Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1997
Clinical TrialMonitoring interactions between spontaneous respiration and mechanical inflations in preterm neonates.
To determine the value of a new bedside monitor in assessing the interactions between spontaneous respiratory activity and ventilator inflations in preterm infants; and to monitor continuously the degree of patient-ventilator synchrony and the stability of spontaneous respiratory effort during different modes of ventilation and in response to care procedures. ⋯ We describe a new kind of bedside monitor for the Interpretation of respiratory data. Unlike other methods, it is able to give the clinician a continuous measure of patient-ventilator interaction which is easy to interpret. It appears to have wide-spread application in neonatal intensive care nurseries where the babies' own breathing efforts can affect the efficiency of respiration and cause unwanted physiologic instability. The monitor can be used to determine the optimal ventilatory settings to
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1997
Colonization with antibiotic-resistant gram-negative organisms in a pediatric intensive care unit.
To measure the prevalence of colonization with antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative organisms and its association with potential risk factors, including antibiotic exposure, in a pediatric intensive care unit (ICU). ⋯ These data suggest that antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative organisms are a significant risk to intensively III children and that in many instances, they are imported into the unit or rapidly acquired from environmental reservoirs. Since risk factors for colonization are multiple, policies confined to antibiotic utilization within the ICU may have fixed, and possibly limited, benefit in their control.
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To look for relationships between the classification of sepsis and plasma cytokine concentrations. ⋯ According to the profiles of the cytokines, septic shock patients do not represent a homogeneous population. These profiles should be described in order to distinguish between patients, and the profiles may be useful to identify those patients susceptible to new therapies.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1997
Pulmonary vascular permeability after cardiopulmonary bypass and its relationship to oxidative stress.
To assess the relationship between oxidative stress resulting from cardiopulmonary bypass and the onset of increased pulmonary vascular permeability. ⋯ Pulmonary vascular permeability was significantly increased in patients postcardiopulmonary bypass compared with normal subjects. This patient population also had significantly increased plasma markers of lipid peroxidation compared with normal subjects. Cardiopulmonary bypass induced further increases in lipid peroxidation products but a substantial decrease in proteinaceous primary antioxidants. In the majority of patients, there was a significant correlation between the iron saturation of transferrin and the protein accumulation index.
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Critical care medicine · Mar 1997
Effects of eicosapentaenoic and gamma-linolenic acid on lung permeability and alveolar macrophage eicosanoid synthesis in endotoxic rats.
Proinflammatory eicosanoids (cyclooxgenase and lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid) released by alveolar macrophages play an important role in endotoxin-induced acute lung injury. We investigated the effect of prefeeding rats for 21 days with enteral diets that provided the anti-inflammatory fatty acids, eicosapentaenoic acid and gamma-linolenic acid (derived from fish oil and borage oil, respectively), as compared with an n-6 fatty acid-enriched diet (corn oil) on the following: a) lung microvascular protein permeability, arterial blood pressure, and platelet and white blood cells in a model of endotoxin-induced acute lung injury; b) alveolar macrophage prostaglandin and leukotriene synthesis; and c) liver and alveolar macrophage phospholipid fatty acid composition. ⋯ The severity of pulmonary microvascular protein permeability and the degree of hypotension were reduced with fish or fish and borage oil diets, as compared with corn oil, in endotoxic rats. The reduced synthesis of the proinflammatory arachidonic acid-derived mediators, leukotriene B4, thromboxane B2, and prostaglandin E2 from stimulated alveolar macrophages was indicative of a decrease in arachidonic acid and an increase in eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid in cell membrane phospholipids.