Current opinion in critical care
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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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Curr Opin Crit Care · Apr 2002
ReviewAdvanced monitoring in the neurology intensive care unit: microdialysis.
Cerebral microdialysis is a relatively new technique for measuring the levels of brain extracellular chemicals, which to date has predominantly been used as a research tool. This review considers the technical aspects of microdialysis, the importance of the commonly measured chemicals, and the use of microdialysis to monitor patients with ischemic stroke, head injury, and subarachnoid hemorrhage. The advantages and disadvantages of microdialysis are discussed, as is its future potential.
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Apr 2002
ReviewLung injury in acute pancreatitis: mechanisms, prevention, and therapy.
Lung injury is the most pertinent manifestation of extra-abdominal organ dysfunction in pancreatitis. The propensity of this retroperitoneal inflammatory condition to engender a diffuse and life-threatening lung injury is significant. ⋯ The variability in the clinical course of pancreatitis renders it a vexing entity and makes demonstration of the efficacy of any specific intervention difficult. The distinct pathologic entity of pancreatitis-associated lung injury is reviewed with a focus on etiology and potential therapeutic maneuvers.
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On the basis of currently available data, it can be suggested that maintained spontaneous breathing during mechanical ventilation should not be suppressed even in patients with severe pulmonary dysfunction if no contraindications, such as increased intracranial pressure, are present. Improvements in pulmonary gas exchange, systemic blood flow, and oxygen supply to tissues, which have been observed when spontaneous breathing was allowed during ventilatory support, are reflected in the clinical improvement in the patient's condition, as indicated by significantly fewer days with ventilation, earlier extubation, and shorter stays in the intensive care unit. ⋯ If ventilatory modalities are limited to those whose positive effects have been documented, then partial ventilatory support can be used as a primary modality even in patients with severe pulmonary dysfunction. Whereas controlled mechanical ventilation followed by weaning with partial ventilatory support modalities has been the earlier standard in ventilation therapy, this approach should be reconsidered in view of the available data.