Intensive care medicine
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Intensive care medicine · Jun 1997
Predictors of mortality and multiple organ failure in children with sepsis.
To assess the markers of perfusion which best discriminate survivors from non-survivors of childhood sepsis and to compare the information derived from gastric tonometry with conventionally measured haemodynamic and laboratory parameters. ⋯ Blood lactate level was the earliest predictor of outcome in children with sepsis. In this group of patients, gastric tonometry added little to the clinical information that could be derived more simply by other means.
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To evaluate the safety of percutaneous dilatational tracheostomy. ⋯ In the hands of the experienced, percutaneous dilatational tracheostomy is a safe and quick bedside procedure. It is also less expensive and incurs minimal stress for the patient compared with the surgical method. The technique can be easily mastered by non-surgical physicians and we feel that it is the method of choice for elective tracheostomy in the majority of intensive care patients.
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Intensive care medicine · Jun 1997
Validation of the simplified therapeutic intervention scoring system on an independent database.
To evaluate the performance of the Simplified Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System on an independent database and determine its relation with the Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System in the quantification of nursing workload in intensive care. ⋯ TISS-28 was validated on this independent population. The results indicate that TISS-28 can replace TISS-76 for the measurement of the nursing workload in Portuguese ICUs.
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Intensive care medicine · Jun 1997
Comparative StudyNew monitors of intravascular volume: a comparison of arterial pressure waveform analysis and the intrathoracic blood volume.
Two new monitoring techniques, the analysis of arterial pressure waveform during mechanical ventilation and the determination of intrathoracic blood volume, were evaluated for preload assessment in a model of graded hemorrhage. ⋯ The parameters of arterial pressure waveform analysis (SPV and dDOWN) and ITBV were sensitive estimates of cardiac preload during the early stages of hemorrhage. Measurement of SPV and dDOWN, being both sensitive and relatively noninvasive, has advantages over other methods of preload assessment but is limited to patients on controlled mechanical ventilation. ITBV, which supplies quantitative information about cardiac preload, is more invasive but can also be used in patients who are breathing spontaneously or who are on partial ventilatory support.
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Intensive care medicine · May 1997
Respiratory system mechanics in the early phase of acute respiratory failure due to severe kyphoscoliosis.
To evaluate respiratory mechanics in the early phase of decompensation in a group of seven patients with severe kyphoscoliosis (KS) (Cobb angle > 90 degrees) requiring mechanical ventilatory support. ⋯ During acute decompensation, both lung and chest-wall compliance are severely reduced in KS patients: conversely, and, contrary to that in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, increases in airway resistance and PEEPi seem to play only a secondary role.