17 results on '"Orlob S"'
Search Results
2. Wolfgang J. Kern, Graz: Kreislaufdetektion basierend auf Beschleunigungssignalen von Feedback-Sensoren bei außerklinischem Herzstillstand.
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Orlob, S., Bohn, A., Toller, W., Gräsner, J.-T., Wnent, J., and Holler, M.
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- 2023
3. Sex specific differences in short-term mortality after ICU-delirium.
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Schreiber N, Eichlseder M, Orlob S, Klivinyi C, Zoidl P, Pichler A, Eichinger M, Fandler-Höfler S, Scholz L, Baumgartner J, Schörghuber M, and Eller P
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Sex Factors, Cohort Studies, Proportional Hazards Models, Critical Illness mortality, Hospital Mortality, Adult, Risk Factors, Delirium mortality, Intensive Care Units organization & administration, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Propensity Score
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Introduction: Delirium is a frequent complication in critically ill patients and is associated with adverse outcomes such as long-term cognitive impairment and increased mortality. It is unknown whether there are sex-related differences in intensive care unit (ICU) delirium and associated outcomes. We aimed to assess sex-specific differences in short-term mortality following ICU-delirium., Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care-IV (MIMIC-IV) database. Adult ICU patients who were diagnosed with delirium using the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU) were included. The primary outcome was 30-day mortality following delirium onset. To control for baseline differences in demographics, illness severity, and comorbidities, we applied 1:1 propensity score matching. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to evaluate the association between sex and mortality., Results: A total of 8950 ICU patients with delirium were analyzed, of whom 42.6% were women. In univariable analysis, women had higher crude mortality (26.0% vs. 23.4%; HR 1.16, 95% CI 1.071-1.267, p < 0.001). After propensity score matching, the cohort included 3811 women and 3811 men. In adjusted analysis, risk for thirty-day mortality remained higher in women (HR 1.16, 95% CI 1.064-1.273, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Our study suggests that women with ICU-delirium have a significantly higher risk of short-term mortality than men. Acknowledging the limitations inherent to observational studies with potential for residual confounding, further research is needed to understand the biological and clinical factors driving this disparity and to inform sex-specific interventions for ICU-delirium., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: The MIMIC database was approved by the institutional review boards of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (2001-P-001699/14) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (No. 0403000206), which waived the requirement for individual patient consent because the datasets contained deidentified information. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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4. Post-resuscitation pneumothorax: retrospective analysis of incidence, risk factors and outcome-relevance.
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Auinger D, Hötzer D, Zajic P, Orlob S, Heschl S, Fida S, Zoidl P, Honnef G, Friedl H, Smolle-Jüttner FM, and Prause G
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Austria epidemiology, Incidence, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest epidemiology, Pneumothorax epidemiology, Pneumothorax etiology
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Background: Pneumothorax may occur as a complication of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and could pose a potentially life-threatening condition. In this study we sought to investigate the incidence of pneumothorax following CPR for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), identify possible risk factors, and elucidate its association with outcomes., Methods: This study was a retrospective data analysis of patients hospitalized following CPR for OHCA. We included cases from 1st March 2014 to 31st December 2021 which were attended by teams of the physician staffed ambulance based at the University Medical Centre Graz, Austria. Chest imaging after CPR was reviewed to assess whether pneumothorax was present or not. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors for the development of pneumothorax relevant and to assess its association with outcomes [survival to hospital discharge and cerebral performance category (CPC)]., Results: Pneumothorax following CPR was found in 26 out of 237 included cases (11.0%). History of obstructive lung disease was significantly associated with presence of pneumothorax after CPR. This subgroup of patients (n = 61) showed a pneumothorax rate of 23.0%. Pneumothorax was not identified as a relevant factor to predict survival to hospital discharge or favourable neurological outcome (CPC1 + 2)., Conclusions: Pneumothorax may be present in greater than one in ten patients hospitalized after CPR for OHCA. Pre-existent obstructive pulmonary disease seems to be a relevant risk factor for development of post-CPR pneumothorax., Clinicaltrials: gov ID: NCT06182007 (retrospectively registered)., Trial Registration: NCT06182007 (retrospectively registered)., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Top 5 barriers in cardiac arrest research as perceived by international early career researchers - A consensus study.
