Abstract

Postmortem examination is considered as the golden standard for the evaluation of clinical diagnosis. However due to several reasons (costs, permission of family members), few medical centers continue to perform autopsy as a means of quality control. From 1995 to 1996, we performed an autopsy study in a medical intensive care unit of a university hospital: 93% of the 140 deceased patients in our medical ICU underwent an autopsy, 100 consecutive patient files were studied. The clinical diagnosis were made by internists, specialized in intensive medicine; the diagnosis on autopsy were made by a pathologist. According to the criteria of Goldman [l], the clinical and autopsy findings were categorized into major and minor diagnoses. A missed diagnosis on clinical grounds was classified as a class 1 error (if detected before death, this would probably have caused a therapeutic change with possible altered outcome) or as a class II error (if known before death, this diagnosis would not have led to a change in therapy). In 16% of the patients, a class I missed diagnosis was detected (cardiac tamponade, myocardial infarction, fungal pneumonia); in 9%, a class II missed diagnosis was detected (most frequently tumors). Sometimes the diagnosis was missed due to a combination of severe, acute problems (e.g. development of cardiac tamponade after insertion of a venous catheter during hemorraghic shock), or due to a lack of sensitive and specific investigational methods (fungal pneumonia is frequently suspected in immuno-compromised patients, but is often difficult to confirm), or due to logistic transportation problems in the hemodynamically unstable patient (e.g. retroperitoncal hemorrhage is not always detectable on bedside echography; for diagnosis, CAT-scan is needed).

Highlights

  • Ill patients requiring intensive care are at risk of iatrogenic ocular damage

  • Intensive Care Unit (ICU) management of critically ill patients often includes the requirement for tracheostomy and feeding access, most often a pecutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG)

  • Percutaneous tracheostomy is performed routinely in many medical intensive care unit (ICU) settings, in high risk surgical and trauma patients who often have unstable cervical spine injury and tissue edema, direct visualization of the cervical structures and trachea is imperative during tracheostomy

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Summary

Introduction

Ill patients requiring intensive care are at risk of iatrogenic ocular damage. We designed an experimental situation where external cardiac pressure conditions were controlled and adjusted to physiological extremes to mimic clinically relevant situations, while cardiac performance was assessed using left ventricular pressure–volume relationships (LVPVR) which are relatively preload and afterload independent This prospective, controlled study was undertaken to evaluate the response to therapy aimed at achieving supranormal cardiac and oxygen transport values (cardiac index >4.5 l/min/m2, oxygen delivery >600 l/min/m2, and oxygen consumption >170 l/min/m2) in patients older than 60 or with previous severe cardiorespiratory illnesses, who have undergone elective extensive ablative surgery planned for carcinoma or abdominal aortic aneurism. Whilst some human studies conducted in the critically ill and in high risk surgical patients have suggested that dopexamine may cause an increase in tonometrically measured gastric intra-mucosal pH (pHi) and an improvement in clinical outcome, this has not been confirmed in other randomised trials. In the present study the association of platelet function to inflammatory markers indicating disease severity was investigated

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