3,988 research outputs found
Microcirculatory Perfusion-Based Approach to the Critically Ill Patient: Bringing a Research Tool Technology to the Bedside
Monitorare il microcircolo nel paziente critico offre un approccio più fisiologico alla loro gestione: un microcircolo alterato, quale causa primaria di ipoperfusione tissutale e disfunzione d’organo dovrebbe rappresentare il target dei trattamenti, specialmente quando il ripristino delle variabili emodinamiche standard sembra essere insufficiente a migliorare l’outcome. Nonostante questo enorme potenziale, esso resta ancora solamente uno strumento di ricerca.
Questo lavoro, una raccolta di alcuni articoli di ricerca, è stato condotto nel tentativo di avvicinare la ricerca alla pratica clinica.
Lo studio di validazione della tecnologia di terza generazione per l’imaging del microcircolo, l’Incident Dark Field illumination (IDF), fornisce il confronto con il gold standard. È stata poi posta l’attenzione sulle difficoltà tecniche di acquisizione di imaging adeguato del microcircolo e sull’ impatto sull’interpretazione dei dati, con particolare riguardo all’esperienza dell’operatore e alla collaborazione del paziente.
Il core del progetto è rappresentato dal MicroDAIMON, uno studio prospettico osservazionale sul monitoraggio giornaliero del microcircolo nel paziente critico che fornisce uno dei più ampi database esistenti e che ha mostrato l’associazione tra alterazioni del microcircolo al baseline e outcome. Il monitoraggio è stato eseguito anche con Near InfraRed Spectroscopy su muscolo scheletrico con test di occlusione vascolare, per valutare la reattività dinamica del microcircolo ad un insulto ischemico e la sua capacità di riserva. Un’analisi di sottogruppo ha incentrato l’attenzione sul paziente politraumatizzato, mostrando che la persistenza di un microcircolo alterato in presenza di variabili macro-emodinamiche ottimizzate può predire un aumentato rischio di disfunzione d’organo. Infine, con uno studio open label, è stato valutato l’effetto della ketanserina sul microcircolo, cercando di fornire un approccio farmacologico alle alterazioni microcircolatorie.Focusing microcirculation in critically ill patients offers a physiologic approach to their management: an impaired microcirculation, as the “motor” of tissues hypoperfusion and organ dysfunction, should represent the target of interventions, especially when the restoring of the standard macrohemodynamic variables appears to be insufficient to improve the patient outcome. Despite this huge potential, microcirculatory monitoring still remains a research tool.
The present work, a collection of diverse research articles, was conducted trying to build a bridge between the research setting and the clinical practice.
It includes the validation study of the third-generation technology for microcirculatory imaging, the Incident Dark Field illumination (IDF), providing a comparison with the gold standard. Moreover, it gives a deep insight on the technical issues in collecting appropriate imaging and on their impact on the data interpretation, focusing the attention on the operator experience and patient’s cooperation.
