Articles: critical-illness.
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AACN Clin Issues Crit Care Nurs · Feb 1993
Using continuous SVO2 to assess oxygen supply/demand balance in the critically ill patient.
To ensure that tissues are well oxygenated, oxygen supply and demand are now targets of therapy for the critically ill patient. This chapter reviews the physiologic determinants of oxygen supply, how it is threatened by respiratory or cardiac dysfunction or by hemorrhaged or anemic states, and how it can be assessed in individual patients. ⋯ Failure of tissues to consume enough oxygen is explained in patients with critically low delivery or with the maldistributed blood flow state seen in sepsis. The monitoring of mixed venous oxygen saturation is examined as a method of tracking the threats to supply/demand balance and of guiding treatment that can support the adequate oxygenation of tissue.
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Int Anesthesiol Clin · Jan 1993
ReviewClinical utilization of pulmonary artery catheter monitoring.
Since the introduction of PA catheter monitoring in 1970, the applications for it have dramatically broadened. PA catheters are used to obtain hemodynamic data for the assessment, monitoring, and therapeutic management of critically ill, high-risk surgical patients. Because of potential complications associated with PA catheter monitoring, numerous editorials and articles have questioned the procedure's risk-to-benefit ratio. ⋯ Problems may stem not from technology but from the knowledge and expectations of clinicians. "Human" complications from inadequate understanding of the physiological data is not uncommon. Measured pressures by themselves can be misleading; indeed use of absolute numbers rather than trends or relative changes in the values monitored can compromise clinical assessment. Overzealous acceptance and utilization of any quantitative measurement without sound clinical judgment is fraught with failure.
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Int Anesthesiol Clin · Jan 1993
Review Comparative StudyFluid and divalent cation therapy in the critically ill patient.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 1993
Comparative StudyPharmacokinetics of exogenous epinephrine in critically ill children.
This study was designed to determine the steady-state plasma concentrations and clearance rates of epinephrine in critically ill children, to examine if epinephrine pharmacokinetics conform to a linear model, and to compare epinephrine clearance rates with clearance rates of dopamine and dobutamine. ⋯ Epinephrine infusions produce pharmacologic plasma concentrations of epinephrine in critically ill children. The plasma concentration of epinephrine correlates with the infusion rate, suggesting linear pharmacokinetics. Epinephrine clearance rates in critically ill children appear to be lower than the reported clearance rates in healthy adults. The clearance rates of two other inotropic catecholamines, dopamine and dobutamine, are significantly correlated with the clearance rate of epinephrine.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1993
ReviewEnteral nutrition in the critically ill patient: a critical review of the evidence.
To examine the relationship between enteral nutrition (EN) and infection in the critically ill. ⋯ Evidence from experimental data in critically ill patients suggests that enteral nutrition may have a favourable impact on gastrointestinal immunological function and infectious morbidity.