Minerva anestesiologica
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Although weaning predictors have been extensively explored in weaning research, their use is currently under debate. From all the stages of mechanical ventilation, the measurements of weaning predictors have been considered by some authors as imperative in order to progress weaning and initiate a weaning trial. However, this practice is rejected by other authors who considered that these tests are not necessary to perform a weaning trial, based in a meta-analysis study from the American College of Chest Physicians. ⋯ In order to reduce weaning duration, weaning strategies must be performed earlier, when a failed weaning trial probably is poor tolerated and the use of f/VT could have a role. New applications of weaning predictors must be clarified in future research, in order to progress in weaning in the context of new studies. Weaning is still a challenging period during mechanical ventilation.
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The experimental evidence that ventilator could injure lungs through the application of excessive end-inspiratory volumes and transpulmonary pressures has led to major changes in the clinical management of patients suffering from the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The prevention of ventilator-induced lung injury has become one of the main goals of current ventilator strategies for patients with ARDS as well as for patients with normal lungs that require mechanical ventilation. ⋯ Considerable efforts have been made within the last decades to try to develop new ventilator strategies as well as pharmacological and mechanical measures in order to prevent VILI and further improve the outcome of ARDS patients. This review will strive to describe seminal experimental and clinical studies that aimed at preventing the development of VILI.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Sep 2012
ReviewNeurophysiological monitoring in adult and pediatric intensive care.
Clinical neurophysiology is both an extension of clinical examination and an integration of neuroimaging. It plays a role in diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Electroencephalography (EEG) and somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) are the most informative neurophysiological tests. ⋯ However differences in interpretation are needed and the issue is whether it is possible to establish an age limit over which the prediction of SEPs is similar to that in adults. There are only a few studies of seizure prevalence in pediatric ICU. The variability of frequency of NCSE in comatose children is high as in adults and, similar to the adult, remains unclear the impact on outcome.
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Assays of cardiac troponin have become a cornerstone in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction across a broad range of clinical settings. In critically ill patients, cardiac troponin is detectable in the plasma in up to 60% of cases, and this incidence may increase further as assays become more sensitive. Troponin rises in critical care are commonly unrelated to pathology in the coronary arteries, but are frequently associated with conditions such as sepsis and respiratory failure. ⋯ Despite adding prognostic value, treatment for non-coronary troponin rises remains limited to management of the underlying cause, and restoration of a favourable balance between myocardial oxygen demand and supply. Conversely, troponin rises secondary to myocardial infarctions are amenable to the same interventions as in any other setting, albeit with additional diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. In this review, we will explore the utility of troponin as a biomarker in critical care, and we will outline a pragmatic management strategy for this patient population.