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Katzenschlager S, Elshaer A, Metelmann B, Metelmann C, Thilakasiri K, Karageorgos V, Barry T, Alm-Kruse K, Karim H, Maurer H, Kramer-Johansen J, and Orlob S
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Aim of the Study: Cardiac arrest research has not received as much scientific attention as research on other topics. Here, we aimed to identify cardiac arrest research barriers from the perspective of an international group of early career researchers., Methods: Attendees of the 2022 international masterclass on cardiac arrest registry research accompanied the Global Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Registry collaborative meeting in Utstein, Norway, and used an adapted hybrid nominal group technique to obtain a diverse and comprehensive perspective. Barriers were identified using a web-based questionnaire and discussed and ranked during an in-person follow-up meeting. After each response was discussed and clarified, barriers were categorized and ranked over two rounds. Each participant scored these from 1 (least significant) to 5 (most significant)., Results: Nine participants generated 36 responses, forming seven overall categories of cardiac arrest research barriers. "Allocated research time" was ranked first in both rounds. "Scientific environment", including appropriate mentorship and support systems, ranked second in the final ranking. "Resources", including funding and infrastructure, ranked third. "Access to and availability of cardiac arrest research data" was the fourth-ranked barrier. This included data from the cardiac arrest registries, medical devices, and clinical studies. Finally, "uniqueness" was the fifth-ranked barrier. This included ethical issues, patient recruitment challenges, and unique characteristics of cardiac arrest., Conclusion: By identifying cardiac arrest research barriers and suggesting solutions, this study may act as a tool for stakeholders to focus on helping early career researchers overcome these barriers, thus paving the road for future research., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. AE, KT, and VK are committee members/representatives of the Young European Resuscitation Council. BM: Member of the European Resuscitation Council and German Resuscitation Council. CM: Member of the European Resuscitation Council and German Resuscitation Council. SO: Member of the European Resuscitation Council and Austrian Resuscitation Council. All other authors state no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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6. Mean arterial pressure during cardiopulmonary bypass: A modifiable risk factor for acute kidney injury in cardiac surgery patients?
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Schreiber N, Orlob S, Fida S, Klivinyi C, Kirsch AH, Kolland M, and Schörghuber M
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- Humans, Arterial Pressure, Cardiopulmonary Bypass, Risk Factors, Postoperative Complications, Cardiac Surgical Procedures, Acute Kidney Injury
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- 2024
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7. Out of sight - Out of mind? The need for a professional and standardized peri-mission first responder support model.
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Schnaubelt S, Orlob S, Veigl C, Sulzgruber P, Krammel M, Lauridsen KG, and Greif R
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First responders are an essential part of the chain (-mail) of survival as they bridge and reduce the time to first chest compressions and defibrillation substantially. However, in the peri-mission phase before and after being sent to a cardiac arrest, these first responders are in danger of being forgotten and taken for granted, and the potential psychological impact has to be remembered. We propose a standardized first responder support system (FRSS) that needs to ensure that first responders are valued and cared for in terms of psychological safety and continuing motivation. This multi-tiered program should involve tailored education and standardized debriefing, as well as actively seeking contact with the first responders after their missions to facilitate potentially needed professional psychological support., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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8. Accelerometry-Based Classification of Circulatory States During Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest.
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Kern WJ, Orlob S, Bohn A, Toller W, Wnent J, Grasner JT, and Holler M
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Heart Rate, Electrocardiography methods, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest diagnosis, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods
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Objective: Exploit accelerometry data for an automatic, reliable, and prompt detection of spontaneous circulation during cardiac arrest, as this is both vital for patient survival and practically challenging., Methods: We developed a machine learning algorithm to automatically predict the circulatory state during cardiopulmonary resuscitation from 4-second-long snippets of accelerometry and electrocardiogram (ECG) data from pauses of chest compressions of real-world defibrillator records. The algorithm was trained based on 422 cases from the German Resuscitation Registry, for which ground truth labels were created by a manual annotation of physicians. It uses a kernelized Support Vector Machine classifier based on 49 features, which partially reflect the correlation between accelerometry and electrocardiogram data., Results: Evaluating 50 different test-training data splits, the proposed algorithm exhibits a balanced accuracy of 81.2%, a sensitivity of 80.6%, and a specificity of 81.8%, whereas using only ECG leads to a balanced accuracy of 76.5%, a sensitivity of 80.2%, and a specificity of 72.8%., Conclusion: The first method employing accelerometry for pulse/no-pulse decision yields a significant increase in performance compared to single ECG-signal usage., Significance: This shows that accelerometry provides relevant information for pulse/no-pulse decisions. In application, such an algorithm may be used to simplify retrospective annotation for quality management and, moreover, to support clinicians to assess circulatory state during cardiac arrest treatment.
