Current opinion in infectious diseases
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Curr. Opin. Infect. Dis. · Apr 2013
ReviewBlood biomarkers for personalized treatment and patient management decisions in community-acquired pneumonia.
In patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), blood biomarkers can help to substantially improve individual decisions involving initiation, (de-)intensification, and cessation of antibiotics, and initial risk stratification, site-of-care assignment (outpatient versus ward versus ICU), and discharge. To illustrate these processes, this review summarizes recent findings from trials investigating the use of two hormokines, procalcitonin (PCT) or proadrenomedullin (ProADM), in personalized treatment and management decisions in CAP patients. ⋯ Inclusion of biomarker data in clinical algorithms improves individual decision-making in CAP patients. Interventional trials should be conducted to determine these markers' ultimate utility in patient management.
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Pneumonia is considered the leading infectious diseases cause of death and the seventh leading cause of death overall in the US. There is significant interest in understanding the relationship between community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and mortality. ⋯ Despite advances in the understanding of long-term mortality among CAP patients, there is still a high unacceptable long-term mortality. Public health programs should address this important gap, considering the high level of complexity factors in patients with CAP.
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Curr. Opin. Infect. Dis. · Apr 2013
ReviewRespiratory therapy device modifications to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a controversial entity in the field of critical care. After years of research and significant efforts from regulatory agencies and hospitals, this complication is still frequently affecting mechanically ventilated patients, making VAP an active battleground for research. As a result, several preventive measures have recently been tested in experimental and clinical trials. Our interest is focused on those innovations related to the endotracheal tube (ETT). ⋯ VAP prevention strategies are a continuously evolving field. Being able to identify the most valuable ideas needs a deep understanding of the disease pathophysiology. The role of the ETT is crucial and there is need for our standards of care to improve. This may soon be possible with newer technologies becoming increasingly available to clinicians.
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Pleural infection is a common and serious clinical problem that because of its high morbidity and mortality imposes a significant burden on clinicians, healthcare resources and patients of all ages. Defining the optimal management strategy for pleural infection remains a cause for research and debate. This review considers the areas of interest including bacteriology and antibiotic selection, intrapleural fibrinolytics and the role of surgery. ⋯ The high mortality in adults from pleural infection despite advances in clinical knowledge, diagnostics and therapeutics highlights the need for ongoing research. Future studies are required to focus on improving the clinical outcomes, with the identification of those patients at greatest risk of poor outcomes at presentation and most likely to benefit from more radical treatment a priority to allow the delivery of individualized care.
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Curr. Opin. Infect. Dis. · Apr 2013
ReviewDiagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia: controversies and working toward a gold standard.
The aim is to discuss the clinical, microbiologic, and radiological criteria used in the diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), distinguish between ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis (VAT) and VAP, and reconcile the proposed Centers for Disease Control surveillance criteria with clinical practice. ⋯ The clinical characteristics of VAP and VAT are similar and include fever, leukocytosis, and purulent sputum. An infiltrate on chest radiograph is consistent with VAP but lacks diagnostic precision, so it is not a criterion in the proposed surveillance definition and should be interpreted cautiously by clinicians. Microbiologically, quantitative and semiquantitative endotracheal aspirate cultures may be employed to diagnose VAP and VAT. Positive bronchoalveolar lavage and protected specimen brush cultures are useful only for the diagnosis of VAP. Experts should collaborate to develop consensus definitions for VAP and VAT that can be applied in practice.