Current opinion in critical care
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Controversy concerning the pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) and its use as a bedside clinical tool continues to be a significant bone of contention. In the pursuit of evidence-based medicine, a substantial effort has been made over the last 25 years to demonstrate the benefit or lack thereof of PAC-led therapy, and this endeavor still persists with large, randomized, clinical trials currently in progress both in the United States and in the United Kingdom. This article reviews the core evidence for and against PAC efficacy and safety and considers the most appropriate method for validation of such a device.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Apr 2002
ReviewAdvanced monitoring in the intensive care unit: brain tissue oxygen tension.
Cerebral monitoring of patients with acute intracranial disorders generally focuses on intracranial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure monitoring. Over the past few years, several new techniques have become available for more detailed routine monitoring of cerebral oxygenation and metabolism. Brain tissue oxygen pressure measurement is increasingly being used for evaluation of cerebral oxygenation. ⋯ Published experimental and clinical data are considered, and the current status of the clinical use and indications of the technique are summarized. Monitoring may be performed in relatively undamaged parts of the brain or, preferably, in the penumbra region of an intracerebral lesion. Pathophysiologic evidence warrants targeting therapy for patients with traumatic brain injury and subarachnoid hemorrhage toward improvement of cerebral oxygenation guided by continuous monitoring of brain tissue oxygen tension.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Apr 2002
ReviewDecompressive surgery in the treatment of traumatic brain injury.
According to European Brain Injury Consortium (EBIC) and American Brain Injury Consortium (ABIC) guidelines for severe head injuries, decompressive craniectomy is one therapeutic option for brain edema that does not respond to conventional therapeutic measures. As a result of the failure of all recently developed drugs to improve outcome in this patient group, decompressive craniectomy has experienced a revival during the last decade. ⋯ Decompressive craniectomy may, however, be the only method available in developing countries with limited ICU and monitoring resources. Prospectively controlled and randomized studies to definitively evaluate the effect of this old neurosurgical method on outcome in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) are forthcoming.
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Recently there has been much interest in the use of hypothermia in the management of the brain-injured patient and its effect on outcome. Most of these studies examine the use of hypothermia compared with normothermia of 37 degrees C and have failed to demonstrate a benefit in the treatment groups, but what is normothermia in the brain-injured patient? Good epidemiologic evidence suggests that the vast majority of patients admitted to an ICU environment will develop a fever. ⋯ Several treatment options for controlling temperature are discussed. Despite a sound physiologic argument for controlling fever in the brain-injured patient, there is no evidence that doing so will improve outcome.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Apr 2002
ReviewTherapeutic approaches to vasospasm in subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Delayed vasospasm as a result of subarachnoid blood after rupture of a cerebral aneurysm is a major complication. It is seen in over half of patients and causes symptomatic ischemia in about one third. ⋯ The mainstays of treatment are careful maintenance of fluid balance, induced hypervolemia and hypertension, calcium antagonists, balloon or chemical angioplasty, and, in some centers, cisternal fibrinolytic drugs. Promising future lines of treatment include gene therapy, nitric oxide donors, magnesium, sustained release cisternal drugs, and several other drugs that are under experimental or clinical trial.