Abstract
Amniotic fluid embolism (AFE) is a catastrophic complication of pregnancy. The incidence of AFE is very rare, and the clinical presentation; central hemodynamic data in humans are typically obtained more than 1 hour after the event and from only the subset of women who have survived the initial insult. This makes the exact pathophysiology remain elusive, despite numerous attempts at understanding AFE syndrome. We tried to evaluate the effect of amniotic fluid on blood coagulation by making a simple in-vitro model, using an activated clotting time (ACT) monitor.
Highlights
There is considerable uncertainty about the reproducibility of the various instruments used to measure dyspnea, their ability to reflect changes in symptoms, whether they accurately reflect the patient’s experience and if its evolution is similar between acute heart failure syndrome patients and nonacute heart failure syndrome patients
Results of this study show that early tracheostomy, if perioperative complications
We looked at the use of postwith tracheostomies performed in the critical care unit of a tertiary procedure chest radiography (CXR)
Summary
There is considerable uncertainty about the reproducibility of the various instruments used to measure dyspnea, their ability to reflect changes in symptoms, whether they accurately reflect the patient’s experience and if its evolution is similar between acute heart failure syndrome patients and nonacute heart failure syndrome patients. Conclusions Our data demonstrate that critically ill patients may be exposed to a higher FiO2 than that required to maintain adequate oxygenation These results highlight an area of ICU care that has received little study, with no published clinical trials examining the effect of FiO2 on outcome. Results Age, sex, the underlying disease and tumour stage (TNM classification), type of previous anticancer treatment, performance status, severity scores (APACHE II, Simplified Acute Physiology Score II, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment), ICU and hospital mortalities and hospital outcome at 3, 6 and 12 months were analysed. Clinical data of 277 post-transplantation patients admitted to the ICU were collected at admission and the SAPS 3 and APACHE II score calculated with respective estimated mortality rates.
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