现在位置 >首页 > 研究点评
0℃
PROTINVENT study: protein intake timing and dose for the critically ill Optimal protein intake during critical illness is unknown. In order to achieve a personalised nutritional approach, Dutch researchers conducted the PROTein INtake and clinical outcomes of adult critically ill patients on prolonged mechanical VENTilation (PROTINVENT) study. The study’s primary aim was to determine the best timing and dose of protein intake to support the lowest 6-month mortality...
阅读全文
0℃
European guideline on managing post-traumatic bleeding: 5th edition An updated guideline on the management of significant bleeding and coagulopathy following major trauma has been released by the pan-European, multidisciplinary Task Force for Advanced Bleeding Care in Trauma. The document, published in the journal Critical Care, includes recommendations intended to guide the management of patients during the early phase of hospital care following traumatic injury. ...
阅读全文
0℃
The role of post-ICU recovery clinics With multiple advances in critical care, more patients are given the chance to survive life-threatening illnesses such as sepsis. This growing cohort of patients, however, grapples with a new challenge – post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). A raft of symptoms, including muscle weakness, depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), makes it difficult for patients with PICS to resume their prehospitalisation liv...
阅读全文
0℃
News Oxygen after surgery: review questions WHO advice that high levels reduce infection BMJ 2019; 364 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l777 (Published 18 February 2019)Cite this as: BMJ 2019;364:l777 World Health Organization guidelines on using high levels of oxygen during and after surgery have been questioned after claims that research by an Italian surgeon lacks credibility. Mario Schietroma of the University of L’Aquila in central Italy is the author of ...
阅读全文
0℃
Value-based incentive programmes and CAUTI rates Value-based incentive programmes (VBIPs) aim to drive improvements in quality and reduce costs by linking financial incentives or penalties to hospital performance. A new study evaluated the association of two U.S. federal VBIPs – the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program and the Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction Program (HACRP) – and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) in the critical c...
阅读全文
0℃
Declining rate of ARDS-related mortality There have been multiple advances in the management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), but the temporal trends in ARDS-related mortality are not well known. Conservative fluid management strategy for ARDS, in particular, has been extensively studied and is increasingly being used in clinical practice. However, it is largely unknown whether this changing practice parallels with the improvement in survival outcome....
阅读全文
0℃
Harvard study: machine learning improves ED triage The increasing number of emergency department (ED) visits often correlates with ED crowding and delays in care. This problem highlights the need for ED triage systems that accurately differentiate and prioritise critically ill from stable patients, enabling efficient allocation of finite ED resources.   Currently, the Emergent Severity Index (ESI) is the most commonly used triage algorithm in U.S. EDs....
阅读全文
0℃
Advances in monitoring expired CO2 in critically ill patients Reviews the potential uses and pitfalls of capnography in critically ill patients, especially for haemodynamic and respiratory monitoring. Expired CO2 can be easily monitored in the intensive care unit (ICU), especially in patients under invasive mechanical ventilation, using infrared measurement by sampling mainstream expiratory flow using an in-line chamber, or sidestream expiratory flow (by contin...
阅读全文
0℃
Blood biomarker can identify infection-related disease progression In settings such as the emergency department (ED), early assessment of the potential for further disease progression is vital. An early identification of infection severity is helpful in initiating appropriate treatment strategies. However, currently there is a lack of validated tools to assess risk of further disease progression in patients presenting to the ED with a suspected infection. A new ...
阅读全文
0℃
Imaging and intensive care medicine An evolving partnership A major evolution is underway involving critical care and imaging.  The intensive care patient population is changing. Increasingly intensive care units (ICUs) are treating older patients, with more comorbidities, and variable prognosis, at a time when family expectations are different and often with higher expectations of recovery. Life support technology is increasingly sophisticated, surgery is minima...
阅读全文
×
腾讯微博