Articles: treatment.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 2024
Randomized Controlled TrialLong-term outcomes with haloperidol versus placebo in acutely admitted adult ICU patients with delirium.
We assessed long-term outcomes in acutely admitted adult patients with delirium treated in intensive care unit (ICU) with haloperidol versus placebo. ⋯ In acutely admitted adult ICU patients with delirium, haloperidol treatment reduced mortality at 1-year follow-up, but did not statistically significantly improve HRQoL.
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Pediatric emergency care · Jan 2024
A Summer of Fevers and Fussiness: Eighteen Infants Admitted With Parechovirus Meningitis.
To define the presentation, spectrum of illness, and outcomes in infants with parechovirus (PeV) meningitis admitted to our inpatient general pediatrics service during a spike in incidence of admissions in summer 2022. ⋯ Infants hospitalized with PeV meningitis were febrile and fussy, but experienced uncomplicated hospital stays without neurological deficits. Parechovirus meningitis must be considered as a common cause of acute viral meningitis in young infants even without CSF pleocytosis. This study, although limited in scope and follow-up, can potentially assist in the diagnosis and treatment of PeV meningitis at other institutions.
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Although stereotactic radiation has frequently supplanted whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) in treating patients with multiple brain metastases, the role of surgery for these patients remains unresolved. No randomized trials have compared surgical resection with postoperative stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) to SRS/SRT alone. Previous studies addressing surgery for patients with multiple brain metastases are often limited by small sample sizes, a lack of appropriate comparison groups, or a focus on patients treated before recent advances in targeted therapy and immunotherapy. We compared outcomes in patients with multiple brain metastases treated with surgical resection and postoperative SRS/SRT to those treated with SRS/SRT alone. ⋯ In patients with multiple brain metastases, surgical resection before SRS/SRT is associated with reduced mortality and radiation necrosis. Prospective studies may further delineate patient populations that benefit from aggressive local, brain-directed treatment even with significant intracranial disease burden.
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Chronic pain is a major cause of suffering and disability and is often associated with psychiatric complications. Current treatments carry the risk of severe side effects and may lead to limited or no relief at all in a relevant portion of this patient population. Preliminary evidence suggests that classical psychedelics (e.g. LSD and psilocybin) may have analgesic effects in healthy volunteers, and in certain chronic pain conditions and observational studies reveal that they are used in naturalistic settings as a means to manage pain. ⋯ Psychedelic substances are receiving increasing attention from the scientific literature because of evidence showing beneficial effects on several measures related to mental health in clinical samples and healthy volunteers samples. Previous evidence suggests that people suffering from chronic pain are using psychedelics to seek relief and the present paper presents the results of a survey study investigating their use and analgesic effects among individuals suffering from fibromyalgia, arthritis, migraine, tension-type headache and sciatica.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 2024
Observational StudySex Differences in Vital Organ Support Provided to ICU Patients.
Critically ill women may receive less vital organ support than men but the mortality impact of this differential treatment remains unclear. We aimed to quantify sex differences in vital organ support provided to adult ICU patients and describe the relationship between sex, vital organ support, and mortality. ⋯ Women received significantly less vital organ support than men in ICUs in Australia and New Zealand. However, our findings suggest that women may not be harmed by this conservative approach to treatment.