Southern medical journal
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Southern medical journal · Mar 1995
Case ReportsPentobarbital sedation for patients in the pediatric intensive care unit.
We present our experience with pentobarbital for sedation during mechanical ventilation in six infants when fentanyl and midazolam failed. The patients ranged in age from 2 to 17 months and in weight from 3.0 to 11.4 kg. Before the switch to pentobarbital, the maximum doses of fentanyl ranged from 7 to 13 micrograms/kg/hr and the midazolam infusions, from 0.2 to 0.4 mg/kg/hr. ⋯ In the four patients who required neuromuscular blocking agents, their use was discontinued after pentobarbital was given. The antihypertensive agents (diazoxide and nitroprusside) required by the two patients receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation were also discontinued after pentobarbital administration. Although we continue to use fentanyl and benzodiazepines as first-line drugs for sedation, pentobarbital may be an effective alternative when these agents fail.
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Southern medical journal · Mar 1995
ReviewCefprozil, a new cephalosporin: its use in various clinical trials.
Cefprozil is a new oral cephalosporin with a broad spectrum of activity against a wide range of aerobic gram-positive and gram-negative organisms, as well as certain anaerobic bacteria. Cefprozil has demonstrated good stability in the presence of beta-lactamase-producing organisms, a common cause of bacterial resistance with many older beta-lactam antibiotics. ⋯ A review of clinical studies that evaluated cefprozil for the treatment of otitis media, sinusitis, pharyngitis, tonsillitis, lower respiratory tract infections, skin and skin structure infections, and urinary tract infections is presented in this article. In multicenter clinical trials, cefprozil was found to be comparable or superior to frequently prescribed antibiotics, including other cephalosporins, in terms of its safety profile and its bacteriologic and clinical response rates.
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Southern medical journal · Mar 1995
Comparative StudyAre postoperative complications related to resident sleep deprivation?
This real-world study compares the outcome of surgery and the sleep-deprivation status of the resident surgeon. Residents who operated the day after a 24-hour on-call period were considered sleep deprived; all other resident surgeons were considered non-sleep-deprived. ⋯ The complication data were analyzed using logistic regression analysis, with outcome being the presence or absence of surgical complications. No statistically significant change in complication incidence was noted when the resident surgeon was sleep deprived.