Journal of critical care
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Journal of critical care · Dec 2000
Venous thromboembolic disease: an observational study in medical-surgical intensive care unit patients.
Acute and chronic illness, immobility, and procedural and pharmacologic interventions may predispose patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) to venous thromboembolic (VTE) disease. The purpose of this study was to observe potential risk factors and diagnostic tests for VTE, and prophylaxis against VTE in medical-surgical ICU patients. ⋯ Several ICU-acquired risk factors for VTE were documented in this medical-surgical ICU. VTE prophylaxis was underprescribed, and VTE diagnostic tests were infrequent. Further research is required to determine the incidence, predisposing factors, attributable morbidity, mortality, and costs of VTE in medical-surgical ICU patients, the optimal diagnostic test strategies, and the most cost-effective approaches of prophylaxis.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 2000
Comparative StudyNoninvasive hemodynamic monitoring for early warning of adult respiratory distress syndrome in trauma patients.
Traditionally hemodynamic patterns after adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are described after appropriate diagnostic criteria have been met, but studies begun after the diagnosis of ARDS miss the antecedent circulatory influences that may contribute to its development. This study tests the hypothesis that noninvasive monitoring before the appearance of ARDS may reveal early circulatory deficiencies that lead to this disorder. The aims of this study are as follows: (1) to describe the time course of hemodynamic and tissue perfusion patterns in severely traumatized postoperative patients from the period immediately after admission and during surgical repair to the time that ARDS developed or to hospital discharge in patients who did not develop ARDS, (2) to compare the time course of these patterns in survivors and nonsurvivors of ARDS, and (3) to suggest that reduced flow and perfusion may be early warning signs of ARDS. Prospective descriptive study of severely injured trauma patients noninvasively monitored in the emergency department, operating room, and intensive care unit (ICU). Early hemodynamic pattems were described in the surviving and nonsurviving patients who subsequently developed ARDS. The study was performed in a University-affiliated Level I trauma center and ICU. ⋯ Early noninvasive monitoring in the emergency department, operating room, and ICU showed reduced cardiac and tissue perfusion functions in patients who subsequently developed ARDS. These patterns were more pronounced in the ARDS patients who died; these patterns may serve as early warning of ARDS.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 2000
Clinical TrialThe effect of varying inspiratory flow waveforms on pulmonary mechanics in critically ill patients.
Ten mechanically ventilated patients were evaluated to determine the effect of three different inspiratory flow patterns on pulmonary mechanics. ⋯ These results indicate that critically ill mechanically ventilated patients show improved respiratory mechanics with decelerating inspiratory waveform that may have beneficial clinical implication.
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Journal of critical care · Dec 2000
Time-weighted nursing demand is a better predictor than midnight census of nursing supply in an intensive care unit.
Labor costs are the largest fraction of operating costs in an intensive care unit (ICU). Estimation of appropriate nursing supply is frequently based on the midnight census of patients, which is a "snapshot" view of the ICU. We postulated that the midnight census would not correlate as well as time-weighted nursing demand (a calculation of need for nursing staff) with the actual number of nurses who were required to staff the ICU (nursing supply). The purpose of this study was to compare the correlation between midnight census and actual nursing supply with the correlation between time-weighted nursing demand and nursing supply. ⋯ Time-weighted nursing demand is a better predictor than midnight census of nursing supply in an ICU.