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Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P441
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Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P438 -
Impact of sepsis-associated cytokine storm on plasma NGAL during acute kidney injury in a model of polymicrobial sepsis
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:419 -
Abstract withdrawn
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P384 -
Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled PK/PD study on the effects of a single intravenous dose of the anti-hepcidin Spiegelmer NOX-H94 on serum iron during experimental human endotoxemia
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P352 -
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Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P350 -
Association between oxygenation and 6-month mortality during post-cardiac arrest care
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P315 -
Overtriage and undertriage in a prehospital system over 7 years
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P276 -
Abstract withdrawn
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P268 -
Renal oxygenation in clinical acute kidney injury
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:221 -
Measurement of kidney perfusion in critically ill Patients
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:220 -
Two steps forward in bedside monitoring of lung mechanics: transpulmonary pressure and lung volume
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:219 -
Point-of-care coagulation management in intensive care medicine
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:218 -
Assessment of volume responsiveness during mechanical ventilation: recent advances
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:217 -
Patient monitoring alarms in the ICU and in the operating room
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:216 -
Therapeutic hypothermia: is it effective for non-VF/VT cardiac arrest?
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:215 -
Ventriculo-arterial decoupling in acutely altered hemodynamic states
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:213 -
Analgesia in the emergency department: a GRADE-based evaluation of research evidence and recommendations for practice
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:212 -
Clinical review: What are the best hemodynamic targets for noncardiac surgical patients?
Perioperative hemodynamic optimization, or goal-directed therapy (GDT), has been show to significantly decrease complications and risk of death in high-risk patients undergoing noncardiac surgery. An important...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:210 -
Successful introduction of cardiac index, fluid responsiveness and oxygen delivery data into the primary survey at a central London major trauma centre and impact on time to CT, fluid resuscitation and disposal
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P201 -
Comparison of a fully automatic ARDSNet protocol and a feedback-controlled open lung management concept
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P97 -
Abstract withdrawn
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 2):P65 -
The effect of diabetes mellitus on the association between measures of glycaemiccontrol and ICU mortality: a retrospective cohort study
In critical illness, four measures of glycaemic control are associated with ICUmortality: mean glucose concentration, glucose variability, the incidence ofhypoglycaemia (≤ 2.2 mmol/l) or low glucose (2.3 to 4....
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R52 -
Palmar skin conductance variability and the relation to stimulation, pain and the motor activity assessment scale in intensive care unit patients
Many intensive care unit (ICU) patients describe pain and other adverse feelings that may impact long-term psychological morbidity. Sympathetically mediated palmar skin conductance variability is related to em...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R51 -
The influence of gender on the epidemiology of and outcome from severe sepsis
The impact of gender on outcome in critically ill patients is unclear. Weinvestigated the influence of gender on the epidemiology of severe sepsis andassociated morbidity and mortality in a large cohort of ICU...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R50 -
Prediction of invasive candidal infection in critically ill patients with severeacute pancreatitis
Patients with severe acute pancreatitis are at risk of candidal infectionscarrying the potential risk of an increase in mortality. Since early diagnosis isproblematic, several clinical risk scores have been de...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R49 -
Accuracy of blood-glucose measurements using glucose meters and arterial blood gas analyzers in critically ill adult patients: systematic review
Glucose control to prevent both hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia is important in an intensive care unit. Arterial blood gas analyzers and glucose meters are commonly used to measure blood-glucose concentration i...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R48 -
Strategies for prevention of postoperative delirium: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials
The ideal measures to prevent postoperative delirium remain unestablished. We conducted this systematic review and meta-analysis to clarify the significance of potential interventions.
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R47 -
Characterisation of sleep in intensive care using 24-hour polysomnography: anobservational study
Many intensive care patients experience sleep disruption potentially related tonoise, light and treatment interventions. The purpose of this study was tocharacterise, in terms of quantity and quality, the slee...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R46 -
Predictive value of circulating interleukin-6 and heart-type fatty acid binding protein for three months clinical outcome in acute cerebral infarction: multiple blood markers profiling study
There is no single blood marker for predicting the prognosis in ischemic stroke. A combination of multiple blood markers may enhance the ability to predict long-term outcome following ischemic stroke.
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R45 -
A bedside definition of acute respiratory distress syndrome based on a conceptual model
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:418 -
Hydroxyethyl starch in severe sepsis: end of starch era?