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- 2023
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9. Assessing the weak links - Necessity and impact of regional cardiac arrest awareness campaigns for laypersons.
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Orlob S, Grundner S, Wittig J, Eichinger M, Pucher F, Eichlseder M, Lingitz R, Rief M, Palt N, Hartwig C, Zangl G, Haar M, Manninger M, Rohrer U, Scherr D, Zirlik A, Prause G, and Zweiker D
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Introduction: Public knowledge of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), and initiation of basic life support (BLS) is crucial to increase survival in OHCA., Methods: The study analysed the knowledge and willingness to perform BLS of laypersons passing an AED at a public train station. Interviewees were recruited at two time points before and after a four year-long structured regional awareness campaign, which focused on call , compress , shock in a mid-size European city (270,000 inhabitants). Complete BLS was defined as multiple responses for call for help ; initiation of chest compressions ; and usage of an AED, without mentioning recovery position . Minimal BLS was defined as call for help and initiation of chest compressions ., Results: A total of 784 persons were interviewed, 257 at baseline and 527 post-campaign. Confronted with a fictional OHCA, at baseline 8.5% of the interviewees spontaneously mentioned actions for complete BLS and 17.9% post-campaign (p = 0.009). An even larger increase in knowledge was seen in minimal BLS (34.6% vs 60.6%, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: After a regional cardiac arrest awareness campaign, we found an increase in knowledge of BLS actions in the lay public. However, our investigation revealed severe gaps in BLS knowledge, possibly resulting in weak first links of the chain of survival., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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10. Pneumothorax in a Thiel cadaver model of cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
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Auinger D, Orlob S, Wittig J, Honnef G, Heschl S, Feigl G, and Prause G
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Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest: GP has given a talk at a national symposium, invited by RWM Medizintechnik GmbH. All other authors have no personal conflict of interest. Medical devices and equipment used in this study were kindly lent by the following companies: CHEMOMEDICA Medizintechnik und Arzneimittel VertriebsgmbH, Löwenstein Medical Austria GmbH, Sanitas GmbH, GS Elektromedizinische Geräte G. Stemple GmbH, Dräger Austria GmbH, WEINMANN Emergency Medical Technology, RWM Medizintechnik GmbH. No company or manufacturer had an influence on the study protocol, statistical analyses, nor was involved in writing of the paper.
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- 2023
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11. Data for: Reliability of mechanical ventilation during continuous chest compressions: A crossover study of transport ventilators in a human cadaver model of CPR.
