Articles: critical-care.
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Intensive care medicine · May 2024
Editorial Letter Randomized Controlled TrialNavigating complex interventions in post-ICU care: insights from a randomized clinical trial of post-intensive care multidisciplinary consultations.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The effectiveness of a brief intervention for intensive care unit patients with hazardous alcohol use: a randomized controlled trial.
Screening for hazardous alcohol use and performing brief interventions (BIs) are recommended to reduce alcohol-related negative health consequences. We aimed to compare the effectiveness (defined as an at least 10% absolute difference) of BI with usual care in reducing alcohol intake in intensive care unit survivors with history of hazardous alcohol use. ⋯ As underpowered, our study cannot reject or confirm the hypothesis that a single BI early after critical illness is effective in reducing the amount of alcohol consumed compared to TAU. However, a considerable number in both groups reduced their alcohol consumption.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Volatile versus propofol sedation after cardiac valve surgery: a single-center prospective randomized controlled trial.
Optimal intensive care of patients undergoing valve surgery is a complex balancing act between sedation for monitoring and timely postoperative awakening. It remains unclear, if these requirements can be fulfilled by volatile sedations in intensive care medicine in an efficient manner. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the time to extubation and secondary the workload required. ⋯ Using volatile sedation is associated with few minutes additional workload in assembling and enables a significantly accelerated evaluation of vulnerable patient groups. Volatile sedation has considerable advantages and emerges as a safe sedation technique in our vulnerable study population.
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Intensive care medicine · Mar 2024
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyRenal replacement therapy initiation strategies in comatose patients with severe acute kidney injury: a secondary analysis of a multicenter randomized controlled trial.
The effect of renal replacement therapy (RRT) in comatose patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) remains unclear. We compared two RRT initiation strategies on the probability of awakening in comatose patients with severe AKI. ⋯ In comatose patients with severe AKI, a more-delayed RRT initiation strategy resulted in a lower chance of transitioning from coma to awakening.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Modelling the potential increase in eligible participants in clinical trials with inclusion of community intensive care units patients in Alberta, Canada: a decision tree analysis.
Critical care research in Canada is conducted primarily in academically affiliated intensive care units (ICUs) with established research infrastructure. Efforts are made to engage community hospital ICUs in research, although the impacts of their inclusion in clinical research have never been explicitly quantified. We therefore sought to determine the number of additional eligible patients that could be recruited into critical care trials and the change in time to study completion if community ICUs were included in clinical research. ⋯ Inclusion of community ICU patients in critical care research trials has the potential to substantially increase enrolment and decrease time to trial completion.