Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Dec 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical TrialImpact of multiple risk factors and ranitidine prophylaxis on the development of stress-related upper gastrointestinal bleeding: a prospective, multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial. The Ranitidine Head Injury Study Group.
To evaluate the impact of risk factors on the development of stress-related upper gastrointestinal bleeding in severe head injury patients randomized to treatment with a 6.25 mg/hr continuous ranitidine infusion or placebo. ⋯ The full risk to develop stress-related upper gastrointestinal bleeding was realized when two risk factors were present concomitantly. The presence of additional risk factors did not increase the occurrence of bleeding. A continuous infusion of ranitidine at 6.25 mg/hr provided significant protection from bleeding, regardless of the number of risk factors present.
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Critical care medicine · Dec 1993
Multicenter Study Clinical TrialPrognostic value of the dobutamine test in patients with sepsis syndrome and normal lactate values: a prospective, multicenter study.
To determine the oxygen supply (DO2) and uptake (VO2) responses to a 60-min dobutamine infusion in critically ill septic patients without circulatory shock and with normal blood lactate concentrations. Also, to determine whether these responses would predict outcome. ⋯ Most of these septic patients without shock or hyperlactatemia responded to dobutamine infusion in one of two ways: with little increase in DO2 and no increase in VO2, or with significant increases in both DO2 and VO2. The latter response is typical of healthy volunteers given dobutamine. Because of the calorigenic effect of dobutamine, our results imply nothing about the presence or absence of oxygen supply limitation. Still, patients who had increases in DO2 and VO2 had a much higher survival rate than patients who did not. We speculate that the inability of some patients to respond to dobutamine and the associated higher mortality rate may be related to beta-adrenoreceptor dysfunction.