Articles: critical-care.
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Critical care clinics · Jan 1990
ReviewRegional anesthesia: management considerations in the trauma patient.
From peripheral nerve blocks to central neuraxis blocks, regional anesthesia offers a wide range of options for the comprehensive management of trauma victims. Experience during wars and with mass casualties has proven the safety and efficiency of regional techniques. In this article, authors review the merit of these techniques to advance the quality of patient care. They also suggest the need to improve the selection of techniques, ranging from the prehospital phase to long-term rehabilitation.
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A post-operative follow-up in 21 cases of Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (C. D. H.) was carried out on 2 groups of patients. ⋯ Post-operative complications decreased on the ratio of 1/7, the intensive care stay being halved. The overwhelming importance of the correct anaesthetic procedure was underlined. An overall survival rate of 76% gives hopes for a better future for patients suffering from this malformation.
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The five components integral to modern, sophisticated airway management in trauma patients include equipment, pharmacologic adjuncts, manual techniques, physical circumstances, and patient profile. Although there is a finite number of pieces and types of equipment, pharmacologic adjuncts, and manual techniques, the last two components are variable. ⋯ We believe that the commonly used airway management algorithms are a poor substitute for a conceptual understanding of the basic principles of the five components of airway management, although these decision trees may be useful as learning tools. The construction of a truly complete decision tree is virtually impossible because of the high number of individual patient profiles.
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Critical care clinics · Jan 1990
ReviewPerioperative anesthetic management of the pediatric trauma patient.
The object of this article is to provide the anesthesiologist with an approach to the perioperative management of pediatric trauma. The initial focus is on planning and initial stabilization and transport. ⋯ The anesthetic management of the head-injured patient is focused upon the control of intracranial pressure, and the major method for control is hyperventilation to reduce the CO2. Head trauma patients often have injuries to other body systems, which may account for both their ventilatory and their circulatory problems.
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Intensive care medicine · Jan 1990
Case ReportsThe cerebral function analysing monitor in paediatric medical intensive care: applications and limitations.
Practical guidelines for continuous single channel EEG monitoring using the Cerebral Function Analysing Monitor (CFAM) have been outlined based on experience of 54 critically ill comatose and/or paralysed sedated children monitored for up to 9 days during the acute phase of illness. Fall in amplitude and slowing of frequency following either a cerebral insult or barbiturate administration as well as paroxysmal events were readily recognisable in the CFAM traces. ⋯ Despite these useful contributions to clinical care, significant limitations were apparent. It is recommended that CFAM monitoring should be combined with serial conventional EEG recording in order to check the appropriateness of the cortical areas being monitored, the quality and type of signal being processed as well as the significance of the 1 or 2 channel CFAM findings in relation to global cerebral function.