Klinische Wochenschrift
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Klinische Wochenschrift · Jan 1991
Review[Disorders of blood coagulation in the intensive care unit: what is important for diagnosis and therapy?].
In the haemostatic system there is normally a stable balance between its components (vessel wall, platelets, coagulation, fibrinolysis), which are in continuously close interaction. Disturbances of this balance may lead to bleeding, thrombosis, or thrombohaemorrhagic consumptive disorders. The task of haemostaseologic diagnostics is to discover eventual preexisting but as yet undiagnosed disturbances in any patient entering an intensive care unit and, in cases of acute bleeding, to provide useful information that facilitates therapeutic decisions. ⋯ Promising attempts to overcome DIC via substitution of antithrombin III and fresh frozen plasma are discussed. Optimal management of complications and monitoring of therapy requires the close teamwork of attending surgeons or physicians and haemostaseologists. The purpose of any therapy is to preserve or regain the balance of haemostasis.
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The patterns of recovery of patients who received seven different analgesic and sedative treatments were investigated with regard to the time at which the subjects awoke. For observations of the neurologic status, we developed a special score. ⋯ Piritramid/promethazine, pethidine/flunitrazepam, pethidine/promethazine and tramadol/methohexital required more time for awakening. On the basis of these results, we prefer to use the combination of fentanyl/midazolam, alfentanil/midazolam and ketamine/flunitrazepam to judge all patients' neurologic scores.
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Klinische Wochenschrift · Jan 1991
Review[How painful is long-term ventilation? Considerations on the importance of analgesia within the scope of analgosedation].
The goal of analgesia and sedation in intensive care units is most often achieved using numerous drug combinations, mostly justified by physicians' and nurses' habits instead of rational pharmacological criteria for the choice of drugs and dosages. The present paper aims at defining the analgesic situation of ventilated intensive care patients and concludes from analogy with other, better understood states of pain that the importance of analgesic drugs is frequently overrated. To achieve effective analgesia and sedation in individual patients, the dosage must be titrated to individual needs. The author suggests that standardized baseline analgesia should be used, which enables sedation to be titrated, whereas the opposite is not practicable in clinical routine.
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Seven different schemes for analgesic anaesthesia were investigated for their clinical applicability, potential side effects, and impacts on circulation parameters of the systemic and pulmonary (peripheral) circulation as well as on the intracranial pressure. In all, so patients per group were treated. The results revealed different reactions of patients, such as a higher incidence of disturbances of the autonomic nervous system and excitation after medication withdrawal. ⋯ In several instances, a clear increase in the right atrial and the pulmonary arterial mean pressure as well as the intracranial pressure was observed during ketamine/flunitrazepam therapy. The combinations pethidine/promethazine or pethidine/flunitrazepam also showed clear side effects on the circulation and evoked an increase in the intracranial pressure. Fentanyl/midazolam or alfentanil/midazolam treatments were the most favourable combinations for most of the patients who were artificially respirated.
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Klinische Wochenschrift · Jan 1991
Comparative Study[Supplemental infection therapy with i.v. immunoglobulins (polyvalent IgG and Pseudomonas IgG)--results of an observational case study with 163 patients].
The impact of i.v. immunoglobulin (IVIG) therapy on the survival of adult septic patients cannot yet be considered either proved or disproved. To define optimal criteria for a large multicenter placebo-controlled trial, a multicenter observational study was carried out in 163 medical and surgical patients exhibiting a total of 173 episodes of sepsis and septic shock [Elebute (El) sepsis score; 19 +/- 0.5). ⋯ This improvement, associated with an improved prognosis (mortality, 24% vs 55%), was found in all subgroups, most importantly, polyvalent IgG vs Pseudomonas IgG treatment; medical vs surgical patients; moderate vs severe MOF; and gram-positive vs gram-negative septicemia. Thus, all of these patients should be included in future placebo-controlled, randomized IVIG trials.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)