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Orlob S, Hobisch C, Wittig J, Auinger D, Touzil O, Honnef G, Schindler O, Metnitz P, Feigl G, and Prause G
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The data presented in this article relate to the research article, "Reliability of mechanical ventilation during continuous chest compressions: a crossover study of transport ventilators in a human cadaver model of CPR" [1]. This article contains raw data of continuous recordings of airflow, airway and esophageal pressure during the whole experiment. Data of mechanical ventilation was obtained under ongoing chest compressions and from repetitive measurements of pressure-volume curves. All signals are presented as raw time series data with a sample rate of 200Hz for flow and 500 Hz for pressure. Additionally, we hereby publish extracted time series recordings of force and compression depth from the used automated chest compression device. Concomitantly, we report tables with time stamps from our laboratory book by which the data can be sequenced into different phases of the study protocol. We also present a dataset of derived volumes which was used for statistical analysis in our research article together with the used exclusion list. The reported dataset can help to understand mechanical properties of Thiel-embalmed cadavers better and compare different models of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Future research may use this data to translate our findings from bench to bedside. Our recordings may become useful in developing respiratory monitors for CPR, especially in prototyping and testing algorithms of such devices., Competing Interests: SO has received the “Reinhard Malzer Award” as funding for this study. But the association did not interfere with any steps towards this article. GP has given a talk at a national symposium, invited by RWM Medizintechnik GmbH. All other authors have no personal conflict of interest. Medical devices and equipment used in this study were kindly lent by the following companies: CHEMOMEDICA Medizintechnik und Arzneimittel VertriebsgmbH, Löwenstein Medical Austria GmbH, Sanitas GmbH, GS Elektromedizinische Geräte G. Stemple GmbH, Dräger Austria GmbH, WEINMANN Emergency Medical Technology, RWM Medizintechnik GmbH. No company or manufacturer had influence on the study protocol, statistical analyses, nor were involved in writing of this paper. Dr. Orlob reports grants from Österreichische Gesellschaft für Notfall- und Katastrophenmedizin (abbr.: ÖNK), during the conduct of the study. Dr. Prause reports a talk at a national symposium, invited by RWM Medizintechnik GmbH. All other authors have no personal conflict of interest., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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12. A sliding-window based algorithm to determine the presence of chest compressions from acceleration data.
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Kern WJ, Orlob S, Alpers B, Schörghuber M, Bohn A, Holler M, Gräsner JT, and Wnent J
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This publication presents in detail five exemplary cases and the algorithm used in the article (Orlob et al. 2022). Defibrillator records for the five exemplary cases were obtained from the German Resuscitation Registry. They consist of accelerometry, electrocardiogram and capnography time series as well as defibrillation times, energies and impedance when recorded. For these cases, experienced physicians annotated time points of cardiac arrest and return of spontaneous circulation or termination of resuscitation attempts, as well as the beginning and ending of every single chest compression period in consensus, as described in Orlob et al. (2022). Furthermore, an algorithm was developed which reliably detects chest compression periods automatically without the time-consuming process of manual annotation. This algorithm allows for an usage in automatic resuscitation quality assessment, machine learning approaches, and handling of big amounts of data (Orlob et al. 2022)., Competing Interests: JTG has received speakers honorary from ZOLL Medical, not related to the content of this study. All other authors have no conflict of interest to declare., (© 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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13. Reliability of mechanical ventilation during continuous chest compressions: a crossover study of transport ventilators in a human cadaver model of CPR.
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Orlob S, Wittig J, Hobisch C, Auinger D, Honnef G, Fellinger T, Ristl R, Schindler O, Metnitz P, Feigl G, and Prause G
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- Adult, Cadaver, Cross-Over Studies, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Tidal Volume, Ventilators, Mechanical, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Respiration, Artificial
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Background: Previous studies have stated that hyperventilation often occurs in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) mainly due to excessive ventilation frequencies, especially when a manual valve bag is used. Transport ventilators may provide mandatory ventilation with predetermined tidal volumes and without the risk of hyperventilation. Nonetheless, interactions between chest compressions and ventilations are likely to occur. We investigated whether transport ventilators can provide adequate alveolar ventilation during continuous chest compression in adult CPR., Methods: A three-period crossover study with three common transport ventilators in a cadaver model of CPR was carried out. The three ventilators 'MEDUMAT Standard²', 'Oxylog 3000 plus', and 'Monnal T60' represent three different interventions, providing volume-controlled continuous mandatory ventilation (VC-CMV) via an endotracheal tube with a tidal volume of 6 mL/kg predicted body weight. Proximal airflow was measured, and the net tidal volume was derived for each respiratory cycle. The deviation from the predetermined tidal volume was calculated and analysed. Several mixed linear models were calculated with the cadaver as a random factor and ventilator, height, sex, crossover period and incremental number of each ventilation within the period as covariates to evaluate differences between ventilators., Results: Overall median deviation of net tidal volume from predetermined tidal volume was - 21.2 % (IQR: 19.6, range: [- 87.9 %; 25.8 %]) corresponding to a tidal volume of 4.75 mL/kg predicted body weight (IQR: 1.2, range: [0.7; 7.6]). In a mixed linear model, the ventilator model, the crossover period, and the cadaver's height were significant factors for decreased tidal volume. The estimated effects of tidal volume deviation for each ventilator were - 14.5 % [95 %-CI: -22.5; -6.5] (p = 0.0004) for 'Monnal T60', - 30.6 % [95 %-CI: -38.6; -22.6] (p < 0.0001) for 'Oxylog 3000 plus' and - 31.0 % [95 %-CI: -38.9; -23.0] (p < 0.0001) for 'MEDUMAT Standard²'., Conclusions: All investigated transport ventilators were able to provide alveolar ventilation even though chest compressions considerably decreased tidal volumes. Our results support the concept of using ventilators to avoid excessive ventilatory rates in CPR. This experimental study suggests that healthcare professionals should carefully monitor actual tidal volumes to recognise the occurrence of hypoventilation during continuous chest compressions., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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14. Ventilation During Cardiac Arrest and After Return of Spontaneous Circulation: Like Father, Like Son?
