Articles: critical-care.
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Since the limited accessibility of general intensive care units creates a situation in which medical patients in critical condition continue to be cared for in the regular wards, we conducted a retrospective cohort study to assess the treatment outcomes in such patients referred to the medical intermediate care unit (MICU). At the Soroka Medical Center, a facility with 810 beds, of which 170 beds are in medical wards, including an 8-bed intensive cardiac care unit and a 5-bed general intensive care unit, 119 patients were referred to the MICU, directly from the emergency room or from medical wards, during the first half of 1994. Eighty percent of the patients were admitted to the MICU directly from the emergency room. ⋯ The ratio of nursing staff to patient in the MICU was approximately 1:3, compared to 2:3 in the general intensive care unit and 1:12 in the wards. The mean cost of one day of hospitalization in the MICU was one-third that in the general intensive care unit and double the cost in a ward. Medical patients in critical condition can be treated in an MICU, with a savings in expenses and without impairing the patient's chances for survival.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Fructose vs. glucose in total parenteral nutrition in critically ill patients].
Parenteral nutrition required following surgery or injury should not only meet post-aggression caloric requirements but also match the specific metabolic needs so as not to worsen the metabolic disruptions already present in this situation. The primary objective of parenteral nutrition is body protein maintenance or restoration by reduction of protein catabolism or promotion of protein synthesis or both. Whether all parenteral energy donors, ie., glucose, fructose, other polyols, and lipid emulsions, are equally capable of achieving this objective continues to be a controversial issue. The objective of the present study was to answer the following questions: (1) Do glucose and fructose differ in their effects on the metabolic changes seen following surgery or injury, the changes in glucose metabolism in particular? (2) Can the observation of poorer glucose utilization in the presence of lipids be confirmed in ICU patients? ⋯ As demonstrated, parenteral fructose, unlike parenteral glucose, has a significantly less adverse impact than glucose on the glucose balance, which is disrupted initially in the post-aggression state. In addition, the less pronounced increase in insulin activity during fructose infusion than during glucose infusion can be assumed to facilitate mobilization of endogenous lipid stores and lipid oxidation. Earlier workers pointed out that any rise in free fatty acid and ketone body concentrations in the serum produces inhibition of muscular glucose uptake and oxidation, and of glycolysis. These findings were recorded in a rat model and could not be confirmed in our post-aggression state patients receiving lipid doses commensurate with the usual clinical infusion rates. The serious complications that can result from hereditary fructose intolerance are completely avoidable if a careful patient history is taken before the first parenteral use of fructose. If the patient or family members and close friends, are simply asked whether he/she can tolerate fruit and sweet dishes, hereditary fructose intolerance can be ruled out beyond all reasonable doubt. Only in the extremely rare situations in which it is not possible to question either the patient or any significant other, a test dose will have to be administered to exclude fructose intolerance. The benefits of fructose-specific metabolic effects reported in the literature and corroborated by the results of out own study suggest that fructose is an important nutrient that contributes to metabolic stabilization, especially in the post-aggression phase and in septic patients. Hyperglycaemic states are largely prevented and fewer patients require ex
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Dimens Crit Care Nurs · Nov 1995
Case ReportsPeripheral electrical stimulation: titrating neuromuscular blocking agent levels.
Objective monitoring of the response to neuromuscular blocking agents is essential to ensure the patient receives the maximum benefit from the drug without harm. Peripheral nerve stimulation using a train-of-four mode of four quick pulses is an intervention the critical care nurse uses at the bedside to monitor the level of neuromuscular blockage for each patient. The nurse can use this objective evaluation and a dosage protocol to titrate effective levels of neuromuscular blocking agents for ventilated patients.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Nov 1995
[Ventilator weaning after long-term ventilation--the concept of a regional ventilator weaning center].
Long-term mechanical ventilation implies a significant number of weaning failures. The basis of this unweanability is chronic fatigue of the inspiratory muscles which is due to depletion of energy store (e.g. glycogen). Considering this pathophysiological principle, the decisive therapeutic option during weaning from long-term mechanical ventilation consists of resting the respiratory muscles. ⋯ This reduces minute ventilation and, therefore, the work of breathing. In patients still exhibiting chronic fatigue of the respiratory muscle pump after successful weaning, intermittent home ventilation is initiated via a breathing mask. Apart from the concept described above, successful weaning from the respirator after long-term ventilation is based upon dedicated patient care and depends on the architectural characteristics of the intensive care unit.