Current opinion in critical care
-
Most patients who are successfully resuscitated after cardiac arrest are initially comatose and require mechanical ventilation and other organ support in an ICU. Knowledge about the optimal strategy for treating these patients is evolving rapidly. This review will summarize the evidence on key aspects of postarrest care and prognostication, with a focus on actionable parameters that may impact patient survival and neurologic outcomes. ⋯ Clinical guidelines for postresuscitation care have recently been updated and incorporate all the available science supporting the treatment of postcardiac arrests. At a minimum, fever should be strictly avoided in comatose postcardiac patients. Prognostication must involve multiple modalities and should not be attempted until assessment confounders have been sufficiently excluded.
-
Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2021
ReviewUtility of bedside ultrasound derived hepatic and renal parenchymal flow patterns to guide management of acute kidney injury.
Ideal fluid management of critically ill patients is maintaining an adequate perfusion pressure but avoiding venous congestion. Venous excess ultrasound score (VExUS) quantifies venous congestion to guide the management of fluid balance. ⋯ We summarize the technique and clinical practice of VExUS to help guide fluid balance across different populations of critically ill patients.
-
Patients admitted to ICUs are a heterogeneous group, displaying multiple anaemia risk factors and comorbidities. Clinicians should therefore take all possible measures to identify modifiable risks. Patient Blood Management (PBM) is an approach promoting the timely application of evidence-based interventions designed to maintain patients own blood mass. ⋯ Critically ill patients display various morbidities often requiring individualized treatment. PBM offers patient-centred measures to improve outcome any time during hospital stay.
-
Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2021
ReviewThe world restart a heart initiative: how to save hundreds of thousands of lives worldwide.
Sudden out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is still one of the top reasons for death in industrialized countries. Bystander resuscitation rates differ significantly across the world despite bystanders being easily able to save lives in this situation. In the 4 years since initiation of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) World Restart a Heart (WRAH), the initiative helped educating millions of people and thus enabled them to save lives. ⋯ The WRAH awareness campaign has reached 194 countries and more than 200 million people in the last years. The success of it could even be kept going in the pandemic due to social media and digital/virtual programmes. International guidelines recommend raising awareness and name ILCOR WRAH as a way to do it.
-
Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2021
ReviewMyocardial injury after noncardiac surgery: facts, fallacies and how to approach clinically.
Acute myocardial injury occurs commonly during perioperative care. There is still considerable confusion regarding its diagnosis and definition, and a lack of consensus on who and how to screen, exacerbated by a lack of studies addressing how to manage patients with detected myocardial injury. ⋯ This review aims to bring together current literature regarding myocardial injury that is detected perioperatively, identifies knowledge gaps for future research and provides suggestions for management.