Critical care : the official journal of the Critical Care Forum
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This narrative review provides an overview of the evolving significance of lymphopenia in sepsis, emphasizing its critical function in this complex and heterogeneous disease. We describe the causal relationship of lymphopenia with clinical outcomes, sustained immunosuppression, and its correlation with sepsis prediction markers and therapeutic targets. The primary mechanisms of septic lymphopenia are highlighted. In addition, the paper summarizes various attempts to treat lymphopenia and highlights the practical significance of promoting lymphocyte proliferation as the next research direction.
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Cerebral complications after cardiac arrest (CA) remain a major problem worldwide. The aim was to test the effects of sodium-ß-hydroxybutyrate (SBHB) infusion on brain injury in a clinically relevant swine model of CA. ⋯ In this experimental model, SBHB infusion after resuscitated CA was associated with reduced circulating markers of cerebral injury and increased sEEG amplitude.
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During mechanical ventilation, post-insufflation diaphragm contractions (PIDCs) are non-physiologic and could be injurious. PIDCs could be frequent during reverse-triggering, where diaphragm contractions follow the ventilator rhythm. Whether PIDCs happens with different modes of assisted ventilation is unknown. In mechanically ventilated patients with hypoxemic respiratory failure, we aimed to examine whether PIDCs are associated with ventilator settings, patients' characteristics or both. ⋯ In critically ill mechanically ventilated patients, PIDCs and reverse triggering phenotypes were associated with potentially modifiable factors, including ventilator settings. Proportional modes like NAVA represent a solution abolishing PIDCs.