Articles: critical-care.
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Critical care medicine · Feb 1993
Descriptive analysis of critical care units in the United States: patient characteristics and intensive care unit utilization.
To gather data about occupancy, admission characteristics, patients' ages, and types of therapy utilized in ICUs in the United States. ⋯ This report should be viewed as the beginning step of an effort to improve both the information base available on critical care medicine and the performance of ICUs. Our survey findings provide an introduction into the everyday workings of critical care units throughout the United States. Research is required to determine which patients will benefit from intensive care and how to efficiently utilize the vast technology we have available for them in a world with limited financial resources, an aging population, and a multiplicity of societal and ethical concerns.
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Review Historical Article
The role of hemofiltration in the critically-ill intensive care unit patient: present and future.
The development of acute renal failure (ARF) in intensive care unit (ICU) patients carries a poor prognosis. Today, most cases are no longer an isolated organ dysfunction but are part of a multiple system organ failure syndrome. Recently developed renal replacement therapies allow adequate metabolic control, even in highly catabolic and hemodynamically unstable patients. ⋯ Although hemofiltration has been shown to improve hemodynamics of experimental septic shock, convincing evidence that hemofiltration improves outcome of ICU patients is lacking. Available data suggest that high ultrafiltrate volumes may be needed to achieve clinically important beneficial effects of hemofiltration in these patients. Prospective, randomized trials in homogeneous patient groups are needed to assess the role of hemofiltration in patients with septic shock or multiple system organ failure.