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Wittig J, Orlob S, and Prause G
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- Fathers, Humans, Male, Respiration, Artificial, Return of Spontaneous Circulation, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
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Competing Interests: The authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
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- 2021
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15. Adsorption therapy in critically ill with septic shock and acute kidney injury: a retrospective and prospective cohort study.
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Schittek GA, Zoidl P, Eichinger M, Orlob S, Simonis H, Rief M, Metnitz P, Fellinger T, and Soukup J
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Background: Haemoadsorption has been described as an effective way to control increased pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators ("cytokine storm") in septic shock patients. No prospective or randomised clinical study has yet confirmed these results. However, no study has yet prospectively specifically investigated patients in severe septic shock with sepsis-associated acute kidney injury (SA-AKI). Therefore, we aimed to examine whether haemoadsorption could influence intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital mortality in these patients. Furthermore, we examined the influence of haemoadsorption on length of stay in the ICU and therapeutic support., Methods: Retrospective control group and prospective intervention group design in a tertiary hospital in central Europe (Germany). Intervention was the implementation of haemoadsorption for patients in septic shock with SA-AKI. 76 patients were included in this analysis., Results: Severity of illness as depicted by APACHE II was higher in patients treated with haemoadsorption. Risk-adjusted ICU mortality rates (O/E ratios) did not differ significantly between the groups (0.80 vs. 0.83). We observed in patients treated with haemoadsorption a shorter LOS and shorter therapeutic support such as catecholamine dependency and duration of RRT. However, in multivariate analysis (logistic regression for mortality, competing risk for LOS), we found no significant differences between the two groups., Conclusions: The implementation of haemoadsorption for patients in septic shock with acute renal failure did not lead to a reduction in ICU or hospital mortality rates. Despite univariate analysis delivering some evidence for a shorter duration of ICU-related treatments in the haemoadsorption group, these results did not remain significant in multivariate analysis. Trial registration CytoSorb
® registry https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02312024 . December 9, 2014., Database: https://www.cytosorb-registry.org/ (registration for content acquisition is necessary).- Published
- 2020
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16. Atlanto-occipital dislocation in a patient presenting with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a case report and literature review.
