16 results on '"Egbers PH"'
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2. High-flow via a tracheostomy tube and speaking valve during weaning from mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy.
- Author
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Egbers PH, Sutt AL, Petersson JE, Bergström L, and Sundman E
- Abstract
Background: Weaning from mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy after prolonged intensive care consume enormous resources with optimal management not currently well described. Restoration of respiratory flow via the upper airway is essential and early cuff-deflation using a one-way valve (OWV) is recommended. However, extended OWV use may cause dry airways and thickened secretions which challenge the weaning process. High-flow therapy via the tracheostomy tube (HFT-T) humidifies inspired air and may be connected via an in-line OWV (HFT-T-OWV) alleviating these problems. We aim to provide clinical and experimental data on the safety of HFT-T-OWV along with a practical guide to facilitate clinical use during weaning from mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy., Methods: Data on adverse events of HFT-T-OWV were retrieved from a quality register for patients treated at an intensive care rehabilitation center between 2019 and 2022. Benchtop experiments were performed to measure maximum pressures and pressure support generated by HFT-T-OWV at 25-60 L/min flow using two different HFT-T adapters (interfaces). In simulated airway obstruction using a standard OWV (not in-line) maximum pressures were measured with oxygen delivered via the side port at 1-3 L/min., Results: Of 128 tracheostomized patients who underwent weaning attempts, 124 were treated with HFT-T-OWV. The therapy was well tolerated, and no adverse events related to the practice were detected. The main reason for not using HFT-T-OWV was partial upper airway obstruction using a OWV. Benchtop experiments demonstrated HFT-T-OWV maximum pressures <4 cmH
2 O and pressure support 0-0.6 cmH2 O. In contrast, 1-3 L/min supplemental oxygen via a standard OWV caused pressures between 84 and 148 cmH2 O during simulated airway obstruction., Conclusions: Current study clinical data and benchtop experiments indicate that HFT-T-OWV was well tolerated and appeared safe. Pressure support was low, but humidification may enable extended use of a OWV without dry airway mucosa and thickened secretions. Results suggest the treatment could offer advantages to standard OWV use, with or without supplementary oxygen, as well as to HFT-T without a OWV, for weaning from mechanical ventilation and tracheostomy. However, for definitive treatment recommendations, randomized clinical trials are needed., (© 2023 The Authors. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica Foundation.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Siderophore purification with titanium dioxide nanoparticle solid phase extraction.
- Author
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Egbers PH, Harder T, Koch BP, and Tebben J
- Abstract
Siderophores are metal chelators produced by microorganisms to facilitate binding and uptake of iron. The isolation and characterization of siderophores are impeded by typically low siderophore yields and the complexity of siderophore-containing extracts generated with traditional purification methods. We investigated titanium dioxide nanoparticle solid-phase extraction (TiO2 NP SPE) as a technique to selectively concentrate and purify siderophores from complex matrices for subsequent LC-MS detection and identification. TiO2 NP SPE showed a high binding capacity (15.7 ± 0.2 μmol mg-1 TiO2) for the model siderophore desferrioxamine B (DFOB) and proved robust to pH changes and the presence of EDTA. These are significant advances in comparison to immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). The TiO2 NP SPE was highly selective and recovered 77.6 ± 6.2% of DFOB spiked to a compositionally complex bacterial culture supernatant. The simple clean-up procedure removed the majority of contaminants and allowed direct detection of siderophores from the LC-MS base peak chromatogram. The 'untargeted' purification and analysis of an untreated supernatant of iron-deprived bacterial culture allowed for the direct identification of two known and three novel ferrioxamines. Thus, TiO2 NP SPE in combination with LC-MS offers great potential as a discovery platform for the purification and subsequent quantification or identification of novel siderophores of microbial origin.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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4. Communicating with conscious mechanically ventilated critically ill patients: let them speak with deflated cuff and an in-line speaking valve!
- Author
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Egbers PH and Boerma EC
- Subjects
- Catheters, Consciousness, Humans, Critical Illness, Respiration, Artificial
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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5. Enabling speech in ICU patients during mechanical ventilation.
- Author
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Egbers PH, Bultsma R, Middelkamp H, and Boerma EC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Middle Aged, Positive-Pressure Respiration, Speech, Tracheostomy instrumentation
- Published
- 2014
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6. Diagnosing sporadic creutzfeldt-jakob disease in a patient with a suspected status epilepticus in the intensive care unit.
