Articles: prospective-studies.
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Rev Bras Ter Intensiva · Dec 2006
[Hyperlactatemia at ICU admission is a morbid-mortality determinant in high risk non-cardiac surgeries].
One of the greatest challenges found by the intensivists in their daily activities is tissue hipoperfusion control. Blood lactate is generally accepted as a marker of tissular hypoxia and several studies have demonstrated good correlation between blood lactate and prognosis during shock and resuscitation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical utility of arterial blood lactate as a marker of morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients in the post-operative period of high risk non-cardiac surgeries. ⋯ High risk patients submitted to non cardiac surgeries and admitted to the ICU with hiperlactatemia, defined as an arterial lactate > 3.2 mmol/L, are prone to a longer ICU lenght of stay and to die.
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The weaning of patients under mechanical ventilation (MV) is one of the critical stages of respiratory assistance in intensive care. There are several criteria for taking patients out of respiratory prothesis. The aim of this work was to assess if there is a group of parameter which can predict the patients who will succeed in weaning from mechanical ventilation. ⋯ We could conclude that the indexes evaluated were suitable for the determination of the success in the weaning of those patients in mechanical ventilation. APACHE II because of admition constitutes severity indicator and allows awareness from the patient. MV timing, optimizing the treatment in order to accelerate the process of weaning is conducts that aim not only for the weaning success but also interfere both in the evolution and period of hospital admition.
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While inadvertent perioperative hypothermia has received serious attention in many surgical specialties, few discussions of hypothermia have been published in the plastic surgery literature. This article reviews the physiology of thermoregulation, describes how both general and regional anesthesia alter the normal thermoregulatory mechanisms, indicates risk factors particularly associated with hypothermia, and discusses the most effective current methods for maintaining normothermia. Hypothermia is typically defined as a core body temperature of =36 degrees C (=96.8 degrees F), though patient outcomes are reportedly better when a temperature of >/=36.5 degrees C is maintained. ⋯ None of these measures can be adequately employed unless a patient's core body temperature is monitored throughout the perioperative period. Prevention of perioperative hypothermia is neither difficult nor expensive. Proper preventive measures can reduce the risk of complications and adverse outcomes, and eliminate hours of needless pain and misery for our patients.
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Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg · Aug 2006
Continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia ensures prolonged aortic cross-clamping time without increasing the operative risk.
The aim of this study was to assess whether the continuous retrograde blood cardioplegia ensures prolonged aortic cross-clamping time without increasing the operative risk. From 1996 to 2003, 204 consecutive patients who had cardiac procedure requiring aortic cross-clamping time > or = 150 min, were prospectively included in this study: low risk group (EuroSCORE < or = 2) 50 patients, medium risk group (EuroSCORE 3-5) 68 patients, high risk group (EuroSCORE > or = 6) 86 patients. The myocardial protection associated induction of cardiac arrest by antegrade injection of hyperkalemic warm blood, continuous retrograde intermediate lukewarm (20 degrees C) blood cardioplegia, retrograde warm blood reperfusion and systemic normothermia. ⋯ The mean predicted mortality of the population studied (EuroSCORE logistic method) was 8.4%+/-12 (range 0.87%-76.15%) with a 95% confidence interval of 6.7% to 10%. The observed mortality was not different from the predicted mortality. Continuous retrograde intermediate lukewarm blood cardioplegia associated with systemic normothermia allows prolonged aortic clamping time for complex intervention without increase of operative mortality and morbidity.
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EXECUTIVE 1. Foot infections in patients with diabetes cause substantial morbidity and frequent visits to health care professionals and may lead to amputation of a lower extremity. 2. Diabetic foot infections require attention to local (foot) and systemic (metabolic) issues and coordinated management, preferably by a multidisciplinary foot-care team (A-II). ⋯ Clinical examination and imaging tests may suffice, but bone biopsy is valuable for establishing the diagnosis of osteomyelitis, for defining the pathogenic organism(s), and for determining the antibiotic susceptibilities of such organisms (B-II). 19. Although this field has matured, further research is much needed. The committee especially recommends that adequately powered prospective studies be undertaken to elucidate and validate systems for classifying infection, diagnosing osteomyelitis, defining optimal antibiotic regimens in various situations, and clarifying the role of surgery in treating osteomyelitis (A-III).