Critical care medicine
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Biomedical ethics has assumed an increasingly important role in medicine over the past 30 yrs, and its development has served the important goal of protecting patients' rights and interests. However, medical ethics has evolved within a Western tradition, and conflict often arises when trying to apply Western medical ethics to patients from other cultures. Using Hong Kong as an example, this article reviews the nature and sources of cross-cultural conflict in the intensive care unit setting that often arises between physicians trained in Western medicine and patients from a Chinese cultural background. ⋯ Hong Kong presents an interesting case study because of the coexistence of Western and Chinese medicine in a predominantly Chinese population that practices many Chinese cultural traditions. Whereas contemporary Western medical ethics focuses on individual rights, autonomy, and self-determination, traditional Chinese societies place greater emphasis on such community values as harmony, responsibility, and respect for parents and ancestors. Specific areas of cross-cultural conflict include: the role of the patient and family in medical decision-making; the disclosure of unfavorable medical information to critically ill patients; the discussion of advance directives or code status with patients; and the withholding or withdrawal of life support.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1998
Severity-of-illness scores for neutropenic cancer patients in an intensive care unit: Which is the best predictor? Do multiple assessment times improve the predictive value?
To use three severity of illness scores to estimate the probability of hospital mortality among patients with cancer and neutropenia; to compare the performance of these scores, calculated at admission to an intensive care unit (ICU); and to test the improvement in estimation obtained by taking into account the first 72-hr period. ⋯ For cancer patients hospitalized in an ICU for a neutropenic episode, the severity of illness and the risk of death can be accurately assessed by the SAPS II score and the number of acute organ failures at admission. The OSF values on the first and third days of hospitalization both provided information, allowing the classification of patients into groups with different probabilities of hospital mortality.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1998
Frequency and methodologic rigor of quality-of-life assessments in the critical care literature.
To present a framework for describing/measuring quality of life (QOL) and health-related quality of life (HRQL), and to assess the frequency and methodologic rigor of QOL studies in the adult critical care literature. ⋯ QOL assessments occur infrequently in the ICU literature and are of limited methodologic quality. More studies using valid and reliable instruments are necessary to document the long-term QOL of critically ill patients, especially those at risk of a "poor" outcome.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1998
Attenuation of ventilator-induced acute lung injury in an animal model by inhibition of neutrophil adhesion by leumedins (NPC 15669).
Beta2-integrin (CD11b/CD18) expression, an indicator of neutrophil activation, has been associated with the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome. Leumedins act directly on leukocytes to inhibit the up-regulated expression of beta2-integrins involved in leukocyte adhesion. We examined the effect of such a new anti-inflammatory agent, NPC 15669 (N-[9H-(2,7-dimethylfluorenyl-9-methoxy)-carbonyl]-L-leucine), on neutrophil-mediated acute lung injury in an animal model. ⋯ NPC 15669 seems to block inflammatory reactions by inhibiting the sequestration of neutrophils in acute, ventilator-associated lung injury. As a result, gas exchange and total lung compliance improve. Application of this and similar compounds affecting neutrophil adhesion warrants further investigation as a treatment modality for acute lung injury.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1998
Pentoxifylline prevention of altered hepatocyte calcium regulation during hemorrhagic shock/resuscitation.
To evaluate the effect of pentoxifylline on altered hepatocyte calcium regulation and hepatocyte oxidant injury after hemorrhagic shock. ⋯ The protective effects of pentoxifylline could be attributed to its known anti-inflammatory properties reducing excessive in vivo stimulation of hepatocytes by Ca2+ agonistic mediators and attenuating oxygen radical-related disturbances of transmembrane Ca2+ transport mechanisms. Since altered cellular Ca2+ regulation is a key event of cellular dysfunction, resuscitation with pentoxifylline after hemorrhagic shock/resuscitation may provide an adjuvant therapeutic tool to prevent postischemic hepatic failure.