- Author
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van der Horn HJ, Egbers PH, Kuiper MA, and Schuiling WJ
- Abstract
Objective. Several tests are available in the diagnostics of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD); however, none of these is conclusive. We review the values of these tests, from an intensive care unit (ICU) perspective. Methods. Case report and review of the literature. Results. A 53-year-old woman initially presenting with psychiatric symptoms developed myoclonus and was admitted 1 month later to the ICU with a suspected nonconvulsive status epilepticus and respiratory insufficiency, probably due to extensive antiepileptic drug therapy. Typical MRI and EEG findings and a positive 14-3-3 protein led to the diagnosis of sCJD. All treatments were terminated, and autopsy confirmed sCJD. Conclusions. Clinical signs combined with MRI, EEG, and 14-3-3 and/or tau protein determination might be sufficient to diagnose or exclude sCJD and may therefore prevent the application of unnecessary diagnostic tests.
- Published
- 2013
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7. Life-threatening complications of vitamin D intoxication due to over-the-counter supplements.
- Author
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Kaptein S, Risselada AJ, Boerma EC, Egbers PH, and Nieboer P
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- Aged, Calcium blood, Calcium metabolism, Dietary Supplements poisoning, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions complications, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions etiology, Female, Humans, Hypercalcemia complications, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary etiology, Netherlands, Hypercalcemia etiology, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary complications, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D poisoning
- Abstract
Introduction: Ninety percent of hypercalcemic cases are caused by primary hyperparathyroidism or malignancy. Less frequent causes are granulomatous diseases, drug-induced diseases, and intoxications., Case Report: We present two women with life-threatening hypercalcemia due to the intake of vitamin D-concentrated supplements, which turned out to be 100-1,000 times higher than stated on the label of over-the-counter dietary supplements. Laboratory analysis revealed ionized calcium levels of 4.00 (16.00) and 4.56 mmol/L (18.24 mg/dL) with vitamin D(25) concentrations of 1,372 and 644 nmol/L, respectively. Apart from a patient with general symptoms of hypercalcemia, a case of refractory status epilepticus after correction of serum calcium levels, and in need of prolonged ICU treatment, is described., Conclusion: Initial drug-taking history in the presented cases did not reveal the use of over-the-counter supplements, which underlines the importance of a thorough evaluation of (non-)prescribed medication. Moreover, these supplements may contain higher levels of vitamin D than the label states. As a result, hypercalcemia may be an underlying cause for life-threatening complications, including a well-documented refractory status epilepticus.
- Published
- 2010
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8. Effects of nitroglycerin on sublingual microcirculatory blood flow in patients with severe sepsis/septic shock after a strict resuscitation protocol: a double-blind randomized placebo controlled trial.
- Author
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Boerma EC, Koopmans M, Konijn A, Kaiferova K, Bakker AJ, van Roon EN, Buter H, Bruins N, Egbers PH, Gerritsen RT, Koetsier PM, Kingma WP, Kuiper MA, and Ince C
- Subjects
- Administration, Sublingual, Adult, Aged, Blood Flow Velocity drug effects, Critical Care methods, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hemodynamics drug effects, Hemodynamics physiology, Hospitals, Teaching, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Microcirculation drug effects, Middle Aged, Mouth Floor blood supply, Probability, Reference Values, Risk Assessment, Sepsis diagnosis, Sepsis drug therapy, Sepsis mortality, Sepsis therapy, Shock, Septic diagnosis, Shock, Septic therapy, Survival Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Cause of Death, Hospital Mortality trends, Nitroglycerin administration & dosage, Resuscitation methods, Shock, Septic drug therapy, Shock, Septic mortality
- Abstract
Objectives: Microcirculatory alterations have been associated with morbidity and mortality in human sepsis. Such alterations occur despite pressure-guided resuscitation. Earlier data suggested that impaired microcirculatory blood flow could be corrected with intravenous nitroglycerin in these patients. We tested this concept after fulfillment of preset systemic hemodynamic resuscitation end points in the early phase of sepsis., Design: Prospective, single center, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial., Setting: Closed-format 22-bed mixed intensive care unit in a tertiary teaching hospital., Patients: Patients > or =18 yrs with sepsis, according to international criteria, and at least one early sign of organ dysfunction, as the principal reason for intensive care unit admission, were eligible for enrollment., Interventions: Patients were randomly assigned to receive nitroglycerin (n = 35) or placebo (n = 35) after fulfillment of protocol-driven resuscitation end points. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov as NCT00493415., Measurements and Main Results: Primary outcome was sublingual microcirculatory blood flow of small vessels, as assessed by side-stream dark field imaging. After protocolized resuscitation, we observed recruitment of sublingual microcirculation in both groups, as indicated by a significant improvement in the microcirculatory flow index after 24 hrs, in comparison to baseline. However, no difference in the sublingual microvascular flow index was observed between groups. The median microvascular flow index in sublingual small-sized vessels was 2.71 (1.85-3) in the nitroglycerin group and 2.71 (1.27-3), p = .80, in the placebo group. In medium-sized vessels, the respective values were 3 (2.75-3) vs. 2.86 (2.19-3), p = .21, and in large-sized vessels, 3 (3-3) vs. 3 (2.89-3), p = .06. In-hospital mortality, as a secondary outcome, was 34.3% in the nitroglycerin group and 14.2% in the placebo group, p = .09., Conclusions: In the context of a strict resuscitation protocol, based upon fulfillment of systemic hemodynamic end points in patients with early-phase severe sepsis or septic shock, we conclude that intravenous nitroglycerin does not promote sublingual microcirculatory blood flow.
