Journal of critical care
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Journal of critical care · Dec 1993
Comparative StudyEffect of pretreatment with anticonvulsants on theophylline-induced seizures in the rat.
Seizures, often with fatal outcome, are a manifestation of pronounced theophylline toxicity. Prodromal symptoms are not always apparent, and the seizures are reported to be, in certain cases, refractory to treatment with anticonvulsant drugs. The purpose of this investigation was to examine, by an established animal model, which of the commonly used anticonvulsants can reduce the central nervous system sensitivity to theophylline neurotoxicity and what should be the preferred treatment in cases in which theophylline toxicity is anticipated. ⋯ Theophylline concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid, brain, and serum were assayed by a high-performance liquid chromatography method. It was found that pretreatment with either clonazepam, diazepam, phenobarbital, or valproic acid increased the central nervous system thresholds to the theophylline-induced seizures, whereas phenytoin and magnesium sulphate did not attenuate the sensitivity of the brain to the stimulatory action of this widely used bronchodilator. Therefore, whenever theophylline toxicity is suspected, treatment with either diazepam, clonazepam, phenobarbital, or valproic acid can reduce the hazard associated with theophylline-induced seizures.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialSafety and efficacy of intravenous immunoglobulin prophylaxis in pediatric head trauma patients: a double-blind controlled trial.
Infection is one of the major complications of severe head trauma in children. To assess whether intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) decreases the incidence of secondary infection after head injury in children, a randomized, double-blind trial was performed. Thirty-three children (mean age, 6.67 years; mean injury severity score, 32.8; mean Glasgow coma score, 6.1) with severe head injuries were enrolled; 1 child was excluded, 18 received IVIg, and 14 received the placebo preparation. ⋯ There was no difference in the number of days on mechanical ventilation or in number of hospital days. There were no side effects. It is concluded that prophylactic administration of commercial IVIg at a dose of 400 mg/kg, although safe, had no effect on the incidence of secondary infections in children with severe head injuries.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 1993
Comparative StudyImportance of tonicity of carbicarb on the functional and metabolic responses of the acidotic isolated heart.
In this study, the physiological and metabolic effects of Carbicarb administered as an isotonic (150 mmol/L Na[n[]I+) or hypertonic (1 mol/L Na[n[]I+) solution over 2 minutes in the acidotic isolated heart were compared. Physiological monitoring as well as 31P and 23Na nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy were performed. Both isotonic and hypertonic Carbicarb induced comparable dose-dependent increases in intracellular pH as well as decreases in inorganic phosphate and increases in creatine phosphate concentrations, which were sustained for 20 minutes. ⋯ In this setting, hypertonic Carbicarb induced a large transient increase in cytosolic sodium, whereas isotonic Carbicarb caused immediate and sustained decreases in cytosolic sodium. These data suggest that isotonic Carbicarb may have more beneficial effects on cardiac function than hypertonic Carbicarb. These effects may be related to associated changes in cytosolic sodium.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 1993
What good are we doing? The role of clinical research in enhancing critical care medicine.
The amount of financial and other resources used by physicians in the treatment of critically ill patients makes it incumbent upon physicians to ensure that sufficient benefit is obtained from these resources and that physicians are in fact doing good for their patients. Knowing that one is in fact doing good requires an understanding of what counts as benefit. Current medical practice suggests that patient benefit is typically understood in terms of physiological changes and responses, highlighting the role of medical subspecialties in patient care. ⋯ This broader understanding calls for an ambitious research agenda so that physicians will be able to learn how they can genuinely help critically ill patients and their families during times of illness. Carrying out such an agenda requires overcoming the ethical challenges of performing research on patients as vulnerable as critically ill patients. It also requires physicians to establish collaborative ties with other professionals so that truly interdisciplinary research can be performed on a routine basis.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 1993
Absence of supply dependence of oxygen consumption in patients with septic shock.
We tested whether oxygen consumption (VO2) was dependent on oxygen delivery (QO2) in 10 patients with septic shock when QO2 was changed by the use of the inotropic agent, dobutamine. The mean acute physiology and chronic health evaluation (APACHE) II score of the patients was 27.3 +/- 8.1 with a mean blood pressure on entry of 66.8 +/- 12.4 mm Hg, and all had been volume resuscitated to a pulmonary artery occlusion pressure of greater than 10 mm Hg. We measured VO2 by analysis of respiratory gases (VO2G) while calculating VO2 by the Fick equation (VO2F) at three different O2 deliveries. ⋯ Neither lactic acidosis nor acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) conferred supply dependence of VO2G, but the presence of ARDS was predictive of death in this cohort. It is concluded that VO2 is independent of QO2 in patients with septic shock and lactic acidosis. These data confirm that maximizing QO2 beyond values achieved by initial fluid and vasoactive drug resuscitation of septic shock does not improve tissue oxygenation as determined by respiratory gas measurement of VO2.