Intensive care medicine
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Intensive care medicine · May 1999
Partial liquid ventilation combined with kinetic therapy in acute respiratory failure in piglets.
To investigate the effect of the combination of kinetic therapy (KT) with partial liquid ventilation (PLV) on gas exchange, lung mechanics and hemodynamics in acute lung injury (ALI). ⋯ The additional use of KT did not show beneficial effects on oxygenation and lung mechanics during PLV. However, at constant minute ventilation PaCO2 levels were significantly lower during PLV/KT, indicating some positive influence on the ventilation/perfusion distribution within the lung. Extreme body positions during PLV/KT did not show any significant hemodynamic side effects.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialTrial of dexamethasone treatment for severe bacterial meningitis in adults. Adult Meningitis Steroid Group.
To evaluate the clinical benefit of early adjunctive dexamethasone therapy for severe bacterial meningitis in adults. ⋯ Bacterial meningitis is still a severe disease in adults, since the overall observed rate of death or severe neurologic sequelae was 26.7%. The reported data are inconclusive regarding a systematic use of dexamethasone as an adjunctive therapy for bacterial meningitis in adults. Moreover this treatment impairs antibiotic penetration into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that can lead to therapeutic failure, particularly in areas with high or increasing rates of penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1999
Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialQ.E.D. Alcohol test: a simple and quick method to detect ethanol in saliva of patients in emergency departments. Comparison with the conventional determination in blood.
The aim of this pilot study was to assess whether ethanol concentrations in saliva are comparable to those in blood and to evaluate whether this new non-invasive saliva alcohol test is suitable for use in emergency departments. ⋯ The Q.E.D. Alcohol Test A 350, which uses saliva, is well suited for quantitative determination of alcohol levels. The levels measured in saliva correlate well with those measured in blood at both the lower and the upper end of the scale. Because this test is quick and easy to perform by emergency room personnel and the results are accurate enough for clinical purposes, it should prove valuable to determine whether impaired consciousness is related to alcohol intoxication or to other likely causes.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialAdditional inspiratory work of breathing imposed by tracheostomy tubes and non-ideal ventilator properties in critically ill patients.
To determine the tracheostomy tube-related additional work of breathing (WOBadd) in critically ill patients and to show its reduction by different ventilatory modes. ⋯ The results indicate that, depending on respiratory flow rate, (1) tracheostomy tubes can cause a considerable amount of WOBadd, and (2) ATC, in contrast to IPS, is a suitable mode to compensate for WOBadd at any ventilatory effort of the patient.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1999
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialEvaluation of a new, rapid lactate analyzer in critical care.
To determine the reliability, precision and clinical usefulness of a newly developed substrate-specific lactate/blood gas analyzer (Chiron M865). ⋯ The new Chiron lactate analyzer is reliable for serial whole blood lactate measurements in an intensive care stat laboratory. Samples should be kept on ice immediately after sampling to minimize in vitro erythrocyte production of lactate.