Infusionstherapie und Transfusionsmedizin
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Infusionsther Transfusionsmed · Apr 1993
[Early detection of patients at risk for infection after heart surgery].
Since sepsis is a major cause of mortality after cardiac surgery, early identification of the patients at risk of developing septic complications is of considerable importance. In the present study on 110 patients after elective heart surgery, we, therefore, examined scoring systems as well as various single parameters with regard to an early prediction of septic complications. In a first step, the Elebute score definition for postoperative sepsis in general surgery patients (score > or = 12) could be confirmed for cardiac surgery patients as well. ⋯ For reasons of practicability and availability, the APACHE II score (predictive values: positive 86%, negative 96%, Youden index 0.73; diagnostic cut off point: > or = 19 on the 1st postoperative day) seemed to be best suited. Therefore, this was further investigated within a consecutive prospective study (independent group of 106 patients) which confirmed an APACHE II score > or = 19 as discriminating criterion (mortality 36 vs 0%). Thus, the APACHE II score may be useful for prospective screening, with the intention to treat, of patients after cardiac surgery who are at risk of postoperative septic complications.
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The purpose of this article is to review the facilities of early enteral nutrition in critically ill patients. ⋯ Clinical performance as well as efficiency of enteral nutrition seem to be essentially dependent on the intestinal blood flow. New methods for estimating intestinal blood flow, such as tonometry, will have to be evaluated especially in critically ill patients to improve the indications for enteral nutrition.
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Infusionsther Transfusionsmed · Apr 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[Serum IgG concentrations and antibody titer of burn patients after preventive intravenous IgG substitution with a Pseudomonas immunoglobulin].
In a randomized clinical trial 30 patients with burn injury received supportive therapy with a Pseudomonas hyperimmunoglobulin (Psomaglobin N). The control group received no additional therapy. The patients of both groups were between 15 and 60 years of age and had a full-thickness burn of 30-70% of the body surface area with inhalational trauma being optional. ⋯ In the group receiving supportive treatment, 23 out of 30 patients had an inhalation trauma, and 8 of those (35%) died (1 of 7 patients without inhalation trauma). In both groups with inhalation injury, the patients were at risk of developing bacteremia: 13 of 23 of the immunoglobulin-treated patients and 12 of 16 patients of the control group. Bacteremic controls died at a lower score than bacteremic immunoglobulin-treated patients (8.6 vs. 10.3 points).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Infusionsther Transfusionsmed · Apr 1993
[Early immunoglobulin therapy in high risk patients for infection after heart surgery].
The efficacy of early supplemental intravenous immunoglobulin G (ivIgG) treatment was investigated in 41 patients at risk for sepsis following cardiac surgery (APACHE II score > or = 19 on the 1st postoperative day). The ivIgG preparation (Psomaglobin N) was chosen because of its reported high antibody titers and effectiveness in animal models against gram-positive microorganisms, preponderant as infective agents after heart surgery. ⋯ In this group, ivIgG therapy led to higher (p < 0.05) response rates defined as a score decrease > or = 7 within 4 days (ivIgG-treated patients 54%, controls 19%), and a reduction in mortality (ivIgG-treated patients 46%, controls 76%; p = 0.08). Given the good comparability of the study groups, the results of this trial indicate, despite its nonrandomized design, that early supplemental ivIgG treatment seems to decrease disease severity and probably also improve the prognosis in APACHE II score identified high-risk patients after cardiac surgery.
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Infusionsther Transfusionsmed · Apr 1993
[Continuous measurement of peripheral oxygen availability in skeletal muscle of patients with infection].
In patients with sepsis, a pathologic oxygen uptake supply dependence due to an oxygen extraction defect was suggested to result in tissue hypoxia--a hypothesis which is discussed controversially. In order to determine more directly whether the oxygen transport to tissue was reduced in patients with sepsis, the distribution of skeletal muscle pO2 was measured intermittently by polarographic needle electrodes in 28 patients with sepsis for 7 days. Comparison of intermittent with continuous measurements by pO2 catheters showed a close linear relation (r = 0.88; p < 0.001) and acceptable agreement. ⋯ From our data we infer that the hypothesis of tissue hypoxia in sepsis must be questioned at least for the skeletal muscle. The increase of skeletal muscle pO2 in sepsis, however, suggested that oxygen utilization within skeletal muscle decreased the more severe the stage of sepsis was. A decreased oxygen utilization within tissue, which may result from a 'downregulation' of oxygen-dependent metabolic pathways, might account for a decreased oxygen extraction of peripheral tissue in sepsis.