Journal of intensive care medicine
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J Intensive Care Med · Nov 2007
Case ReportsExtracorporeal life support in severe propranolol and verapamil intoxication.
Combined poisoning with calcium-channel blockers and beta-blockers is usually associated with severe heart failure. This report shows the effectiveness of emergency extracorporeal life support in treating life-threatening simultaneous propranolol and verapamil intoxication. A 15-year-old girl presented in cardiogenic shock after alcohol consumption and a propranolol and verapamil overdose; plasma concentrations: propranolol, 0.53 m/mL; verapamil, 1.06 mg/mL. ⋯ Emergency extracorporeal life support can successfully maintain vital organ blood flow and allows time for drug metabolism, redistribution, and removal. Therapeutic plasma exchange may reduce the time of emergency extracorporeal life support. Emergency extracorporeal life support should be considered early in cases of near-fatal intoxications with cardiodepressive drugs.
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Overt status epilepticus and persistent obtundation after a witnessed clinical seizure are neurologic emergencies. Early recognition and intervention in the electroclinical syndrome of status epilepticus reduces morbidity, although treatment of the underlying etiology is also critical. ⋯ This review is written from the perspective of the intensive care unit clinician, and the approach and opinions expressed stem from clinical experience and review of the current literature. Particular attention is given to an overall approach to the management of convulsive status epilepticus in adults and older children as well as exploring novel approaches and diagnostic tools that may prove useful in difficult-to-control status epilepticus.
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J Intensive Care Med · Nov 2007
Clinical utility of B-type natriuretic peptide in early severe sepsis and septic shock.
B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) has diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic utility in critically ill patients. For severe sepsis and septic shock patients in particular, similar clinical utility from the most proximal aspects of hospital presentation to the intensive care unit has not been examined. BNP levels were measured at 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 hours in 252 patients presenting to the emergency department with severe sepsis and septic shock. ⋯ When adjusted for age, gender, history of heart failure, renal function, organ dysfunction, and mean arterial pressure, a BNP greater than 210 pg/mL at 24 hours was the most significant independent indicator of increased mortality: odds ratio 1.061 (1.026-1.097), P < .001, 95% confidence interval. Patients with severe sepsis and septic shock often have elevated BNP levels, which are significantly associated with organ and myocardial dysfunction, global tissue hypoxia, and mortality. Serial BNP levels may be a useful adjunct in the early detection, stratification, treatment, and prognostication of high-risk patients.