Medicina intensiva
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Ischemic optic neuropathy is an uncommon of blindness in the critically ill patient that occurs especially in multiple trauma victims with no direct injury of the eyeball. We present the case of a young male patient with total bilateral blindness after profound hemorrhagic shock secondary to thoracoabdominal non-penetrating traumatism caused by crushing. A search of the literature was conducted, identifying prolonged arterial hypotension and sudden drop in hematocrit value as the most important risk factors.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
[Use of antibiotics for the treatment of multiresistant gram positive cocci infections in critical patients].
This study has been designed to know the use of these antibiotics (ATB) in Intensive Care Units (ICUs). ⋯ The most common use of this ATB was to treat ICU-acquired infections. VAN was the most frequently used drug. Treatments with LZD were modified less frequently for clinical failure and this drug was the one most used in rescue therapies. This information indicates an appropriate use of these ATB in an important percentage of critically patients.
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Organ transplant constitutes one of the most encouraging advances in the history of the medicine. The organ transplants that were a distant challenge in the seventies currently are a routine procedure in the medical practice that has contributed to extending survival and quality of life in the general population. Spain has reached the highest rate for donation and transplants per one million inhabitants worldwide, this extraordinary health care work being a combined achievement of Spanish Health Care System. The objective of this article is to review the indications of solid organ transplants and their long-term outcomes, evaluating the impact on the health-related quality of life in solid organ transplant recipients.
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Review Comparative Study
[Up-date in spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage].
Non-aneurismatic spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage or intracranial hemorrhage accounts for 10-15% of total cerebral vascular accidents. Depending on its site it can may be intraparenchymal or intraventricular. The most frequent location is in the basal ganglia and its predominant etiology is poorly-controlled arterial hypertension. ⋯ Cerebral hemorrhage is not a monophasic phenomenon which abates immediately, because the hematoma continues to increase in the first 24 hours. Due to this reason and because of their characteristics of the disease itself, these are critical patients who must be admitted in to Intensive Care Unit where hemodynamic and cardiorespiratory control should be made as well as strict monitoring of the awareness level and remaining neuromonitoring standard parameters. In this paper, we review some aspects of the epidemiology, physiopathology, clinical presentation, diagnosis and the different therapeutic options, performing an up-date on the treatment of intracranial hemorrhage from both the medical and surgical point of view.
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Comparative Study
[Bias in time delay in ICU admission as a mortality risk factor or "lead time bias"].
To assess if delay in admission to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), measured according to the prognostic estimation of survival in critical patients (EPEC) system, influences the final outcome of patients admitted to our ICU. ⋯ Our study does not make it possible to relate lead time bias with patient survival. Due to the EPEC design, it is possible to differentiate "physiopathological delay" (inappropriate detection of the critical situation) and "logistic delay" (conditioned by factors such as lack of available beds). Our study as well as the EPEC only considers the latter. It cannot be ruled out that the increase in mortality regarding prognosis is directly related with first type of delay and not with the overall lead time bias.