• Nursing in critical care · Mar 2006

    Review

    Managing patients with acute liver failure: developing a tool for practitioners.

    • Helen O'Neal, Jane Olds, and Nicola Webster.
    • John Farman Intensive Care Unit, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, UK. helen.oneal@addenbrookes.nhs.uk
    • Nurs Crit Care. 2006 Mar 1; 11 (2): 63-8.

    AbstractPatients with acute liver failure (ALF) are treated on the general intensive care unit (ICU) within this regional centre for hepatology and liver transplantation. This group of patients are at high risk of developing cerebral oedema, but because of the associated coagulopathy, intracranial pressure is not measured invasively. The safe management of these patients is vital to their outcome, and yet, there is no national or local guidance on the best practice for this group of patients. An absence of guidelines, or evidence base specific to caring for hepatology patients, was highlighted as we reviewed local clinical practices and those at other liver specialty centres, the British Liver Trust and published literature. We identified a need to develop evidence-based guidance for staff caring for patients with ALF within ICUs. A systematic approach enabled us to identify best practice to support the development of a structured evidence-based approach to care.

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