Medizinische Klinik, Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin
-
The mortality of patients with rheumatic diseases in the intensive care unit is generally high despite their relatively young age. In these patients, it is often difficult to make the diagnosis of the underlying autoimmune disease or to differentiate between septic complications and an acute flare; likewise, the complexity of the specific antirheumatic therapy can also be accompanied by problems. The following article gives an overview of problems in the diagnosis and treatment of critically ill patients with autoimmune diseases in the intensive care unit.
-
Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed · Jun 2012
Review[Prehospital cardiac arrest. Therapeutic hypothermia in adults].
Therapeutic hypothermia is one of the few advances in recent years that has improved survival and neurological outcome of survivors of cardiac arrest. Therapeutic hypothermia is part of current guidelines and, therefore, should be part of the routine procedure in postresuscitation care of patients still comatose after primarily successful resuscitation. ⋯ The optimal time point to start cooling is not well defined, even if theoretical considerations and animal experiments are in favor of beginning early. Another question is whether therapeutic hypothermia is of benefit for patients with cardiac arrest due to asystole and pulseless electrical activity in contrast to patients with ventricular fibrillation where it is of proven value.
-
Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed · Jun 2012
Review[Intensive medical care problems of hemato-oncological patients].
The life expectancy and prevalence of malignant diseases is continuously on the rise, which inevitably leads to an increase of critically ill cancer patients. This article explains why the prognosis of cancer patients in the intensive care unit has markedly improved over the last decades, what the reasons for admission are and which risk factors affect mortality. ⋯ Accordingly, acute respiratory failure for example is the most common organ dysfunction in these patients and has specific prognostic, diagnostic and therapeutic characteristics. The successful management of cancer patients in the intensive care unit requires specific knowledge of the intensive care physician and an excellent cooperation with the treating hematologist and oncologist.