Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. Supplementum
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand Suppl · Jan 1997
Meta AnalysisPrehospital care, importance of early intervention on outcome.
The improvement of rescue systems and on-scene therapy has lead to a significant reduction of early posttraumatic death. It was the goal of this study to critically analyse the value of prehospital care in respect to early but also to delayed complications (single = SOF or multiple organ failure = MOF) In a retrospective analysis 1223 polytraumatized patients treated during 1984 and 1994, with an injury severity of more than 20 points according to the Injury Severity Score = ISS, on-scene therapy ("field stabilization") was evaluated. We could show that a sufficient preclinical airway management has major influence on late prognosis (MOF). ⋯ Thus for severe blunt trauma the question is still open: "field stabilization" or "load and go" (Krausz 1992). A decision that always has to be related to the definite rescue time (Smith 1985). It was the goal of this study to critically analyse the value of prehospital care in respect to early but also to delayed complications (single = SOF or multiple organ failure = MOF).
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand Suppl · Jan 1997
Review Comparative StudyEnteral or parenteral nutrition? Pro-enteral.
There is a convincing evidence for the superiority of enteral nutrition as compared with parenteral In critically ill and injured patients. The general objectives of providing nutritional support in the critically ill is to persevere body functions that are functioning normally and to facilitate recovery of those that are failing. The specific objective for enteral nutrition is, however, preservation and restoration of the gastrointestinal structure and function. ⋯ Early enteral nutrition can be successfully carried out in virtually all critically ill patients also after major abdominal surgery and in acute pancreatitis. There are very few contraindications for using enteral nutrition and severe complications are rare. Parenteral nutrition, on the other hand, is associated with increased incidence of infectious complications and is rarely indicated in critically ill patients.
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Diminished availability of oxygen at the cellular level might account for organ dysfunction in sepsis. Although the classical forms of tissue hypoxia due to hypoxemia, anemia, or inadequate perfusion all might be important under some conditions, it seems increasingly likely that a fourth mechanism, namely cytopathic hypoxia, might play a role as well. ⋯ At least in theory, cytopathic hypoxia could be a consequence of several different (but mutually compatible) pathogenic mechanisms, including diminished delivery of a key substrate (e.g., pyruvate) into the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, inhibition of key mitochondrial enzymes involved in either the TCA cycle or the electron transport chain, activation of the enzyme, poly-(ADP)-ribosylpolymerase (PARP), or collapse of the protonic gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane leading to uncoupling of oxidation (of NADH and FADH) from phosphorylation of ADP to form ATP. Tantalizing, but limited, data support the view that cytopathic hypoxia occurs in both animals and patients with sepsis or endotoxemia.