Crit Care Resusc
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Multicenter Study
Sodium administration in critically ill paediatric patients in Australia and New Zealand: a multicentre point prevalence study.
Dysnatraemia and a positive fluid balance are associated with poor outcomes in paediatric intensive care units (PICUs). Our objective was to determine sodium intake and the total daily fluid balance in children in the PICU. ⋯ Daily sodium intake in children in the PICU is high. The contributions of maintenance and bolus intravenous fluids (most commonly as 0.9% sodium chloride), drug infusions and boluses, including antibiotics, and enteral feeds, are significant.
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Review
Informed consent for procedures in the intensive care unit: ethical and practical considerations.
There is increasing interest in procedural consent (informed consent for invasive procedures) in the intensive care unit. We reviewed studies of procedural consent and show that it is not yet routine practice to obtain consent before performing invasive procedures on ICU patients. We considered logistical barriers to procedural consent in the critical care environment and the ethical implications of introducing routine procedural consent to the ICU.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Randomised trial of software algorithm driven regional citrate anticoagulation versus heparin in continuous renal replacement therapy: the Filter Life in Renal Replacement Therapy pilot trial.
The effectiveness of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) increases when unplanned circuit failure is prevented. Adequate anticoagulation is an important component. Although heparin is the predominating anticoagulant, calcium chelation with citrate is an alternative, but systemic calcium monitoring and supplementation increase the complexity of CRRT. We assessed efficacy and safety of citrate delivery via integrated software algorithms against an established regional heparin protocol. ⋯ Although the per-protocol results favoured citrate when it was actually delivered, the significant crossover between treatment arms hampered more definitive conclusions. Until further studies support improved patient outcomes, increased complexity and complications suggest that anticoagulation choice be made using patient-specific indications.