Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Apr 1993
Aminoglycoside volume of distribution and illness severity in critically ill septic patients.
The volume of distribution of amikacin and the APACHE II score were determined in 42 critically ill patients being treated for a gram-negative infection. The mean volume of distribution (Vdt) was 0.41 +/- 0.12 l/kg with a wide range (normal of 0.25 l/kg). ⋯ Critically ill patients should receive larger loading doses of aminoglycosides in order to achieve therapeutic blood levels. The aminoglycoside Vdt may be useful in determining the degree of capillary leak and tissue oedema that accompanies sepsis.
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Chronic phenytoin therapy causes resistance to some nondepolarising muscle relaxants. We have confirmed that this resistance is seen with vecuronium and suggest that at least a week of phenytoin therapy is required for a significant effect to develop. ⋯ We have shown that an exaggerated rise in serum potassium after succinylcholine does not occur in patients with demonstrated resistance to vecuronium from chronic phenytoin therapy. This would suggest that significant extrajunctional acetylcholine receptor proliferation is an unlikely mechanism.
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Hypothetical clinical cases were used to investigate transfusion-related decision-making. Three red cell, three fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and three albumin transfusion decision cases were administered by questionnaire to 228 medical staff. The transfusion decision triggers were identified and comparisons made between resident and specialist groups and between Melbourne and Sydney participants. ⋯ FFP administration was influenced by an abnormal coagulation test, the presence of co-morbidities and by the number of red cell units transfused. The administration of albumin, concentrated or 5% SPPS, was influenced by the period of hospitalisation and clinical circumstances such as a falling urine output postoperatively, and by the presence of hypotensive complications. Different transfusion responses were noted: resident staff transfused red cells and FFP earlier than specialists; Sydney specialists were more conservative of red cell transfusion; Melbourne specialists more conservative of FFP administration and surgeons were four times more likely to transfuse patients than physicians or anesthetists at certain haemoglobin values.