- Published
- 2010
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9. Furosemide does not improve renal recovery after hemofiltration for acute renal failure in critically ill patients: a double blind randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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van der Voort PH, Boerma EC, Koopmans M, Zandberg M, de Ruiter J, Gerritsen RT, Egbers PH, Kingma WP, and Kuiper MA
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Critical Care, Diuretics administration & dosage, Double-Blind Method, Female, Furosemide administration & dosage, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Middle Aged, Placebos, Respiration, Artificial, Severity of Illness Index, Acute Kidney Injury drug therapy, Diuretics therapeutic use, Furosemide therapeutic use, Hemofiltration, Outcome Assessment, Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: To study the potential beneficial role of furosemide in resolving renal failure after hemofiltration in mechanically ventilated critically ill patients., Design: Single-center randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study., Setting: A 13-bed mixed intensive care unit (ICU) in a teaching hospital., Patients: Patients who had been treated with continuous venovenous hemofiltration were included., Interventions: After the end of continuous venovenous hemofiltration, the urine of the first 4 hours was collected for measuring creatinine clearance. Patients were subsequently randomized for furosemide (0.5 mg/kg/hr) or placebo by continuous infusion. To prevent hypovolemia, the rate of fluid infusion was adapted every hour and was set as the urinary production of the previous hour., Measurements and Main Results: End points were renal recovery (creatinine clearance more than 30 mL/min or stable serum creatinine without renal replacement therapy) in the ICU and in the hospital. Seventy-two patients were included and 71 were eligible for the analysis. The 36 furosemide-treated patients had a significantly increased urinary volume compared with the 35 placebo-treated patients (median 247 mL/hr (interquartile range [IQR] 774 mL/hr) vs. 117 mL/hr (IQR 158 mL/hr), p = 0.003) and greater sodium excretion (median 73 mmol/L (IQR 48) vs. 37 (IQR 48) mmol/L, p = 0.001). In the furosemide group 25 patients and in the placebo group 27 patients showed recovery of renal function at ICU discharge (p = 0.46). Two patients of the furosemide group needed long-term dialysis dependency (p = 0.23)., Conclusion: Furosemide by continuous infusion in the recovery phase of hemofiltration-dependent acute kidney failure did increase urinary volume and sodium excretion but did not lead to a shorter duration of renal failure or more frequent renal recovery.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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10. Disparity between skin perfusion and sublingual microcirculatory alterations in severe sepsis and septic shock: a prospective observational study.
- Author
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Boerma EC, Kuiper MA, Kingma WP, Egbers PH, Gerritsen RT, and Ince C
- Subjects
- APACHE, Aged, Female, Hemodynamics, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Male, Middle Aged, Mouth Floor blood supply, Prospective Studies, Sepsis classification, Sepsis physiopathology, Shock, Septic classification, Microcirculation, Shock, Septic physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: Measurement of central-to-toe temperature difference has been advocated as an index of severity of shock and as a guide for circulatory therapy in critically ill patients. However, septic shock, in contrast to other forms of shock, is associated with a distributive malfunction resulting in a disparity between vascular compartments. Although this disparity has been established between systemic and microcirculatory parameters, it is unclear whether such disparity exists between skin perfusion and microcirculation. To test this hypothesis of disparity, we simultaneously measured parameters of the two vascular compartments, in the early phase of sepsis., Design: Prospective observational study in patients with severe sepsis/septic shock in the first 6 h of ICU admission. Simultaneous measurements of central-to-toe temperature difference and sublingual microcirculatory orthogonal polarization spectral imaging, together with parameters of systemic hemodynamics., Setting: 22 bed mixed-ICU in a tertiary teaching hospital., Patients: 35 consecutive patients in a 12-month period., Measurements and Results: In 35 septic patients and a median APACHE II score of 20, no correlation between central-to-toe temperature gradient and microvascular flow index was observed (r (s) = -0.08, p =0.65). Also no significant correlation between temperature gradient/microvascular flow index and systemic hemodynamic parameters could be demonstrated., Conclusions: During the early phase of resuscitated severe sepsis and septic shock there appears to be no correlation between sublingual microcirculatory alterations and the central-to-toe temperature difference. This finding adds to the concept of a dispersive nature of blood flow under conditions of sepsis between microcirculatory and systemic hemodynamics.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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11. Pneumopericardium should be considered with electrocardiogram changes after blunt chest trauma: a case report.
