Minerva anestesiologica
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The measurement of nursing workload first began in the 1970s, because of the need for determining severity of illness and cost-effectiveness in the intensive care unit. In the following decades, the need for more specific tools for assessing nursing workload brought to the development of scoring systems more focused on nursing activities. We will briefly review the scoring systems validated since 1974. ⋯ It describes 81% of the nursing time, compared to 43% of TISS 28. In conclusion, many scoring systems have been proposed to describe nursing workload, both directly (as with TOSS and PRN) or through severity and complexity of treatment (TISS, TISS 28, NAS and NEMS). These scores represent the instruments to assess the correct use of ICU resources.
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Maintenance of adequate cardiac preload is of paramount importance in the treatment of patients undergoing major surgical surgery and in the critically ill setting. The end point is to maintain the organ perfusion through volume replacement and therapy to optimize cardiac output, oxygen deliver. ⋯ We briefly review the intra thoracic blood volume index as a preload index and the fluid responsiveness indexes, stroke volume variation and pulse pressure variation, available as novel parameters at the bed-side. The optimization of fluid balance and vasoactive drugs administration based on volumetric monitoring makes the transpulmonary indicator dilution technique a new option as an effective monitoring system where intravascular volume management is a primary objective.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Apr 2004
Review[Cerebral oxygen consumption and ischemia in traumatic brain injury].
Clinical and experimental studies have shown a reduction of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and metabolic alterations following traumatic brain injury (TBI). The incidence of ischemia and the meaning of post-traumatic metabolic alterations are still unclear. ⋯ Cerebral ischemia occurs following TBI and should be defined based on CBF value and the metabolic needs of the brain. Global monitoring of cerebral oxygenation adequacy should be combined with regional monitoring. The meaning of high AJDO(2) values should be reconsidered: if they can highlights potential ischemia they are also showing a still living brain with a partially preserved oxygen extraction capability.
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The authors briefly review the clinical applications of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), mostly focusing on the application of NIV in the intensive care setting. After a short discussion of the main pathophysiologic aspects of NIV administration in patients with acute exacerbation of COPD, the most relevant clinical trials are shortly reviewed, particularly focussing on prospective randomised trials. NIV application is analysed both in its early administration, as a tool to prevent endotracheal intubation and its main complication, and as a technique alternative to endotracheal intubation in patients requiring mechanical ventilation. Finally, the main contraindications for NIV are reviewed and discussed.
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Primary Acute Lung Injury (ALI) after lung resection (or "post-pneumonectomy pulmonary edema") is a rare form of acute respiratory failure characterized by dyspnea, hypoxemia, diffuse infiltrates on chest radiogram, and rapid evolution often unresponsive to therapy. ALI occurs almost exclusively following pneumonectomy, within 3 days from surgery and without a preceding cause. ⋯ There is no specific therapy. Suggested measures in the perioperative care include the meticulous maintenance of physiological stability, judicious fluid restriction, and the limitation of ventilatory volumes and pressures.