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Uncategorized Published - 30 August, 2016    By - Dr Clemens
Duration of Post-op Atrial Fibrillation After Cardiac Surgery Is a Survival Indicator

A new study has found that postoperative atrial fibrillation (POAF) lasting two days or more is associated with worse long-term survival after cardiac surgery. Even after close matching on operative variables and comorbidity burden, patients with prolonged atrial fibrillation had significantly worse survival compared with patients who experienced POAF less than two days. According to […]

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Uncategorized Published - 30 August, 2016    By - Dr Clemens
Poor Pre-CABG Surgery Functional Status Associated With Increased Long-Term Mortality

A quick bedside assessment may one day help determine the long-term prognosis for patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. According to the results of an observational study, poor functional status before CABG was associated with significantly increased risk for long-term mortality. “We demonstrated that poor baseline functional status in CABG patients is associated […]

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Uncategorized Published - 30 August, 2016    By - Dr Clemens
Education and Intervention Needed To Get Settings Right for Ventilated Patients

Education, along with bedside ventilator cards, significantly increased use of correct initial tidal volume settings for mechanically ventilated patients. The goal of the study was to correctly set the ventilator for patients based on their ideal body weight (IBW), rather than using consistent settings for all patients, said Rotem Friede, MD, medical director of the […]

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Uncategorized Published - 30 August, 2016    By - Dr Clemens
Peri-op Clonidine: Benefits Not There, But Hypotension Is

Anesthesiologists who use perioperative clonidine in the hope of reducing acute postoperative pain or opioid consumption need to reconsider their efforts. According to a randomized controlled trial at the Cleveland Clinic, in Ohio—the largest such trial ever—researchers found that the drug has neither of these perceived benefits, and its use may come at the expense […]

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Uncategorized Published - 30 August, 2016    By - Dr Clemens
Rationing in the Intensive Care Unit in Case of Full Bed Occupancy: A Survey Among Intensive Care Unit Physicians

Authors: Anke J. M. Oerlemans et al BMC Anesthesiol. 2016;16(25) Background: Internationally, there is no consensus on how to best deal with admission requests in cases of full ICU bed occupancy. Knowledge about the degree of dissension and insight into the reasons for this dissension is lacking. Information about the opinion of ICU physicians can […]

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