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Rief M, Zoidl P, Zajic P, Heschl S, Orlob S, Silbernagel G, Metnitz P, Puchwein P, and Prause G
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- Atlanto-Occipital Joint diagnostic imaging, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Critical Care, Humans, Intracranial Hemorrhage, Traumatic complications, Intracranial Hemorrhage, Traumatic diagnostic imaging, Joint Dislocations complications, Joint Dislocations diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest diagnostic imaging, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest physiopathology, Resuscitation, Spinal Injuries complications, Spinal Injuries diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Treatment Outcome, Accidents, Traffic, Atlanto-Occipital Joint injuries, Intracranial Hemorrhage, Traumatic physiopathology, Joint Dislocations physiopathology, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Recovery of Function physiology, Spinal Injuries physiopathology
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Background: Atlanto-occipital dislocation is a rare and severe injury of the upper spine associated with a very poor prognosis., Case Presentation: We report the case of a 59-year-old European man who suffered from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest following a motor vehicle accident. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was initiated immediately by bystanders and continued by emergency medical services. After 30 minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation with a total of five shocks following initial ventricular fibrillation, return of spontaneous circulation was achieved. An electrocardiogram recorded after return of spontaneous circulation at the scene showed signs of myocardial ischemia as a possible cause for the cardiac arrest. No visible signs of injury were found. He was transferred to the regional academic trauma center. Following an extended diagnostic and therapeutic workup in the emergency room, including extended focused assessment with sonography for trauma ultrasound, whole-body computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging (of his head and neck), a diagnosis of major trauma (atlanto-occipital dislocation, bilateral serial rip fractures and pneumothoraces, several severe intracranial bleedings, and other injuries) was made. An unfavorable outcome was initially expected due to suspected tetraplegia and his inability to breathe following atlanto-occipital dislocation. Contrary to initial prognostication, after 22 days of intensive care treatment and four surgical interventions (halo fixation, tracheostomy, intracranial pressure probe, chest drains) he was awake and oriented, spontaneously breathing, and moving his arms and legs. Six weeks after the event he was able to walk without aid. After 2 months of clinical treatment he was able to manage all the activities of daily life on his own. It remains unclear, whether cardiac arrest due to a cardiac cause resulted in complete atony of the paravertebral muscles and caused this extremely severe lesion (atlanto-occipital dislocation) or whether cardiac arrest was caused by apnea due the paraplegia following the spinal injury of the trauma., Conclusions: A plausible cause for the trauma was myocardial infarction which led to the car accident and the major trauma in relation to the obviously minor trauma mechanism. With this case report we aim to familiarize clinicians with the mechanism of injury that will assist in the diagnosis of atlanto-occipital dislocation. Furthermore, we seek to emphasize that patients presenting with electrocardiographic signs of myocardial ischemia after high-energy trauma should primarily be transported to a trauma facility in a percutaneous coronary intervention-capable center rather than the catheterization laboratory directly.
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- 2019
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17. 12th WINFOCUS world congress on ultrasound in emergency and critical care.
