Articles: critical-care.
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Airway obstruction remains a constant problem in acute care. This is particularly true when there are anatomical or pathological abnormalities, trauma, or when repeated failed attempts at endoscopic or blind intubations have left a bloody field, preventing clear visualization of the vocal cords. Our refinement of translaryngeal guided intubation (TLI) uses a spring guidewire accompanied by a plastic sheath protector. ⋯ A well-lubricated endotracheal tube is then inserted to the desired position using the plastic sheath as a stylet. This technique works very well, and we are convinced that TLI is one of the most effective emergency techniques to secure an airway. It can be performed quickly with inexpensive equipment and is a promising addition to the currently recommended alternatives.
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Ten patients, with a range of illness severity, received a continuous 8-hour infusion of undiluted propofol for sedation while undergoing mechanical ventilation in a general intensive care unit. The level of sedation was assessed hourly and measurements were made of haemodynamic, respiratory, haematological and biochemical variables. Sedation remained satisfactory in most patients throughout the study period, with only occasional alterations in infusion rate, and eight patients required further sedative therapy within 45 minutes of discontinuation of the propofol infusion. ⋯ Adrenal steroidogenesis was not inhibited significantly. Propofol infusion proved to be a useful and readily controllable sedative agent, and discontinuation of the drug was followed by rapid recovery in most cases. The critically ill may be particularly sensitive to the cardiovascular depressant properties of the drug.
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Traditional concepts of shock therapy have been based on conventional monitoring. However, the availability of invasive monitoring systems has provided the means to describe the patterns of oxygen transport in various acute life-threatening illnesses. Surgical trauma provides a useful model for investigation of other shock syndromes, because measurements may be made in the preoperative control period, during the hemodynamic crisis intraoperatively, and sequentially throughout the postoperative period for survivors and nonsurvivors. ⋯ The interactions of survivors' hemodynamic and oxygen transport patterns define compensatory responses which primarily are increased cardiac output, DO2, and VO2. Inadequate compensations and decompensations of shock are clearly manifest by the nonsurvivor pattern. Therapeutic goals may be defined by the values of the survivor patterns; reduced mortality and morbidity result when these goals are vigorously applied prospectively (17-19).
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Cutaneous blood flow may be an indirect measure of circulatory function estimated by continuous, noninvasive laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV). It has been postulated that LDV may be a useful monitor of cardiac output changes. To test this hypothesis, LDV was evaluated in 67 critically ill adult patients with simultaneous measurements of cardiac index (CI) and other physiologic variables. ⋯ Further, with the heated laser probe, the magnitude of acute CI change is reflected. However, there are gradual changes over time of LDV which may occur independently of CI or other monitored variables. Hence, absolute LDV values are not predictive of absolute CI values.