Crit Care Resusc
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Serotonin toxicity secondary to drug therapy, interaction or overdose is an increasing phenomenon worldwide. A proportion of patients require admission to an intensive care unit, but the treatment needed is usually supportive and of short duration. Prolonged ICU admission to control ongoing or long-lasting serotonin toxicity has not been reported previously. ⋯ We review the pharmacological mechanisms that led to prolonged serotonin toxicity in these patients. Predictors for prolonged serotonin toxicity include involvement of irreversible monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) or slow-release preparations resistant to the effects of activated charcoal (eg, lithium). We also discuss the implications of prolonged toxicity for critical care management, to maintain optimal patient outcomes.
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To describe how intensive care nurses manage the administration of supplemental oxygen to patients during the first 24 hours after cardiac surgery. ⋯ These findings suggest that the ICU environment does not protect cardiac surgical patients from suboptimal oxygen delivery, and highlights the need for strategies to prompt the early initiation of interventions aimed at optimising blood oxygen levels in cardiac surgical patients in the ICU.
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There is now significant evidence that initial use of the correct antibiotic saves more lives than virtually all other intensive care therapy. This means covering all possible causative organisms with the initial empirical choice. For nosocomial sepsis, broad-spectrum antibiotics must be started as soon as the relevant samples have been taken for culture, with de-escalation of therapy targeted to the causative organisms when results and susceptibilities are available. ⋯ We have shown that some patients with normal serum creatinine levels have very high creatinine clearance rates; in ICU patients with sepsis, blood pressure and tissue perfusion are maintained with large fluid loads and inotropic agents, thereby raising creatinine clearance. High clearances produce low trough concentrations of antibiotic, with important implications for underdosing and the development of antibiotic resistance. The new paradigm for treating sepsis, particularly nosocomial sepsis, is: get it right the first time, hit hard up front, and use large doses of broad-spectrum antibiotics for a short period.
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Comparative Study
Assessment of the clinical utility of an ultrasonic monitor of cardiac output (the USCOM) and agreement with thermodilution measurement.
To assess the clinical utility of an ultrasonic monitor of cardiac output (USCOM), its reliability in tracking cardiac output (CO) changes and agreement with thermodilution (TD) measurements of CO. ⋯ Poor agreement with TD and a substantial rate of failure to obtain an USCOM measurement suggest that this device is unsuitable as a monitoring tool in intensive care.