Intensive care medicine
-
Intensive care medicine · Nov 2000
Body position does not influence the location of ventilator-induced lung injury.
To ascertain whether the locations of ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) are influenced by body position. ⋯ Body position affected the time course of the development of VILI, but it did not affect the location.
-
Intensive care medicine · Nov 2000
Letter Case ReportsHemophagocytic syndrome in the critically ill.
-
Intensive care medicine · Oct 2000
The effects of inhibiting leukocyte migration with fucoidin in a rat peritonitis model.
To study the effects of fucoidin on leukocyte rolling and emigration and bacterial colonization in a peritonitis sepsis model in rats. ⋯ In an intra-abdominal model of sepsis we found that treatment with fucoidin induces leukocytosis inhibits leukocyte rolling and reduces leukocyte emigration in the abdominal cavity, lungs, and liver. Reduction in the number of emigrating leukocytes was not associated with an increase in bacterial counts found in the examined organs.
-
Intensive care medicine · Oct 2000
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyRatios of observed to expected mortality are affected by differences in case mix and quality of care.
To validate SAPS II-AM, a recently customized version of the Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPS II) in a larger cohort of Austrian intensive care patients and to evaluate the effect of the customization process on the ratio of observed to expected mortality. ⋯ Today's severity scoring systems, such as the SAPS II, are limited by not measuring (and adjusting for) a profound part of what constitutes case mix. Changes in the distribution of patient characteristics (known and unknown) therefore affect prognostic accuracy. First-level customization was not able to solve all these problems. Using O/E ratios for quality of care comparisons one must therefore be critical when using these data and should search for possible confounding factors. In the case of unsatisfactory calibration, customized severity of illness models may be useful as an adjunct for quality control.
-
We studied an ultrasound sign, the fleeting appearance of a lung pattern (lung sliding or pathologic comet-tail artifacts) replacing a pneumothorax pattern (absent lung sliding plus exclusive horizontal lines) in a particular location of the chest wall. This sign was called the "lung point". ⋯ The presence of a "lung point" allows positive diagnosis of pneumothorax at the bedside using ultrasound.