Critical care clinics
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Critical care clinics · Jan 2023
ReviewBrain Death/Death by Neurological Criteria: International Standardization and the World Brain Death Project.
This article reviews the criteria for determination of brain death, discusses the importance of protocol development, and reviews the international efforts to standardize clinical testing.
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Diseases of the peripheral nervous system create an additional diagnostic conundrum within the intensive care setting. Causes are vast, presentations are myriad, and symptoms are often ill-defined or misidentified. Care benefits from a multidisciplinary approach including a neuromuscular specialist, rehabilitation services, and a specialty pharmacist in addition to the neurocritical care team. In general, survivors achieve a good functional recovery relative to their preintensive care unit baseline.
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Supplemental oxygen is an essential medication in critical care. The optimal oxygen dose delivery system remains unclear, however. ⋯ Regrettably, LMICS often experience significant inequities in oxygen supply and demand, with major impacts on preventable mortality. These inequities have become particularly prominent during the global COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the need for additional investment and research into the best methods to utilize supplemental oxygen and ensure stable access to medical oxygen.
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Critical care clinics · Oct 2022
ReviewThe State of Global Trauma and Acute Care Surgery/Surgical Critical Care.
Trauma is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality globally, with a significant burden attributable to the low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where more than 90% of injury-related deaths occur. Road injuries contribute largely to the economic burden from trauma and are prevalent among adolescents and young adults. Trauma systems vary widely across the world in their capacity of providing basic and critical care to injured patients, with delays in treatment being present at multiple levels at LMICs. Strengthening existing systems by providing cost-effective and efficient solutions can help mitigate the injury burden in LMICs.
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Critical illness is common throughout the world and is associated with high costs of care and resource intensity. The Corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic created a sudden surge of critically ill patients, which in turn led to devastating effects on health care systems worldwide and more so in Africa. This narrative report describes how an attempt was made at bridging the existing gaps in quality of care for critically ill patients at national and regional levels for COVID and the postpandemic era in a low income country.