Articles: critical-illness.
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J Intensive Care Med · Jul 1995
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialA prospective study of continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration in critically ill patients with acute renal failure.
We studied the biochemical and the clinical consequences of the application of continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration to the management of acute renal failure in critically ill patients. One hundred consecutive surgical and medical ICU patients with acute renal failure were entered into a prospective clinical study at an intensive care unit of tertiary institution. ⋯ included the following: mean patient age was 60.9 years (range 21-81 yr); mean APACHE II score, 28.6 (95% confidence interval; 27.4-29.8); and number of failing organs, mean, 4.1 (95% confidence interval; 3.8-4.4). At commencement of continuous venovenous hemofiltration with dialysis, 79% of patients were receiving inotropic drugs and 72% were septic, and, in 35%, bacteremia or fungemia was demonstrated. Renal replacement therapy was applied for a mean duration of 186.2 hours (95% confidence interval; 149.2-223.7), with a mean hourly net ultrafiltrate production of 621 mL (95% confidence interval; 594-648) and a mean urea clearance of 28.1 mL/min (95% confidence interval; 26.7-29.5). Azotemia was controlled in all patients (plasma urea < 30 mmol/L). During the more than 18,000 hours of treatment, there was no therapy-associated hemodynamic instability. Complications were rare. They included two cases of hemofilter rupture with minor blood loss and a single case of bleeding at the site of the vascular-access catheter. Forty-three patients survived to ICU discharge, and 40 survived to hospital discharge. Continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration is a safe and an effective form of renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients. In such patients, who have a high predicted mortality rate, it was associated with a 40% survival rate. These findings suggests that continuous venovenous hemodiafiltration may be ideally suited to patients with multisystem organ failure with acute renal failure.
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Much of today's medical care relies on experience unsupported by investigation, and emergency medical care is no exception; research is necessary to improve this care. Critically ill and injured patients are the patients who will benefit the most from improvements in emergency medical diagnostic and treatment methods. Yet, the federal bureaucracy has effectively banned research on these patients, since they cannot generally give "informed consent." We argue that, with the proper safeguards, research on critically ill and injured patients should be performed in the emergency medicine (EDs and EMS) settings without informed consent. To require such consent when not obtainable compromises both the researchers who must get such consent and the patients who must continue to endure old, and often untested therapies.
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This article discusses the role of amino acids in nutritional support during critical illness. The basis for assessing the requirements for protein and amino acids is presented, and the case for enhanced requirement of particular amino acids is discussed. Specific requirements for branched-chain amino acids, glutamine, and arginine are evaluated.
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Although many of the measurements and techniques outlined in this article may be epidemiologically useful and correlate with morbidity and mortality, no single indicator is of consistent value in the nutritional assessment of critically ill patients. Measurements such as anthropometrics, total body fat estimation, or delayed hypersensitivity skin testing either are liable to non-nutritional influences or lack accuracy and precision in individual patients. Plasma concentrations of hepatic proteins are affected significantly by the patient's underlying disease state and therapeutic interventions and therefore lack specificity. ⋯ The biochemical measurement of levels of vitamins, minerals, and trace elements is invaluable in demonstrating specific deficiencies associated with disease and assessing whether long-term nutritional support is adequate. Such measurements rarely are necessary to make the initial clinical decision to give nutritional support, however. The most widely used measures of nutritional state are nitrogen balance and secretory protein concentrations, and these indices improve when sick patients recover.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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To determine the clinical significance of fever in geriatric emergency department patients. ⋯ Fever among geriatric ED patients frequently marks the presence of serious illness. All such patients should be strongly considered for hospital admission, particularly when certain clinical features are present. The absence of abnormal findings does not reliably rule out the possibility of serious illness.