Articles: treatment.
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To review the management of persistent hypertension and hypertensive crisis in the critically ill patient. ⋯ A mean arterial pressure in the critically ill is often tolerated up to a value of 135 mmHg for some hours. However in some disorders (e.g. dissecting aortic aneurysm, cardiac failure, angina, acute myocardial infarction, pre-eclampsia or eclampsia and following cardiac, vascular or cerebral surgery) a mean arterial blood pressure of 90 mmHg or greater should be treated urgently.
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Evidence-based practice guidelines for interventional techniques in the management of chronic spinal pain are systematically developed and professionally derived statements and recommendations that assist both physicians and patients in making decisions about appropriate health care in the diagnosis and treatment of chronic or persistent pain. The guidelines were developed utilizing an evidence-based approach to increase patient access to treatment, to improve outcomes and appropriateness of care, and to optimize cost-effectiveness. All types of relevant and published evidence and consensus were utilized. ⋯ It is expected that a provider will establish a plan of care on a case-by-case basis, taking into account an individual patient's medical condition, personal needs, and preferences, and the physician's experience. Based on an individual patient's needs, treatment different from that outlined here could be warranted. These guidelines do not represent "standard of care."
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It is the responsibility of clinician investigators to advance clinical knowledge and specifically its application to patient care. Randomized controlled trials remain near the top of the hierarchy of evidence based medicine. The acquisition of evidence based medicine by means of randomized controlled trials presents general difficulties and additional pitfalls specific to interventional treatments. ⋯ To generate clinically useful research results requires an understanding of the mechanics of performing studies and the reporting of methodologies to ensure appropriate interpretation. Placebo arms and sham interventions present serious ethical issues, which must be analyzed on a case by case basis. The conscientious researcher must always abide by the principles of ethical research and the tenets of human subject protection.
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Neuropsychol Rehabil · Jan 2003
Neurorehabilitation and cognitive-behaviour therapy of anxiety disorders after brain injury: An overview and a case illustration of obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Survivors of acquired and traumatic brain injuries may often experience anxiety states. Psychological reactions to neurological trauma may be caused by a complex interaction of a host of factors. We explore how anxiety states may be understood in terms of a biopsychosocial formulation of such factors. ⋯ We show how CBT plus CR allows a biopsychosocial formulation to be developed of the survivor's concerns for guiding a goal-based intervention. The survivor made significant gains from intervention in terms of goals achieved and changes on clinical measures. We argue that large-scale research is needed for developing an evidence base for managing emotional disorders in brain injury.
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In a companion article, we synthesized current clinical and preclinical data to formulate hypotheses about the etiology of drug administration catheter-tip inflammatory masses. In this article, we communicate our recommendations for the detection, treatment, mitigation, and prevention of such masses. ⋯ Attentive follow-up and maintenance of an index of suspicion should permit timely diagnosis, minimally invasive treatment, and avoidance of neurological injury from catheter-tip inflammatory masses. Whenever it is feasible, positioning the catheter in the lumbar thecal sac and/or keeping the daily intrathecal opioid dose as low as possible for as long possible may mitigate the seriousness, and perhaps, reduce the incidence of such inflammatory masses.