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- Cherylynn A Brownback, Patricia Fletcher, Lynelle N B Pierce, and Susan Klaus.
- Cherylynn A. Brownback was the medical intensive care unit's educator at The University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City when the report was written. Patricia Fletcher is a staff nurse in the cardiothoracic intensive care unit at The University of Kansas Hospital. Lynelle N. B. Pierce is a clinical education specialist at The University of Kansas Hospital. Susan Klaus is the clinical nursing researcher at The University of Kansas Hospital. cbrownback@kumc.edu.
- Am. J. Crit. Care. 2014 Jul 1;23(4):348-51; quiz 352.
AbstractContinuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) is a therapeutic technique used to support critically ill patients with acute renal failure in intensive care units. CRRT is preferred over hemodialysis for patients who cannot tolerate the rapid fluid and electrolyte shifts associated with hemodialysis because of their tenuous hemodynamic state. Traditionally, such patients have not been candidates for mobilization and have remained on strict bed rest. Mobilization is now being initiated on patients undergoing CRRT in intensive care units. This case study chronicles the successful mobilization of a patient undergoing CRRT. This experience suggests that CRRT patients who are appropriate candidates may be mobilized safely and therefore should not automatically be excluded from mobilization therapies.©2014 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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