Supportive care in cancer : official journal of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer
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Intensive care is increasingly used in the management of cancer patients. The main reasons for admitting a cancer patient to an intensive-care unit are postoperative recovery, critical complications of the cancer disease and its treatment, the administration and monitoring of intensive anticancer treatment, and acute disease unrelated to cancer or its treatment. The present review is focused on the prognosis of critically ill cancer patients, on the description of the types of complications requiring intensive care, on specific aspects of the application of critical-care techniques in cancer patients, on ethical considerations and on ICU organization in the context of oncology.
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Mortality from septic shock is considerable despite the advantages of cardiovascular support and antibiotic therapy. This article reviews current therapy of septic shock including immunotherapy and further possibilities of septic shock treatment. The role of cytokines, their inhibitors and antibodies to endotoxin is mentioned. Although these treatments hold much promise for the future, careful evaluation of both the benefits and complications of therapy is needed before widespread clinical use can be recommended.
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Mortality from septic shock is considerable despite the advantages of cardiovascular support and antibiotic therapy. Understanding the pathophysiology of sepsis enables clinicians to institute rational intervention directed towards the pathophysiological mechanisms. ⋯ Current knowledge on the pathophysiological mechanism of cytokines and modulation of systemic cytokine levels during sepsis and septic shock is discussed. The important role of cytokines in sepsis and septic shock may require more detailed investigations of the cytokine pathophysiological network.
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Intensive care is increasingly frequently used in the management of cancer patients. In order to determine whether and how critical-care facilities are used specifically for these patients, we performed a world-wide inquiry in anticancer centres. We mailed a questionnaire to 141 centres and received 84 responses (57.5%). ⋯ Data were obtained concerning the ICU organisation, the medical team, the nursing staff, the critical-care techniques and the anticancer treatments performed. Medical ICU appeared to be managed by physicians and nurses often qualified in both intensive care and oncology. These data suggest that oncological intensive care should be part of the training of oncologists and intensivists.
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Support Care Cancer · Mar 1995
Case ReportsCombined management in the treatment of epidoxorubicin extravasation. A case report.
Inadvertent extravasation during intravenous antitumor therapy is not an unusual complication and can cause damage ranging from minor erythema to severe local necrosis. The appropriate management of these iatrogenic accidents as a part of supportive care in oncology has been addressed by several experimental studies, but there has been little clinical study and no conclusive evidence on the best therapeutic strategies to adopt. The case reported here of a patient suffering from severe soft-tissue injury caused by extravasation of epidoxorubicin demonstrates the usefulness of a combined management (medical, surgical and rehabilitative) in the appropriate care of extravasation.