Perner A, Haase N, Guttormsen AB, Tenhunen J, Klemenzson G, Åneman A, Madsen KR, Møller MH, Elkjær JM, Poulsen LM, Bendtsen A, Winding R, Steensen M, Berezowicz P, Søe-Jensen P, Bestle M, Strand K, Wiis J, Whi...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:310 -
Recognition of hypovolemic shock: using base deficit to think outside of the ATLS box
Base deficit has frequently been utilized as an informal adjunct in the initial evaluation of trauma patients to assess the extent of their physiologic derangements. However, the current Advanced Trauma Life S...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:124 -
A dream deferred: the rise and fall of recombinant activated protein C
Ranieri VM, Thompson BT, Barie PS, Dhainaut JF, Douglas IS, Finfer S, GÃ¥rdlund B, Marshall JC, Rhodes A, Artigas A, Payen D, Tenhunen J, Al-Khalidi HR, Thompson V, Janes J, Macias WL, Vangerow B, Williams MD: Dro...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:309 -
Algorithm for the resuscitation of traumatic cardiac arrest patients in a physician-staffed helicopter emergency medical service
Survival rates following traumatic cardiac arrest (TCA) are known to be poor but resuscitation is not universally futile. There are a number of potentially reversible causes to TCA and a well-defined group of ...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:308 -
Initial ventilator settings for critically ill patients
The lung-protective mechanical ventilation strategy has been standard practice for management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) for more than a decade. Observational data, small randomized studies ...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:123 -
Our favorite unproven ideas for future critical care
The future of critical care medicine will be shaped not only by the evidence-validated foundations of science, but also by innovations based on unproven and, in many cases, untested concepts and thoughtful vis...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S9 -
Get to the point in intensive care medicine - the sooner the better?
Timing of therapy plays a pivotal role in intensive care patients. Although being evident and self-explanatory, it has to be considered that the appropriateness of a specific therapeutic intervention is likewi...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S8 -
The evolution of nutrition in critical care: how much, how soon?
Critical care is a very recent advance in the history of human evolution. Prior to the existence of ICU care, when the saber-tooth tiger attacked you had but a few critical hours to recover or you died. Mother...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S7 -
Rational fluid management in today's ICU practice
Intravenous fluid therapy has evolved significantly over time. From the initial report of the first intravenous administration of sodium-chloride-based solution to the development of goal-directed fluid therap...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S6 -
Towards integrative physiological monitoring of the critically ill: from cardiovascular to microcirculatory and cellular function monitoring at the bedside
Current hemodynamic monitoring of critically ill patients is mainly focused on monitoring of pressure-derived hemodynamic variables related to systemic circulation. Increasingly, oxygen transport pathways and ...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S5 -
Supporting hemodynamics: what should we target? What treatments should we use?
Assessment and monitoring of hemodynamics is a cornerstone in critically ill patients as hemodynamic alteration may become life-threatening in a few minutes. Defining normal values in critically ill patients i...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S4 -
Advancing critical care: time to kiss the right frog
The greatest advances in critical care over the past two decades have been achieved through doing less to the patient. We have learnt through salutary experience that our burgeoning Master-of-the-Universe capa...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S3 -
Critical care - where have we been and where are we going?
The first ICUs were established in the late 1950s and the specialty of critical care medicine began to develop. Since those early days, huge improvements have been made in terms of technological advances and u...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S2 -
Mechanical ventilation: past lessons and the near future
The ability to compensate for life-threatening failure of respiratory function is perhaps the signature technology of intensive care medicine. Unchanging needs for providing effective life-support with minimiz...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17(Suppl 1):S1 -
Citrulline: just a biomarker or a conditionally essential amino acid and a pharmaconutrient in critically ill patients?
Low plasma citrulline levels have been associated with a reduction of functional gut mass in various clinical situations. In critically ill patients, citrulline variations are tricky to interpret because of se...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:122 -
Glycyrrhizin protects against porcine endotoxemia through modulation of systemic inflammatory response
Glycyrrhizin (GL) was recently found to suppress high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1)-induced injury by binding directly to it. However, the effect of GL on HMGB1 expression in endotoxemia as well as its underlyi...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R44 -
Neuromuscular blocking agents in acute respiratory distress syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Randomized trials investigating neuromuscular blocking agents in adult acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) have been inconclusive about effects on mortality, which is very high in this population. Uncer...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:R43 -
A touch of cooling may help
Schortgen F, Clabault K, Katsahian S, Devaquet J, Mercat A, Deye N, Dellamonica J, Bouadma L, Cook F, Beji O, Brun-Buisson C, Lemaire F, Brochard L: Multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial of fever contr...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:306 -
Serum adipocyte fatty acid-binding protein in the critically ill
Sepsis due to unabated inflammation is common. Increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, free radicals, and eicosanoids has been detected in sepsis and other critical illnesses but could also be due ...
Citation: Critical Care 2013 17:121
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- ISSN: 1364-8535 (electronic)