Critical care medicine
-
Critical care medicine · Jul 1979
ReviewMultisystem failure: a review with special reference to drowning.
Near-drowning represents an insult that can affect all organ systems. A common pathway for injury is hypoxemia, acidosis, and hypoperfusion. ⋯ Variations in vascular volume, heart failure, renal failure, coagulation disorders, and electrolyte disturbances may also be present. Patients should be observed for multisystem failure and therapy tailored to the particular needs of each victim.
-
Critical care medicine · Jul 1979
Comparative StudyRelative importance of alpha and beta adrenergic receptors during resuscitation.
Successful resuscitation from cardiac arrest in the asphyxiated dog model has been ascribed to the use of artificial ventilation, closed chest cardiac massage, and administration of a vasopressor. Controversy remains over whether the most commonly employed vasopressor, epinephrine, exerts its effects primarily by elevating diastolic pressure and reestablishing coronary flow, or by exciting cardiac pacemaker cells and enhancing myocardial contractility. ⋯ The appearance of the ECG during cardiac arrest and resuscitation could in no way be used to predict the outcome of resuscitation attempts. Results suggest that, initially, alpha receptor stimulation with concomitant diastolic pressure elevation is more important to the success of resuscitation than beta receptor stimulation.
-
Critical care medicine · Jun 1979
Comparative StudyImpact of cardiopulmonary resuscitation training on resuscitation.
Restoration of adequate spontaneous circulation after "arrest" and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) of 546 patients before and 460 patients after initiation of a CPR training course in a 500-bed city hospital is reported. Between January 1972 and June 1976, adequate circulation after CPR was present in 38.6% of patients before and 50.4% after training ICU nurses and house physicians in modern resuscitation techniques. Factors crucial to resumption of adequate circulation are: (1) CPR training of all hospital personnel so that effective CPR can be started immediately after recognition of an arrest situation, (2) production of a palpable pulse with closed chest cardiac massage, and (3) prompt effective therapy so that the time interval between arrest and resumption of adequate spontaneous circulation is short.
-
Critical care medicine · May 1979
Partial obstruction of endotracheal tubes in children: incidence, etiology, significance.
We examined 99 endotracheal tubes removed from 81 pediatric patients to determine the incidence of partial endotracheal tube obstruction and predisposing factors. The overall incidence of obstruction was 20.2% (20/99); 14 of the 20 obstructed tubes were occluded less than 50%. General anesthesia during the period of intubation was the only factor significantly associated with an increased incidence of obstruction (p less than 0.05). ⋯ Among the 71 tubes from patients who received general anesthesia, a tube size of 4 mm or less was associated with an increased incidence of obstruction (p less than 0.05). Pressure-flow curves for three different sizes of endotracheal tubes were constructed to determine the increase in resistance produced by different degrees of obstruction. At flow rates that approximated those found in children during quiet breathing, the resistance of tubes that were 50% obstructed was 4 times greater than that found in unobstructed tubes.