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Acar Y, Tezel O, Salman N, Cevik E, Algaba-Montes M, Oviedo-García A, Patricio-Bordomás M, Mahmoud MZ, Sulieman A, Ali A, Mustafa A, Abdelrahman I, Bahar M, Ali O, Lester Kirchner H, Prosen G, Anzic A, Leeson P, Bahreini M, Rasooli F, Hosseinnejad H, Blecher G, Meek R, Egerton-Warburton D, Ćuti EĆ, Belina S, Vančina T, Kovačević I, Rustemović N, Chang I, Lee JH, Kwak YH, Kim do K, Cheng CY, Pan HY, Kung CT, Ćurčić E, Pritišanac E, Planinc I, Medić MG, Radonić R, Fasina A, Dean AJ, Panebianco NL, Henwood PS, Fochi O, Favarato M, Bonanomi E, Tomić I, Ha Y, Toh H, Harmon E, Chan W, Baston C, Morrison G, Shofer F, Hua A, Kim S, Tsung J, Gunaydin I, Kekec Z, Ay MO, Kim J, Kim J, Choi G, Shim D, Lee JH, Ambrozic J, Prokselj K, Lucovnik M, Simenc GB, Mačiulienė A, Maleckas A, Kriščiukaitis A, Mačiulis V, Macas A, Mohite S, Narancsik Z, Možina H, Nikolić S, Hansel J, Petrovčič R, Mršić U, Orlob S, Lerchbaumer M, Schönegger N, Kaufmann R, Pan CI, Wu CH, Pasquale S, Doniger SJ, Yellin S, Chiricolo G, Potisek M, Drnovšek B, Leskovar B, Robinson K, Kraft C, Moser B, Davis S, Layman S, Sayeed Y, Minardi J, Pasic IS, Dzananovic A, Pasic A, Zubovic SV, Hauptman AG, Brajkovic AV, Babel J, Peklic M, Radonic V, Bielen L, Ming PW, Yezid NH, Mohammed FL, Huda ZA, Ismail WN, Isa WY, Fauzi H, Seeva P, and Mazlan MZ
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Table of Contents: A1 Point-of-care ultrasound examination of cervical spine in emergency departmentYahya Acar, Onur Tezel, Necati SalmanA2 A new technique in verifying the placement of a nasogastric tube: obtaining the longitudinal view of nasogastric tube in addition to transverse view with ultrasoundYahya Acar, Necati Salman, Onur Tezel, Erdem CevikA3 Pseudoaneurysm of the femoral artery after cannulation of a central venous line. Should we always use ultrasound in these procedures?Margarita Algaba-Montes, Alberto Oviedo-García, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA4 Ultrasound-guided supraclavicular subclavian vein catheterization. A novel approach in emergency departmentMargarita Algaba-Montes, Alberto Oviedo-García, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA5 Clinical ultrasound in a septic and jaundice patient in the emergency departmentMargarita Algaba-Montes, Alberto Oviedo-García, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA6 Characterization of the eyes in preoperative cataract Saudi patients by using medical diagnostic ultrasoundMustafa Z. Mahmoud, Abdelmoneim SuliemanA7 High-frequency ultrasound in determining the causes of acute shoulder joint painMustafa Z. MahmoudA8 Teaching WINFOCUS Ultrasound Life Support Basic Level 1 for Providers in resource-limited countriesAbbas Ali, Alrayah Mustafa, Ihab Abdelrahman, Mustafa Bahar, Osama Ali, H. Lester Kirchner, Gregor ProsenA9 Changes of arterial stiffness and endothelial function during uncomplicated pregnancyAjda Anzic, Paul LeesonA10 Cardiovascular haemodynamic properties before, during and after pregnancyAjda Anzic, Paul LeesonA11 An old man with generalized weaknessMaryam Bahreini, Fatemeh RasooliA12 Ultrasonography for non-specific presentations of abdominal painMaryam Bahreini, Houman HosseinnejadA13 Introduction of a new imaging guideline for suspected renal colic in the emergency department: effect on CT Urogram utilisationGabriel Blecher, Robert Meek, Diana Egerton-WarburtonA14 Transabdominal ultrasound screening for pancreatic cancer in Croatian military veterans: a retrospective analysis from the first Croatian veteran's hospitalEdina Ćatić Ćuti, Stanko Belina, Tihomir Vančina, Idriz KovačevićA15 The challenge of AAA: unusual case of obstructive jaundiceEdina Ćatić Ćuti, Nadan RustemovićA16 Educational effectiveness of easy-made new simulator model for ultrasound-guided procedures in pediatric patients: vascular access and foreign body managementIkwan Chang, Jin Hee Lee, Young Ho Kwak, Do Kyun KimA17 Detection of uterine rupture by point-of-care ultrasound at emergency department: a case reportChi-Yung Cheng, Hsiu-Yung Pan, Chia-Te KungA18 Abdominal probe in the hands of interns as a relevant diagnostic tool in revealing the cause of heart failureEla Ćurčić, Ena Pritišanac, Ivo Planinc, Marijana Grgić Medić, Radovan RadonićA19 Needs assessment of the potential utility of point-of-care ultrasound within the Zanzibar health systemAbiola Fasina, Anthony J. Dean, Nova L. Panebianco, Patricia S. HenwoodA20 Ultrasonographic diagnosis of tracheal compressionOliviero Fochi, Moreno Favarato, Ezio BonanomiA21 The role of ultrasound in the detection of lung infiltrates in critically ill patients: a pilot studyMarijana Grgić Medić, Ivan Tomić, Radovan