Abstract

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has a poor survival rate that may in part be due to flawed technique and training [1]. Recent recommendations for education and training have been issued for staff with responsibility for resuscitating patients [2]. These include 'staff with patient contact should be given regular resuscitation training appropriate to their expected abilities and roles', and 'cardiopulmonary arrest should be managed according to national guidelines'. The use of human patient simulators has become increasingly common in medical education [3]. Their use for exposing staff to high-risk complex clinical situations such as CPR is advocated by the department of health [4].

Highlights

  • Community-acquired pneumonia remains a common ventilation (MV) were randomized into two groups: one group was condition worldwide

  • This study shows that the inhibition of the intramyocardial expression of tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α and of its secondary mediator COX-2 related to moderate hypothermia during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is associated with the inhibition of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)–acute pancreatitis (AP)-1, but not of the NF-κB pathway

  • Nominal values of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) detected by immunoassay were based upon calibration with commercial murine iNOS standards

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Summary

Introduction

Community-acquired pneumonia remains a common ventilation (MV) were randomized into two groups: one group was condition worldwide. Methods Eighty-one consecutive patients (age 63 ± 16 years, male n = 51, SAPS 2 score 49 ± 11, mechanical ventilation n = 50, vasopressors n = 56, renal failure n = 19, postoperative n = 23) admitted to the ICU during a 3-month period were evaluated. Probiotics administration was suggested to reduce the incidence of infections and the overall morbidity and mortality in surgical patients The aim of this prospective randomized clinical trial was to assess the effects of a combination formula of probiotics and prebiotics (Synbiotic 2000Forte; Medifarm, Sweden) versus prebiotics only (fiber) in critically ill, long-term mechanically ventilated trauma patients. This study examines the acute patient outcomes associated with the evolution of early total care to damage control orthopaedics for multiply injured patients with femoral shaft fractures

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