Articles: cations.
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Hyperammonaemia contributes to complications in acute liver failure (ALF) and may be treated with continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT), but current practice is poorly understood. ⋯ In Australian and New Zealand patients with ALF, CRRT is typically started early, before Stage 3 AKI or severe acidaemia, and in the presence hyperammonaemia. In these more severely ill patients, CRRT use was associated with prevention of extreme hyperammonaemia, which in turn, was associated with increased transplant-free survival.
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Journal of anesthesia · Jun 2020
Correction to: Stiripentol alleviates neuropathic pain in L5 spinal nerve-transected mice.
In the original publication of the article, the value "40-μm thickness" was incorrect in the legend of Figure 4. The correct value is 10-μm thickness.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2020
Retraction Of PublicationRetraction Note to: Implications of Entropy and Surgical Pleth Index-guided general anaesthesia on clinical outcomes in critically ill polytrauma patients. A prospective observational non-randomized single centre study.
The authors have retracted this article [1]. After publication it was discovered that Table 1 which reports the clinical and demographical characteristics of the patients in the study contains a number of statistical and typographical errors. The data reported in this article are therefore unreliable. All authors agree with this retraction.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Jun 2020
[Do we Isolate Patients or Bugs? Challenging Isolation Precautions].
Isolation of patients with multidrug-resistant organisms (MRGN) has been recommended since years. Recent evidence suggests no benefit by this isolation procedure. Furthermore, isolation precautions may have potential negative effects on patient well-being and may increase therapeutic error. ⋯ Prevention of spreading bacteria is not done by isolation in room. In fact, it is a multifactorial continuous cycle of planning, teaching, surveillance and transfer of knowledge. Combination of education, compliance to standard precautions and continuous education may be a big step forward in fighting MRGN transmission and progression.