Pharmacotherapy
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We analyzed the adequacy of pain control for 17 trauma patients during the initial part of their stay in the intensive care unit, and assessed reasons for inadequate analgesia, if it occurred. Patients, and physicians, and nurses were interviewed. A verbal pain intensity scale was used to determine whether patients received adequate analgesia. ⋯ Nurses administered less than the maximum amount ordered 58% of the time. The mean dosing interval was 2.3 hours. Barriers to adequate pain management were disparity in the perception of pain between patients and caregivers; patients not requesting more analgesia despite despite the presence of moderate to severe pain; and physician and nurse concerns about patients' adverse physiologic response to increased dosages.
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Case Reports
Severe withdrawal syndrome possibly associated with cessation of a midazolam and fentanyl infusion.
A 40-month-old child was sedated with a fentanyl and midazolam infusion for 7 days. After the drugs were discontinued he became unresponsive and globally aphasic, and had marked thrombocytosis. ⋯ Of interest, this patient had a reactive thrombocytosis at the time of onset of the withdrawal syndrome, and his decreased platelet count coincided with the return to normal cognitive and motor status. Based on this experience and other reports, we believe midazolam-fentanyl combination should be administered with caution.
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Comparative Study
Inappropriate vancomycin prescribing based on criteria from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Increasing reports of vancomycin resistance have raised concerns about the future effectiveness of this drug in treatment of critically ill patients with gram-positive infections. Due to these concerns the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently published criteria that delineate the prudent use of vancomycin. Using these criteria, we attempted to determine the appropriateness of vancomycin prescribing patterns at our institution. ⋯ When culture results were available, 28 (21%) patients inappropriately received the drug. Results of this study are similar to those of other studies of vancomycin use in hospitals based on non-CDC criteria. If CDC criteria are to have a positive impact on physicians' vancomycin prescribing patterns, significant educational efforts will be required.
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Editorial Comment
Vancomycin prescribing in the era of vancomycin-resistant enterococci.