- Author
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Konijn AJ, Egbers PH, and Kuiper MA
- Abstract
Introduction: Electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormalities in patients with blunt chest trauma are diverse and non-specific, but may be indicative of potentially life-threatening conditions., Case Presentation: We report a rare case of pneumopericardium with extreme ECG abnormalities after blunt chest trauma in a 22-year-old male. The diagnosis was confirmed using computed tomography (CT) scanning. The case is discussed, together with its differential diagnosis and the aetiology of pneumopericardium and tension pneumopericardium., Conclusion: Pneumopericardium should be distinguished from other pathologies such as myocardial contusion and myocardial infarction because of the possible development of tension pneumopericardium. Early CT scanning is important in the evaluation of blunt chest trauma.
- Published
- 2008
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12. [A young woman with a labile mood, hyperactivity, hyperthermia and exhaustion: symptoms of lethal catatonia].
- Author
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ter Haar IM, Rutgers RJ, and Egbers PH
- Subjects
- Adult, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Diagnosis, Differential, Dibenzothiazepines therapeutic use, Dopamine blood, Female, Humans, Quetiapine Fumarate, Treatment Outcome, Catatonia diagnosis, Catatonia therapy, Electroconvulsive Therapy
- Abstract
A 22-year-old woman went through a period with a labile mood that first turned into psychotic hyperactivity and was then followed by hyperthermia and exhaustion. This was accompanied by diminished consciousness, sinus arrhythmia and respiratory insufficiency. With a working diagnosis of 'lethal catatonia' she was treated by electroshock and later also with the antipsychotic agent quetiapine. After a few electroshock treatments her vital functions improved and ultimately, the patient recovered. Lethal catatonia is characterised by acute excitation, catalepsy, autonomic instability and fever, which can lead to death. The syndrome often starts with mood instability, which turns into hyperactivity accompanied by hyperthermia and exhaustion. The creatine kinase, blood-sedimentation rate and leukocyte count are often raised. Lethal catatonia must be distinguished from the neuroleptic malignant syndrome, serotonin syndrome and encephalitis. The pathophysiology is unclear, but most reports suggest a hypodopaminergic state. The syndrome is associated with affective disorders and schizophrenia. Early recognition is made difficult by the low frequency of appearance, diversity in nomenclature, and strong resemblance to other syndromes.
- Published
- 2006
13. Filter run time in CVVH: pre- versus post-dilution and nadroparin versus regional heparin-protamine anticoagulation.
- Author
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van der Voort PH, Gerritsen RT, Kuiper MA, Egbers PH, Kingma WP, and Boerma EC
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Male, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Hemofiltration methods, Heparin Antagonists therapeutic use, Nadroparin therapeutic use, Protamines therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background/aims: To study the effect of different modes of continuous veno-venous haemofiltration (CVVH) on filter run time (FRT)., Methods: We studied, in two consecutive prospective, randomised and crossover studies, 16 and 15 patients with acute renal failure during critical illness. Study A compared pre- versus post-dilution, and study B compared regional anticoagulation with heparin (pre-filter) and protamine (post-filter) (HP) versus nadroparin (NP) pre-filter. All CVVH sessions were standardised. Analyses were by Wilcoxon rank sum tests., Results: Study A: During pre-dilution the median FRT was 45.7 vs. 16.1 h in post-dilution CVVH (p = 0.005). The median creatinine clearance during pre-dilution was 33 vs. 45 ml/min in post-dilution (p = 0.001). Study B: During NP, median FRT was 39.5 vs. 12.3 h during HP CVVH (p = 0.045)., Conclusions: Pre-dilution CVVH results in the greatest FRT but a lower plasma creatinine clearance compared to post-dilution. Regional anticoagulation with heparin-protamine resulted in a significantly shorter FRT compared to systemic NP anticoagulation.
