Pediatric clinics of North America
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Status epilepticus is a serious medical emergency that requires prompt and appropriate intervention. Maintenance of adequate vital function with attention to airway, breathing, and circulation; prevention of systemic complications; and rapid termination of seizures must be coupled with investigating and treating any underlying cause. ⋯ Refractory SE requires more aggressive treatment, often the use of intravenous anesthetic agents and intense monitoring, and therefore must be managed in a pediatric intensive care unit with a multidisciplinary approach. Large, controlled, multicenter, comparative studies are needed urgently to clarify better the optimal management of these patients.
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Pediatr. Clin. North Am. · Jun 2001
ReviewThe virtual pediatric intensive care unit. Practice in the new millennium.
Patients and their families meet with health care providers in a complex marketplace. The information revolution is providing access to vast amounts of information and new ways to understand it. More important, perhaps, is that it also is providing new ways of communicating information not only about health but also about the health care delivery process. ⋯ This virtual community will be responsible for clinical and economic performance in the practice of pediatric critical care. The VPICU realizes that this requires the tools to make high-quality decisions and that these decisions depend on data and communication. The author invites all pediatric intensivists to participate in the VPICU to achieve the goals of better practice through the application of information technologies in pediatric critical care.
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Infection is problematic because it affects many patients (adults and children), is a major cause of death in intensive care units (ICU) worldwide, and uses a large amount of hospital resources. The mortality rate among patients with septic shock varies but approximates 40% in infected patients admitted to ICUs. Because of the large number of adults dying of sepsis, many resources are expended. Children are physiologically different from adults, but nonetheless, many similarities exist with respect to the response to septic shock.
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The best ICU monitors are physicians and nurses, who integrate all of the physiologic parameters of patients with the known pathophysiology of the disease process. Over-reliance on raw electronic data, with their inherent errors, jeopardizes the safe and efficient care of patients. Data must be interpreted in the context of the history, repetitive physical examinations, response to therapy, and a background of experience. New modalities and the application of artificial intelligence may facilitate the interpretation of data, but the role of the bedside medical practitioner remains as the heart of pediatric critical care.
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Optimal management of breastfeeding does not eliminate neonatal jaundice and elevated serum bilirubin concentrations. Rather, it leads to a pattern of hyperbilirubinemia that is normal and, possibly, beneficial to infants. Excessive frequency of exaggerated jaundice in a hospital or community population of breastfed infants may be a warning that breastfeeding policies and support are not ideal for the establishment of good breastfeeding practices. The challenge to clinicians is to differentiate normal patterns of jaundice and hyperbilirubinemia from those that indicate an abnormality or place an infant at risk.