Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · May 1989
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialEffects of pentastarch and albumin infusion on cardiorespiratory function and coagulation in patients with severe sepsis and systemic hypoperfusion.
Twenty consecutive patients with severe sepsis were randomized to fluid challenge with 5% albumin or 10% low MW hydroxyethyl starch (pentastarch) solutions. Fluid challenge was administered iv as 250 ml of test colloid every 15 min until the pulmonary artery wedge pressure (WP) was greater than or equal to 15 mm Hg or a maximum dose of 2000 ml was infused. Hemodynamic, respiratory, and coagulation profiles were measured before and after fluid infusion. ⋯ Both colloid infusions resulted in similar increases in cardiac output, stroke output, and stroke work. The effect of fluid infusion with pentastarch on coagulation was not significantly different from albumin, although pentastarch was associated with a 45% decrease in factor VIII:c. We conclude that pentastarch is equivalent to albumin for fluid resuscitation of patients with severe sepsis.
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Critical care medicine · May 1989
Sepsis syndrome: a valid clinical entity. Methylprednisolone Severe Sepsis Study Group.
The sepsis syndrome represents a systemic response to infection and is defined as hypothermia (temperature less than 96 degrees F) or hyperthermia (greater than 101 degrees F), tachycardia (greater than 90 beat/min), tachypnea (greater than 20 breath/min), clinical evidence of an infection site and with at least one end-organ demonstrating inadequate perfusion or dysfunction expressed as poor or altered cerebral function, hypoxemia (PaO2 less than 75 torr), elevated plasma lactate, or oliguria (urine output less than 30 ml/h or 0.5 ml/kg body weight.h without corrective therapy). One hundred ninety-one patients with the sepsis syndrome were evaluated prospectively and comprised the placebo group of a multicenter trial of methylprednisolone in sepsis syndrome and septic shock. Forty-five percent of the patients were found to be bacteremic. ⋯ Mortality for the patients with sepsis syndrome who did not develop shock was 13%. Mortality for the groups of patients with shock on admission and shock postadmission was 27.5% and 43.2%, respectively. Forty-seven percent of the bacteremic patients developed shock after study admission compared to 29.6% of the nonbacteremic patients (p less than .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Critical care medicine · May 1989
Comparative StudyComparison of two simplified severity scores (SAPS and APACHE II) for patients with acute myocardial infarction.
The Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS), the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II), the Acute Physiology Score (APS), and the Coronary Prognostic Index (CPI), calculated within the first 24 h of ICU admission, were compared in 76 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Sixteen (21%) patients subsequently died in the ICU. The nonsurvivors had significantly higher SAPS, APACHE II, and CPI scores than the survivors. ⋯ There were no significant differences either between the areas under the ROC curves drawn for SAPS, APACHE II, and CPI, or between the overall accuracies of these indices. APS provided less homogeneous information. We conclude that SAPS and APACHE II, two severity indices which are easy to use, assess accurately the short-term prognosis, i.e., the ICU outcome, of patients with AMI.
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Critical care medicine · May 1989
Volume monitor for mechanical ventilation in the hyperbaric chamber.
Treatment of critically ill patients requiring ventilatory support and hemodynamic monitoring in the hyperbaric medicine department is a frequent occurrence. We provide mechanical ventilation principally with the Penlon Oxford ventilator; however, its simple design lacks volume, rate, and disconnect monitors. ⋯ To our knowledge, this is the only battery-driven monitor on the market that provides rate, volume, apnea, and minute ventilation within the same unit. It should be used as an adjunct to the Penlon Oxford ventilator in the hyperbaric chamber.
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Critical care medicine · May 1989
Intravenous lipids in newborn lungs: thromboxane-mediated effects.
Lipid infusions can interfere with oxygenation and cause pulmonary hypertension. We studied the effects of iv lipid infusions on pulmonary hemodynamics and oxygen transport to investigate whether the vasoconstrictor, thromboxane (Tx), mediates resulting changes. Newborn piglets were instrumented to observe cardiopulmonary hemodynamics, blood gases, and oxygen contents. ⋯ TxB2 increased in all animals with iv lipid (276 +/- 295 to 1481 +/- 716 in PL; 228 +/- 110 to 1402 +/- 580 in SQ), and fell with intervention in the SQ animals only (2632 +/- 1236 vs. 964 +/- 305, respectively; p less than .02). In conclusion, interference with DO2 associated with pulmonary hypertension and increased TxB2 occurred with iv lipid infusion in piglets. Tx antagonism ameliorated these changes.