Pharmacotherapy
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Managing anemia in the critically ill patient.
Anemia of critical illness is a multifactorial condition caused by phlebotomy, ongoing blood loss, and inadequate production of red blood cells. It occurs early in the course of critical illness. Although red blood cell transfusion is the treatment of choice for immediate management of anemia in the intensive care unit, controversy surrounds the most appropriate hemoglobin concentration or hematocrit "trigger." Therapeutic options, including blood-conservation tools, minimization of phlebotomy, erythropoietic agents, and investigational oxygen-carrying agents, may be alternatives to red blood cell transfusions in critically ill patients with anemia. Patient selection for erythropoietic agents will depend on further work dealing with outcomes and the total cost of care in managing the anemia of critical illness.
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The frequency of invasive fungal infections (IFIs) has increased with the increase in number of high-risk patients. United States trends in mortality due to invasive mycoses showed a striking increase in the past 2 decades. Human immunodeficiency virus-associated opportunistic mycoses accounted for part of the increase, as did mycoses in other immunocompromised populations. ⋯ The echinocandin class has one drug approved for clinical use--caspofungin, which targets the fungal cell wall. Deciding which antifungal agent to use involves weighing such clinical factors as mycoses susceptibility and drug toxicity, as well as pharmacoeconomic considerations. Besides the price of the drug, the cost of antifungal therapy includes costs of mortality associated with failed treatment, prolonged hospitalization and treatment related to complications, and additional antifungal treatment to compensate for primary treatment failure.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The antipyretic effect of ibuprofen and acetaminophen in children.
To determine whether evidence in the medical literature supports ibuprofen or acetaminophen for reducing fever in children. ⋯ Acetaminophen and ibuprofen have equal tolerability. Acetaminophen produced a greater body temperature reduction at 0.5 hour after intervention compared with ibuprofen. However, ibuprofen provides a longer duration of antipyretic effect than acetaminophen 4 hours after intervention, and the initial temperature decrement lasts longer.
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A 42-year-old man was brought to the emergency department with ethylene glycol intoxication. He was hemodynamically stable and had normal renal function. His serum ethylene glycol concentration was 284 mg/dl approximately 1 hour after ethylene glycol consumption. ⋯ Elimination pharmacokinetics in this patient were compared with that in a patient who received fomepizole and hemodialysis. Fomepizole monotherapy can be given in patients without renal failure or metabolic acidosis even with serum ethylene glycol concentrations greater than 50 mg/dl. However, cost estimates based on this case suggest that if the patient is treated adequately with a single hemodialysis session and 24-hour hospitalization, then fomepizole monotherapy may be more expensive than the combination regimen of fomepizole and hemodialysis.
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Severe sepsis is an infection-induced process that often promotes organ dysfunction and death in up to 50% of afflicted patients. Clinical advances that improve patient survival include early goal-directed volume resuscitation, broad-spectrum empiric antimicrobial therapy with deescalation strategies, therapy with drotrecogin alfa (activated), glucocorticoid replacement in patients with adrenal insufficiency, and tight control of blood glucose levels. The challenge for critical care practitioners is to integrate the many pharmacologic and supportive interventions required for optimal care of these patients.