Articles: injury.
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J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis · Nov 1999
Brain acidosis, cerebral blood flow, capillary bed density, and mitochondrial function in the ischemic penumbra.
Within the ischemic penumbra, there is a heterogeneous development of cortical intracellular acidosis that is associated with selective neuronal injury. This experiment, which used a rabbit model of moderate focal cerebral ischemia, examined the time course for changes in intracellular brain pH, cortical blood flow, capillary bed density, and mitochondrial function in the ischemic penumbra. After cortical annotation of regions of intracellular acidosis in the ischemic penumbra, the animals underwent transcardiac carbon black perfusion for measurement of capillary bed density. ⋯ For example, capillary bed density in preischemic controls was 338+/-6/mm(2), whereas after 1 hour of ischemia, it measured 147+/-12/mm(2), at 3 hours 97+/-23/mm(2), and at 6 hours 92+/-16/mm(2). Mitochondrial function was reduced coinciding with the decrease in capillary bed density. These data support the hypothesis that cortical acidosis in the ischemic penumbra facilitates the development of perfusion defects that subsequently lead to mitochondrial dysfunction.
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To review the role of drugs with potential benefit to renal function in critically ill patients. ⋯ The common factor in renal dysfunction and acute renal failure is tubular ischaemia. Prevention of this final common pathway is the chief goal of renal protection in critically ill patients. Despite the plethora of potentially beneficial drugs, volume loading and defence of renal perfusion pressure (and renal blood flow) with pressor agents appear to be the only reliable means of renal protection.
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To review the function and use of intravenous magnesium in magnesium depleted and non-magnesium depleted patients. ⋯ Magnesium is required in patients who are magnesium depleted and is also of benefit in non-magnesium depleted patients with pre-eclampsia. It may also be of benefit in non-magnesium depleted patients with acute coronary syndromes, arrhythmias, acute asthma, stroke, seizures and spinal cord injury.
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To discuss the reasons why 250 ml 7.5% hypertonic saline was chosen as a pre-hospital resuscitation fluid for head injured patients in a multicentred, prospective, randomised controlled trial investigating its long term effects on central nervous system outcome. ⋯ Pre-hospital resuscitation of head injured and hypotensive trauma patients using hypertonic saline, has the potential to reduce long term cerebral injury and reduce social and financial costs to the community.
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To consider the evidence for the beneficial effects of the current management guidelines in traumatic brain injury, and to highlight the important issues. ⋯ The impact of management guidelines in traumatic brain injury on patient outcome has been difficult to determine. However, there is a large body of uncontrolled evidence that suggests secondary global cerebral ischaemia-hypoxic insults are the major determinants in influencing outcome and that therapeutic interventions that maintain and defend cerebral perfusion pressures may improve outcome.