Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Mar 2006
ReviewProviding critical care during a disaster: the interface between disaster response agencies and hospitals.
Recent natural disasters have highlighted shortfall areas in current hospital disaster preparedness. These include the following: 1) insufficient coordination between hospitals and civil/governmental response agencies; 2) insufficient on-site critical care capability; 3) a lack of "portability" of acute care processes (i.e., patient transport and/or bringing care to the patient); 4) education shortfalls; and 5) the inability of hospitals to align disaster medical requirements with other competing priorities. ⋯ Definition of the roles and responsibilities of a hospital during a disaster requires additional planning precision beyond the prehospital response phase. Planners must also better define plans for circumstances when or if a hospital is rendered unusable. Disaster medical training of hospital personnel has been inadequate. This article details the specifics of these issues and outlines various potential approaches to begin addressing and formulating remedies to these shortfalls.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 2006
Impact of medical complications on outcome after subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Medical complications occur frequently after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Their impact on outcome remains poorly defined. ⋯ Fever, anemia, and hyperglycemia affect 30% to 54% of patients with SAH and are significantly associated with mortality and poor functional outcome. Critical care strategies directed at maintaining normothermia, normoglycemia, and prevention of anemia may improve outcome after SAH.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 2006
Four methods of measuring tidal volume during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation.
Assess the accuracy of four different methods of measuring tidal volume during simulated high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. ⋯ Tidal volume can be measured during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation using a variety of techniques. Frequency-specific calibration improves the accuracy and precision of tidal volume measurements. Hot wire anemometry exhibits stable performance characteristics across the range of temperature, humidity, Fio2, and inspiratory/expiratory ratios encountered clinically, has a small deadspace, is unaffected by mean airway pressure, and is therefore suitable for clinical applications.
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To estimate the effects of age on 6-month survival of critically ill patients with cancer. ⋯ Aging was associated with increased mortality, especially for patients>60 yrs. The severity of organ failures and the presence of uncontrolled cancer were the main predictive factors, but there were important differences among the outcome predictors for young and elderly patients. Our results suggest that selected older patients with cancer can benefit from intensive care.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 2006
Multicenter StudyMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus prolongs intensive care unit stay in ventilator-associated pneumonia, despite initially appropriate antibiotic therapy.
To determine the impact of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) on length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) for patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and to control for the effect of initially inappropriate antibiotic treatment on outcomes by focusing only on persons who were given appropriate antibiotic therapy for their infection. ⋯ MRSA VAP independently prolongs the duration of ICU hospitalization, and in turn, increases overall costs, even for patients initially given appropriate antibiotic treatment. Confronting the adverse impact of MRSA will require efforts that address more than the initial antibiotic prescription.