Latest Articles
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Intensive care medicine · Feb 1998
Retracted PublicationVolume replacement strategies on intensive care units: results from a postal survey.
To assess volume replacement strategies on intensive care units (ICUs) in Germany. ⋯ The kind of volume therapy differs widely among the different ICUs. This questionnaire supported the supposition that no standards exist for volume therapy in intensive care patients. New results concerning the abuse of albumin in the critically ill have not yet influenced strategies of volume replacement.
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Letter Case Reports Retracted Publication
Corticosteroids for the complications of Ross River virus infection.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1997
Retracted PublicationDoes continuous heparinization influence platelet function in the intensive care patient?
To study the influence of continuous administration of heparin on platelet function in intensive care patients. ⋯ Continuous administration of heparin with an average dose of approximately 500 U/h did not negatively influence platelet function in the trauma patients. Recovery from reduced platelet function in the sepsis group was not affected by continuous heparinization. Thus, continuous heparinization with this dose appears to be safe with regard to platelet function in the intensive care patient.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial Retracted Publication
Train-of-four and double burst stimulation fade at the great toe and thumb.
We compared probabilities of tactile detection of fade in response to train-of-four (TOF), double burst stimulation3.3 (DBS3.3), and DBS3.2 at the great toe with those at the thumb. ⋯ This study suggests that the probability of tactile detection of fade in response to TOF, DBS3.3, or DBS3.2 at the great toe is less than that at the thumb. The present results may be because the flexor hallucis brevis muscle is more resistant to non-depolarizing neuromuscular relaxant than the adductor pollicis muscle and that the ratio of fade in response to neurostimulation at the great toe is higher than at the thumb.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1997
Retracted PublicationDoes age influence circulating adhesion molecules in the critically ill?
Soluble adhesion molecules are regarded to be markers of inflammation, endothelial activation, or damage. The influence of age on plasma concentrations of circulating adhesion molecules should be serially studied in critically ill intensive care patients. ⋯ The higher plasma concentrations of the measured adhesion molecules in elderly critically ill patients indicate that elderly patients are more prone than younger patients to a more pronounced activation or even damage of the endothelium. Further work needs to be done to determine the prognostic importance and to define the role of soluble adhesion molecules, particularly in the elderly critically ill patient.