1,721,062 research outputs found
The potential dangers of treating head injury patients with corticosteroids
In the past, corticosteroids were given to head-injured patients in order to prevent secondary brain damage, even if clinical trials had been inconclusive and potential risks of complications were of concern. Recently, CRASH, a large, multi-centre study on short-term, high-dose corticosteroid treatment in head trauma, was interrupted after enrolling > 10,000 patients because corticosteroid treatment was associated with significantly higher mortality within two weeks. Participating clinicians were not requested to judge the causes of death, but rates of infections and gastrointestinal haemorrhages did not differ between treated patients and controls. Other potential corticosteroid complications include metabolic derangements (particularly hyperglycaemia), adrenal insufficiency and critical illness myopathy. Furthermore, experimental data suggest that corticosteroids may have some harmful effects on neural tissue. In this review, the potential risks of treating head-injured patients with corticosteroids are examined. © 2005 Ashley Publications Ltd
Opioids and mechanical ventilation.
In last years opioids have been increasingly utilized to sedate patients during mechanical ventilation. First, in Hypnotic Based Sedation (HBS), they were added to hypnotics because of their analgesic properties. Successively, in Analgesic Based Sedation (ABS), both sedative and analgesic properties were utilized and opioids were given alone; hypnotics were added only if adequate sedation was not achieved at maximum dosage. Apart from their analgesic and sedative properties, opioid effects on respiratory function are of particular value in many mechanically-ventilated patients. Dose-dependent inhibition of respiratory drive may usefully prevent spontaneous breathing during controlled ventilation, particularly when permissive hypercapnia is applied, or decrease excessive respiratory rate during assisted or noninvasive ventilation. Even cough inhibition can be valuable in some conditions, for instance, during respiratory weaning and endotracheal tube removal in patients that should not cough because of a recent tracheal resection. On the other hand, excessive respiratory depression may cause hypoventilation and apnea during assisted or spontaneous ventilation and lengthens the weaning process. In order to take advantage from positive effects and to avoid negative ones, opioid dosage should be thoroughly titrated. On this basis remifentanil has become increasingly popular as the opioid agent most suitable for ABS because of its unique, favorable pharmacokinetics
Proposta di un protocollo per lo studio con risonanza magnetica delle articolazioni temporo-mandibolari.
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