681-700 of 860 results with category "Critical Care"

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Title: Thrombocytopenia in the Critically-ill

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: thrombocytopenia, critically0ill, sepsis, death, mortality, prognosis (PubMed Search)

Posted: 12/21/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD

 

 

 

The incidence and prevalence of thrombocytopenia in the ICU is poorly defined however, it has been found to be an independent predictor of death in the critically-ill. Increased mortality does not appear to be related to bleeding complications. On the other hand, survivors of critical illness tend to recover platelet faster as compared to non-survivors. 

 

Thrombocytopenia in the critically-ill is a marker for systemic inflammation/infection although the exact mechanisms are unknown. Common risk factors associated with thrombocytopenia in the ICU population are:

 

Sepsis

Renal failure

High-illness severity

Organ dysfunction

 

Bottom line:  Thrombocytopenia in the critically-ill is associated with increased mortality. 

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Title: Antibiotic Timing

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 12/15/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

The Importance of Antibiotic Timing for Sepsis and Septic Shock

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Title: Linezolid and Serotonin Syndrome

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: Antibiotics, linezolid, serotonin syndrome, delirium, critical care (PubMed Search)

Posted: 12/7/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD

 

Linezolid is used for gram-positive infections resistant to conventional therapy (e.g., Vancomycin-resistant enterococcus and Methicillin Resistant Staph Aureus). Linezolid is an oxazolidinone, but more importantly it is a weak monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) and serotonin syndrome (e.g., altered mental status, neuromuscular abnormalities, autonomic instability) may occur when combined with selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) or with recent discontinuation of SSRI. 

 

Be aware that the following drugs can precipitate serotonin syndrome when combined with Linezolid:

 

Mirtazpine       Buproprion       Fentanyl

Trazodone       Buspirone         Bromocryptine

Levodopa        Lithium               Amphetamines

Cocaine           Codeine            Reserpine

Ergots               MAOI's

 

 

 

 

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Title: Patient Positioning in the Critically Ill Obese Patient

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 11/30/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Beware Trendelenburg Positioning in the Critically Ill Obese Patient

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Title: Beware of Non-Convulsive Status Epilepticus

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: Status epilepticus, non-convulsive, altered mental status, seizure, critical care, ICU, neurology (PubMed Search)

Posted: 11/23/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD

Non-Convulsive Status Epilepticus (NCSE) is generally under reported. An ICU study found 10% admissions for altered mental status (AMS) were eventually diagnosed as NCSE.

Pearls:

- Include NCSE in the AMS differential

- NCSE may occur with or without convulsive seizures

- Difficult to distinguish from a post-ictal state (14% of convulsive seizures convert to  

  NCSE)

- Reported mortality is up to 44%

 

Consider NCSE when:

- Seizure history / recent seizures

- Post-ictal period >1 hour

- Odd behaviors (e.g., chewing, blinking, personality change) and abnormal eye 

  movements (86% specific)

- AMS without structural, metabolic or traumatic etiology

- Patient intubated for status epilepticus 

 

If you are unsure but suspicious of NCSE order a STAT EEG.  Treat NCSE like a convulsive status.

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Title: Obesity and Mechanical Ventilation

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 11/16/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD

Positioning for Ventilated, Critically Ill Obese Patients

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Title: Ocular sonography and elevated intracranial pressure

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: ultrasound, ocular, sonography, intracranial pressure, optic nerve sheath, ICP (PubMed Search)

Posted: 11/9/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD

 

Ocular sonography is a fast, simple, and non-invasive tool to detect elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) by measuring the optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD). Several studies have shown a positive correlation between increased ONSD (>5.7mm) and elevated ICP (>20mmHg).  Although ultrasound may not replace CT or MRI to diagnose the cause of the increased ICP, its use as a triage tool can expedite these tests.

 

The technique:

  1. Use linear probe on closed eyelid.
  2. Identify the optic nerve sheath.
  3. Measure the optic nerve sheath, 3mm behind globe.
  4. Rotate probe 90 degrees and measure again.
  5. Average both diameters.

Please see the references below for more information and, as with any new technique please consult local experts prior to making clinical decisions

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Title: Ventilation in the Post-Cardiac Arrest Patient

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 11/2/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD

Ventilation Pearls in the Post-Cardiac Arrest Patient

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Title: Long-term complications of ICU Delirium

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: delirium, dementia, ICU, (PubMed Search)

Posted: 10/25/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Increasing literature demonstrates ICU delirium is bad. Delirium in mechanically ventilated patients is an independent predictor for long-term cognitive defects (e.g., managing money, following detailed instructions, reading maps, and developing dementia). The cited study found 80% of patients with ICU delirium had cognitive dysfunction at three months, and 70% had residual dysfunction at one year (33% had severe dysfunction).