The core of the project is represented by the MicroDAIMON, a prospective observational study with one of the largest databases of microcirculatory data in critically ill patients to date: it shows the association between microcirculatory abnormalities at the baseline and mortality. Daily monitoring was also performed with Near InfraRed Spectroscopy of skeletal muscle associated to a vascular occlusion test in order to evaluate the dynamic response and reserve capacity of the microcirculation to an ischemic disturbance. A subgroup analysis, focuses the attention on trauma patients, showing that the persistence of microcirculatory abnormalities in presence of normalized macro-hemodynamic variables could predict a major risk of development of organ dysfunction. Finally, with an open label pilot study, the effect of ketanserin in recruiting a dysfunctional microcirculation was investigate, trying to propose a pharmacologic approach to microcirculatory abnormalities
Microcirculation as a guide for therapy: do not condemn an innocent without a fair trial
Evaluation of the Microcirculation in Critically Ill Patients
Abstract: The first goal of therapies in critically ill patients is to improve tissue perfusion and oxygenation. Hemodynamic monitoring has long been limited to measure-ments of cardiac output and global oxygen delivery. The clinical introduction of hand-held vital microscopes in the late 1990s enabled the real-time, non-invasive, bedside ob-servation of blood flow in the microcirculation (vessels with diameter <100 μm), i.e. the real site of oxygen and nutrient exchange between blood and cells. Microcirculatory alter-ations have been described during sepsis and shock states and were associated with mor-tality. These can occur independently of systemic hemodynamic alterations. Sublingual videomicroscopy allowed evaluating the microvascular response to resuscitation proce-dures, including oxygen therapy, fluids, blood transfusions, vasopressors. Future re-search directions should be aimed to integrate microcirculatory monitoring with standard hemodynamic measurements and verify the utility of microcirculation as a therapeutic tar-get. Continuous technological developments are imperative to facilitate the introduction of sublingual videomicroscopy in the clinical practice
Comment on "Respiratory mechanics and gas exchanges in the early course of COVID-19 ARDS: a hypothesis-generating study"
Claudia Rankine: An Evening with Claudia Rankine
An initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest, the NEA Big Read broadens our understanding of our world, our communities, and ourselves through the joy of sharing a good book. For NEA Big Read: Hampton Roads, that book is Citizen: An American Lyric.
NEA Big Read: Hampton Roads, the President\u27s Lecture Series, and the President\u27s Task Force on Inclusive Excellence invite you to a powerful evening with Claudia Rankine, the book\u27s author, hosted by Tim Seibles, Poet Laureate for the Commonwealth of Virginia, and opening with readings by local youth poets.
Claudia Rankine has written five collections of poetry, including Citizen: An American Lyric, which was selected for the National Endowment for the Arts\u27 Big Read, and two plays. She also has participated in several video collaborations and edited anthologies including The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of the Mind.
Rankine has received fellowships from the MacArthur and Guggenheim foundations. Citizen won several honors, including the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry, the PEN Open Book Award and the NAACP Image Award. Citizen also was the only poetry book to be a New York Times nonfiction bestseller. She is the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University and chancellor of the Academy of American Poets
Comment on "Effects of short-term hyperoxia on sytemic hemodynamics, oxygen transport, and microcirculation: An observational study in patients with septic shock and healthy volunteers"
Microcirculation-guided resuscitation in sepsis: the next frontier?
Microcirculatory dysfunction plays a key role in the pathogenesis of tissue dysoxia and organ failure in sepsis. Sublingual videomicroscopy techniques enable the real-time non-invasive assessment of microvascular blood flow. Alterations in sublingual microvascular perfusion were detected during sepsis and are associated with poor outcome. More importantly, sublingual videomicroscopy allowed to explore the effects of commonly applied resuscitative treatments in septic shock, such as fluids, vasopressors and inotropes, and showed that the optimization of macro-hemodynamic parameters may not be accompanied by an improvement in microvascular perfusion. This loss of "hemodynamic coherence," i.e., the concordance between the response of the macrocirculation and the microcirculation, advocates for the integration of microvascular monitoring in the management of septic patients. Nonetheless, important barriers remain for a widespread use of sublingual videomicroscopy in the clinical practice. In this review, we discuss the actual limitations of this technique and future developments that may allow an easier and faster evaluation of the microcirculation at the bedside, and propose a role for sublingual microvascular monitoring in guiding and titrating resuscitative therapies in sepsis
Portrait of Claudia Lynn Pittman.
Handwritten inscription: Claudia Lynn Pittman, 20 yrs old, Hattiesburg.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joephoto_c/1129/thumbnail.jp
Homonoia - Concorda - Sammanasya
Analysis of the divine figures of Homónoia in the Greek pantheon, Concordia in the Roman pantheon, and Sammanasya in the Vedic pantheon. Claudia Santi is the author of Homónoia; Andrzej Gillmeister is the author of Concordia; Antonio Salvati is the author of Sammanasya. As regards Homónoia, the origin of this personified abstraction seems to be traced back to the political debate of Athens in the last 5th century. Maybe it was created by Antiphon as opposed to stásis, both in the meaning of ‘psychic conflict’ and ‘internal political dissensions, civil war’
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