RadonićA22 The SAFER Lasso; a novel approach using point-of-care ultrasound to evaluate patients with abdominal complaints in the emergency departmentYoungrock Ha, Hongchuen TohA23 Awareness and use of clinician-performed ultrasound among clinical clerkship facultyElizabeth Harmon, Wilma Chan, Cameron Baston, Gail Morrison, Frances Shofer, Nova Panebianco, Anthony J. DeanA24 Clinical outcomes in the use of lung ultrasound for the diagnosis of pediatric pneumoniasAngela Hua, Sharon Kim, James TsungA25 Effectiveness of ultrasound in hypotensive patientsIsa Gunaydin, Zeynep Kekec, Mehmet Oguzhan AyA26 Moderate-to-severe left ventricular ejection fraction related to short-term mortality of patients with post-cardiac arrest syndrome after out-of-hospital cardiac arrestJinjoo Kim, Jinhyun Kim, Gyoosung Choi, Dowon ShimA27 Usefulness of abdominal ultrasound for acute pyelonephritis diagnosis after kidney transplantationJi-Han LeeA28 Lung ultrasound for assessing fluid tolerance in severe preeclampsiaJana Ambrozic, Katja Prokselj, Miha LucovnikA29 Optic nerve sheath ultrasound in severe preeclampsiaGabrijela Brzan Simenc, Jana Ambrozic, Miha LucovnikA30 Focused echocardiography monitoring in the postoperative period for non-cardiac patientsAsta Mačiulienė, Almantas Maleckas, Algimantas Kriščiukaitis, Vytautas Mačiulis, Andrius MacasA31 POCUS-guided paediatric upper limb fracture reduction: algorithm, tricks, and tipsSharad MohiteA32 Point-of-care lung ultrasound: a good diagnostic tool for pneumonia in a septic patientZoltan Narancsik, Hugon MožinaA33 A case of undergraduate POCUS (r)evolutionSara Nikolić, Jan Hansel, Rok Petrovčič, Una Mršić, Gregor ProsenA34 The Graz Summer School for ultrasound: from first contact to bedside application: three-and-a-half-day undergraduate ultrasound training: résumé after two years of continuous developmentSimon Orlob, Markus Lerchbaumer, Niklas Schönegger, Reinhard KaufmannA35 Usefulness of point-of-care ultrasound in the emergency room in a patient with acute abdominal painAlberto Oviedo-García, Margarita Algaba-Montes, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA36 Use of bedside ultrasound in a critically ill patient. A case reportAlberto Oviedo-García, Margarita Algaba-Montes, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA37 Diagnostic yield of clinical echocardiography for the emergency physicianAlberto Oviedo-García, Margarita Algaba-Montes, Mayra Patricio-BordomásA38 Focused cardiac ultrasound in early diagnosis of type A aortic dissection with atypical presentationChun-I Pan, Hsiu-Yung Pan, Chien-Hung WuA39 Detection of imperforated hymen by point-of-care ultrasoundHsiu-yung Pan, Chia-Te KungA40 Developing a point-of-care ultrasound curriculum for pediatric nurse practitioners practicing in the pediatric emergency departmentSarah Pasquale, Stephanie J. Doniger, Sharon Yellin, Gerardo ChiricoloA41 Use of transthoracic echocardiography in emergency setting: patient with mitral valve abscessMaja Potisek, Borut Drnovšek, Boštjan LeskovarA42 A young man with syncopeFatemeh Rasooli, Maryam BahreiniA43 Work-related repetitive use injuries in ultrasound fellowsKristine Robinson, Clara Kraft, Benjamin Moser, Stephen Davis, Shelley Layman, Yusef Sayeed, Joseph MinardiA44 Lung ultrasonography in the evaluation of pneumonia in childrenIrmina Sefic Pasic, Amra Dzananovic, Anes Pasic, Sandra Vegar ZubovicA45 Central venous catheter placement with the ultrasound aid: two years' experience of the Interventional unit, Division of Intensive Care Medicine, KBC ZagrebAna Godan Hauptman, Marijana Grgic Medic, Ivan Tomic, Ana Vujaklija Brajkovic, Jaksa Babel, Marina Peklic, Radovan RadonicA46 Duplicitas casui: two patients admitted due to acute liver failureVedran Radonic, Ivan Tomic, Luka Bielen, Marijana Grgic MedicA47 A pilot survey on an understanding of Bedside Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) among medical doctors in internal medicine: exposure, perceptions, interest, and barriers to trainingPeh Wee MingA48 Unusual case of defecation syncopeNur hafiza Yezid, Fatahul Laham MohammedA49 A case report of massive pulmonary embolism; a multidisciplinary approachZainal Abidin Huda, Wan Nasarudin Wan Ismail, W.Yus Haniff W.Isa, Hashairi Fauzi, Praveena Seeva, Mohd Zulfakar Mazlan.
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- 2016
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