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Journal of critical care · Sep 2005
ReviewStruggle for implementation of new strategies in intensive care medicine: anticoagulation, insulin, and lower tidal volumes.
- Marcus J Schultz, Esther K Wolthuis, Hazra S Moeniralam, and Marcel Levi.
- Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands. m.j.schultz@amc.uva.nl
- J Crit Care. 2005 Sep 1;20(3):199-204.
AbstractThe management of intensive care patients have changed dramatically in the last years: from merely supportive care, it has moved to evidence-based strategies that have been demonstrated to reduce mortality of the severely ill patients. Clinical research have brought numerous positive clinical trials offering intensive care physicians specific therapies to improve outcome of intensive care patients. Among them were the trials that tested the infusion of activated protein C in patients with severe sepsis, tight glycemic control in surgical intensive care patients, and use of lung protective mechanical ventilation by using small tidal volumes in patients with acute lung injury. Although results of these trials were sufficiently strong to, at least, consider implementation of these strategies in critical care medicine, published and yet unpublished reports show that there is significant struggle with implementation of these therapies. This manuscript focuses on the potential reasons that underlie this problem.
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