ⋯ Hypothermic patients with cardiac instability (i.e. systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg, ventricular arrhythmia and core body temperature < 28 °C) should be rewarmed with active external and minimally invasive rewarming techniques in a hospital which also has circulation substituting venous-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) and cardiopulmonary bypass (CBP) facilities. In cardiac arrest patients VA-ECMO may be a better treatment option than CBP and survival rates of 100 % can be achieved compared to ~ 10 % with traditional methods (e.g. body cavity lavage). Early transport to a hospital appropriately equipped for rewarming has the potential to decrease complication rates and improve survival.