Dr. Tim Sable’s review of a common and recurrent issue in critical care practice: therapy misalignment. Review the presentation to see how current practitioners use randomized controlled trials to manage ICU patients and whether or not these therapies are in line with the results of the studies. Dr. Sable reviews the TRICC and ARMA trials as examples. This presentation is archived in the section of Journal Club Presentations.
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Dr. Christofer Utz did an excellent review of the Critical Care Safety Study published in 2005 Critical Care Medicine. The primary objective of this study was to identify the incidence and rates of adverse events in critical care units per 1000 patient days. Dr. Utz reports the study design, methods as well as resuts and finished the presentation with a nice critique on several limitations of this study. The discussion was very engaging and raised several important questions regarding how should we truly define a medical error. The audience also questioned whether we should be reporting some of these errors at all vs. should we be reporting more than we already do today. This presentation is archived in the section of Journal Club Presentations.
Dr. Michael Fernando (CA-2) did an excellent presentation of Acute Renal Failure and Sepsis featured in the July 2004 New England Journal of Medicine. With the significant morbidity and mortality associated with sepsis, septic shock and acute renal failure it is prudent to understand the mechanisms of this disease process as well as evaluate which interventions make therapeutic sense! This review in NEJM gives us some insight and may help intensivists answer some of these questions. This is archived in the collection of Journal Club Presentations.
It was identified that early sepsis maybe a state in which physiologically the body is depleted of Read more…
Dr. Ricardo Riveros (CA-2) presents a thorough review of Mechanisms of Sepsis-Induced Cardiac Dysfuntion featured in the May 2007 Critical Care Medicine. This was a very difficult review of basic science as well as the mechanistic molecular biology of the cardiac dysfunction that occurs in septic patients with myocardial dysfunction. This article focuses on the intracellular pathways that are disrupted by sepsis hence leading to cell death, apoptosis. Dr. Riveros points out the animal models and patient studies used to study these mechanisms as well as their downfalls. A great resource for basic review of what goes wrong within the cell during sepsis. This is archived in the collection of Journal Club Presentations.
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