You must be aggressive to prevent delirium:

-         Implement daily assessment tools (e.g., CAM-ICU)

-         Daily awakening and spontaneous breathing trials

-         Early patient mobilization

-         Aggressive pharmacological treatment of delirium

-         For more information: www.icudelirium.org

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Title: Ketamine for RSI in Unstable ED Patients

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 10/19/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Ketamine for RSI in Hemodynamically Unstable ED Patients

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Title: Heliox in severe asthma

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: asthma, heliox, airway (PubMed Search)

Posted: 10/12/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

 

Heliox is a mixture of oxygen and helium resulting in a gas less dense than air. In asthma, airway resistance causes turbulent airflow which increases the work of breathing. Heliox reduces airway resistance by increasing laminar airflow. 

 

Benefits: 

Better lung mechanics

Improved nebulizer delivery

Few known side-effects/complications

 

Drawbacks:

Expensive

Contraindicated in hypoxemic patients.

Paucity of large prospective randomized trials.

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Title: Endotracheal medication administration

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: endotracheal intubation, medication, acls, resuscitation (PubMed Search)

Posted: 10/7/2010 by Ellen Lemkin, MD, PharmD

EMS in Maryland has REMOVED endotracheal medication administration from its ADULT protocols

This is due to:



Title: Peak and Plateau Pressures in Intubated ED Patients with Respiratory Distress

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 10/5/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Respiratory Distress in the Ventilated ED Patient

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Title: Continuing HAART for critically-ill HIV/AIDS patients?

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: HAART HIV AIDS Critical illness (PubMed Search)

Posted: 9/28/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD (Updated: 9/28/2010)

While you should always involve ID consultants when managing critically-ill HIV/AIDS patients on HAART, consider this; sub-therapeutic levels of anti-retrovirals may promote HIV resistance, potentially invalidating a class of drug for future use. Therefore, it may be advantageous to discontinue the drug(s) during critical-illness to avoid resistance. 

 

Two examples leading to sub-therapeutic HAART levels in critical-illness:

  1. Reduced absorption of PO medications from bowel wall edema and/or decreased splanchnic perfusion.
  2. Interactions with HAART medications and the multitude of other drugs administered in the ICU.

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Title: Hemophilia A and Life-threatening bleeding

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 9/21/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Life-threatening Bleeding in Hemophilia A Patients

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Title: Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infections (NSTI)

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infections, sepsis, critical care, surgery (PubMed Search)

Posted: 9/14/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD (Updated: 9/14/2010)

(Sorry for the previously mislabeled pearl...)

Necrotizing soft tissue infections (NSTI) are on the rise and, despite improved surgical and critical care, over the years there has only been a mild reduction in mortality. Survival is associated with early diagnosis and treatment. Unfortunately, NSTI are not always obvious because deeper tissues made be involved first. Despite a validated scoring system and better radiology, our clinical suspicion still rules and relies on a meticulous history and physical exam. 

Here are some subtle signs of NSTI:

 

Pain out of proportion to exam

Edema beyond region of erythema

Skin anesthesia

Skin erythema and/or hyperthermia

Epidemolysis

Skin bronzing

 

If NSTI is suspected, be vigilant! Start broad-spectrum antibiotics, begin appropriate resuscitation and involve your surgeons early.

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Title: Pulmonary Contusion Ventilator Management

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 9/7/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Pulmonary Contusion and Ventilator Management

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Title: Cerebral Salt Wasting Syndrome vs. Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH Secretion.

Category: Critical Care

Keywords: SIADH, CSW, syndrome of inappropriate adh, cerebral salt wasting, hyponatremia, neurosurgery (PubMed Search)

Posted: 8/31/2010 by Haney Mallemat, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Hyponatremia plagues many neurosurgical patients due to the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH) or the cerebral salt wasting syndrome (CSW). Both diseases may appear similar (hyponatremia, increased urine osmolarity, increased urine sodium, normal adrenal, renal and thyroid function), but there is one BIG difference. Patients with SIADH are euvolemic or hypervolemic (excess ADH causes fluid retention) whereas patients with CSW are fluid depleted (impaired renal handling of sodium and water). To differentiate, look for signs of hypovolemia: orthostatics, dry mucus membranes, hemoconcentration, pre-renal azotemia, and/or hemodynamics (IVC collapse anyone?).

Bottom line: Distinguish SIADH from CSW because the treatments are exact opposites:

SIADH: Fluid restrict

CSW: Give water and salt (i.e., 0.9% saline)

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Title: Hemostatic Therapy for ICH

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 8/24/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Hemostatic Therapy for ICH - Updated Guidelines

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Title: Drug-Induced Hypophosphatemia

Category: Critical Care

Posted: 8/10/2010 by Mike Winters, MBA, MD (Updated: 3/4/2026)

Drug-Induced Hypophosphatemia

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