The Surgical clinics of North America
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Modern hemodynamic therapy is not only the recognition and treatment of hypotension but also the avoidance and treatment of shock in its broadest sense. The major issues include the recognition of hypoperfusion of the body as a whole or its individual tissues and organ systems and the determination of the best endpoints for the treatment of shock. Even if all of the commonly used clinical indicators of shock are "normal," shock on a cellular, tissue, or organ basis may still be present. ⋯ The determination of adequate intravascular volume (preload) continues to present major difficulties in the care of critically ill or injured patients. Although PCWP is frequently helpful, it is not a gold standard. A bedside ultrasonic technique, such as esophageal Doppler sonography, may replace the Swan-Ganz catheter technique in many patients.
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Surg. Clin. North Am. · Jun 2000
ReviewThe early assessment and intensive care unit management of patients with severe traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries.
The assessment and management of neurotrauma have progressed significantly over the past several years. Improved understanding of the physiology of injured neural tissue and advances in technology have refined the approach to the care of patients suffering neurologic injury. ⋯ The ongoing evolution of critical care also has had a significant impact on the care of patients suffering from neurotrauma. This article reviews some current issues related to the diagnosis and management of traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury as we head into the next millennium.
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The management of patients requiring a damage control approach taxes the abilities of the best equipped trauma center. These patients present with severe metabolic abnormalities, most notably characterized by a deadly triad of hypothermia, coagulopathy, and acidosis. Using volumetric, oxymetric pulmonary artery catheters, hypothermia and any ongoing cardiovascular abnormalities can be identified quickly and treatment can be monitored. ⋯ Although there is no shotgun approach to blood component transfusion therapy, the coagulopathy shown by these patients has a time course that is more rapid than stat laboratories can presently keep up with. Given the fulminant nature of this coagulopathy, the authors feel justified in empirically initiating platelet and plasma or cryoprecipitate transfusion on identification of visible coagulopathy. The willingness of trauma surgeons to push the envelope in treating these most severely afflicted patients has allowed patients who once would have certainly died to lead meaningful lives.
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Surg. Clin. North Am. · Jun 2000
ReviewThe contemporary surgical intensive care unit. Structure, staffing, and issues.
Modern ICUs present unique challenges to physician-administrators in the current health care environment. Several models of care (e.g., open versus closed ICUs, physician extenders in the ICU) are used throughout the country, with varying degrees of success. Although all care models may work, the ideal model for a given ICU can be found only through ongoing performance improvement.
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Although significant progress has been made in the treatment of patients with acute lung failure in the critical care setting, the mortality rate from acute lung injury and ARDS is unacceptably high, given the numbers of patients treated for these syndromes each year. The improved understanding of the pathophysiology of respiratory failure from basic science and clinical research is reflected in improved survival rates over the years. Advances in the mechanical ventilator (through microprocessor technology); biosurface technology; liquid ventilation; and, in some cases, returning to so-called "antiquated" practices of patient care (e.g., prone positioning) seem to have had an impact nonetheless. As refinement continues to occur in these areas, morbidity and mortality from lung failure will have a lesser impact on patients as physicians treat the consequences of organ failure in the ICU.