- Published
- 2005
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14. Valproic acid intoxication: sense and non-sense of haemodialysis.
- Author
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Meek MF, Broekroelofs J, Yska JP, Egbers PH, Boerma EC, and van der Voort PH
- Subjects
- Adult, Epilepsy drug therapy, Ethanol blood, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders drug therapy, Drug Overdose therapy, Hemodiafiltration, Hemoperfusion, Valproic Acid poisoning
- Abstract
Introduction: Valproic acid is increasingly used in the treatment of epilepsy, and also prescribed for bipolar affective disorders, schizoaffective disorders, schizophrenia and migraine prophylaxis. We describe two case reports involving valproic acid intoxication with ingestion of ethanol., Methods: One patient was treated by supportive care, one patient received haemodialysis., Results: From analysis of plasma concentrations before and during haemodialysis (pre- and post-filter) it is shown that valproic acid can be effectively eliminated by haemodialysis when plasma levels are way above 100 microg/ml. In the literature, plasma protein binding is reported to be around 90% for levels within the therapeutic range. In our patient plasma protein binding was around 50% after treatment with haemodialysis., Conclusion: These findings make haemodialysis in valproic acid intoxication a sensible therapeutic option with increasing efficiency when plasma concentration is high. Furthermore our findings suggest that lowering valproic acid concentrations to a therapeutic level by haemodialysis does not necessarily result in an immediate, simultaneous increase in plasma protein binding of valproic acid.
- Published
- 2004
15. A before-after study of multi-resistance and cost of selective decontamination of the digestive tract.
- Author
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van der Voort PH, van Roon EN, Kampinga GA, Boerma EC, Gerritsen RT, Egbers PH, and Kuiper MA
- Subjects
- Health Care Costs, Humans, Intensive Care Units economics, Pneumonia prevention & control, Respiration, Artificial, Anti-Bacterial Agents economics, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cross Infection prevention & control, Digestive System microbiology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial drug effects
- Abstract
Background: We compared standard antibiotic use with an antibiotic policy based on selective decontamination of the digestive tract (SDD) for cost and microbiology., Patients and Methods: A 2-year before-after observational study was performed in an 11-bed, mixed medical and surgical intensive care unit (ICU). We included all consecutive patients admitted to the ICU 1 year before and 1 year after institution of SDD (patients admitted within the 2-month SDD run-in period were excluded from analysis). In the year before SDD, 513 patients were treated in the ICU (mean APACHE II 19.5), compared to 529 in the year with SDD (mean APACHE II 19.4)., Results: The duration of mechanical ventilation was shorter in the SDD-treated patients (median 3, interquartile range [IQR] 2-7 days vs median 4 days, IQR 2-10, p = 0.03). The total of ICU variable costs, microbiological costs and antibiotic costs were equal in both episodes: euro 1,171 versus euro 1,168 per patient). Aerobic gram-negative bacilli (AGNB) and multiresistant AGNB were found less frequently in SDD-treated patients, RR 0.37 (95% CI 0.33-0.42) and RR 0.28 (95% CI 0.19-0.42). Multi-resistant AGNB in tracheal secretions and urine more than 72 hours after admission were completely absent in SDD-treated patients., Conclusion: The overall cost per patient treated during an antibiotic policy including SDD was equal to a policy supporting standard antibiotic care. In addition, duration of ventilation decreased and a trend was shown towards a decreased Length of ICU and hospital stay. Less frequently, cultures from organ sites containing AGNB were found during SDD and the number of multi-resistant strains was significantly reduced at organ sites, in particular trachea and urine. Fewer patients were colonized with multi-resistant AGNB but these numbers did not reach statistical significance.
- Published
- 2004
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16. [Reduced risk of complications associated with severe acute (necrotizing) pancreatitis by administration of antibiotics; results from a literature review]].
- Author
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van der Voort PH, van Roon EN, Egbers PH, Gerritsen RT, and Kuiper MA
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antibiotic Prophylaxis, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Mycoses drug therapy, Mycoses prevention & control, Pancreatitis, Acute Necrotizing complications, Pancreatitis, Acute Necrotizing microbiology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Sepsis prevention & control, Survival Analysis, Bacterial Infections prevention & control, Pancreatitis, Acute Necrotizing drug therapy, Sepsis drug therapy
- Published
- 2002
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