Cochrane Db Syst Rev
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Oct 2004
Review Meta AnalysisThrombolysis (different doses, routes of administration and agents) for acute ischaemic stroke.
Thrombolytic therapy is effective for acute myocardial infarction, a disease with some similarities to acute ischaemic stroke. Meta-analyses suggest a net benefit in acute ischaemic stroke. ⋯ These scant data suggest that higher doses of thrombolytic agents may lead to higher rates of bleeding. However, the evidence is inadequate to conclude whether lower doses of thrombolytic agents are more effective than higher doses, or whether one agent is better than another, or which route of administration is the best, in acute ischaemic stroke.
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Based mainly on experimental data which indicates improvement to the cerebral microcirculation, Dan Shen, a form of herbal medicine, is widely used in the treatment of acute ischaemic stroke in China. We aimed to assess the evidence from randomised controlled trials of their effects. ⋯ There were too few patients and outcome events to draw reliable conclusions from the present data. The methodological qualities of all included studies were poor. Further high-quality randomised controlled trials should be performed.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Oct 2004
Review Meta AnalysisEffectiveness of intermediate care in nursing-led in-patient units.
The Nursing led inpatient Unit (NLU) is one of a range of services that have been considered in order to manage more successfully the transition between hospital and home for patients with extended recovery times. ⋯ There is some evidence that patients discharged from a NLU are better prepared for discharge but it is unclear if this is simply a product of an increased length of inpatient stay. No statistically significant adverse effects were noted but the possibility of increased early mortality cannot be discounted. More research is needed.
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Cardiac tamponade may occur following cardiac surgery as a result of blood or fluid collecting in the pericardial space compressing the heart and reducing cardiac output. Mediastinal chest drains (including pericardial drains) are inserted as standard post-operative practice following cardiac surgery to assist the clearance of blood from the pericardial space and to prevent cardiac tamponade. To prevent chest tubes from blocking and so causing tamponade nurses manipulate them to prevent or remove clots. Manipulation methods including milking, stripping, fanfolding and tapping may be applied to the tubes to keep them from blocking. Evidence is required as to the safest and most effective means of preventing chest tube blockage and preventing cardiac tamponade. ⋯ There are insufficient studies which compare differing methods of chest drain clearance to support or refute the relative efficacy of the various methods in preventing cardiac tamponade. Nor can the need to manipulate chest drains be supported or refuted by results from RCT's.
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Low-back pain (LBP) is a common reason for consulting a general practitioner, and advice on daily activities is an important part of the primary care management of low-back pain. ⋯ For people with acute LBP, advice to rest in bed is less effective than advice to stay active. For patients with sciatica, there is little or no difference between advice to rest in bed and advice to stay active. There is little or no difference in the effect of bed rest compared to exercises or physiotherapy, or seven days of bed rest compared with two to three.