Left Ventricular Dysfunction in Critically Ill Patients
Left Ventricular DysfunctionCritically Ill3 moreLeft ventricular dysfunction is common in the critically ill. The aim of this study is to assess the incidence and prognosis of left ventricular dysfunction in critically ill patients.
Muscle Mass Loss in Critically Ill Patients.
Muscle LossThe purpose of the study is to describe the change in muscle mass in critically ill patients. The study will examine rectus femoris cross sectional area with ultrasound and identify risk factors of this changes.
Near-death Experience in ICU Survivors
Critical IllnessNear-Death ExperienceThis observational study aims to describe the incidence of near-death experience (NDE) in patients who survived a critical illness. In order to help determine the potential risk factors of NDE, dissociative status and spirituality are also investigated. Finally, in patients who experienced NDE, a magnetic resonance imaging is performed to search for any structural modifications.
Sedation Practices and Preferences of Turkish Intensive Care Physicians: National Survey
Critical IllnessSedationSedation is one of the most common practices applied in intensive care units (ICU) and the management of sedation, analgesia and delirium is a quality measure in ICUs. Several intensive care societies published guidelines regarding the use of sedatives and analgesics recently. In literature there are many survey studies investigating practices of sedation in ICUs of different countries, but knowledge of the sedation practices of intensive care physicians in Turkey is lacking. The aim of this study was to provide a baseline knowledge on this matter and to establish some points to be improved. An electronic survey form, consisting of 34 questions was generated with google forms, posted to 1700 email addresses and 429 returned (25%). The survey included questions about demographics and choices and routines of sedation, analgesia, neuromuscular blockers and delirium administration. Ninety-six percent of the respondents indicated that they practiced sedation in their ICUs and mechanical ventilation was checked as the primary indication (94%). On the question regarding drug choices for sedation, midazolam was the most preferred agent (90%). About pain questions, the most used evaluation tool was visual analogue scale (69.0%) and 83% of the respondents preferred to use tramadol for pain, followed by paracetamol (81.6%). Of the participants, 50.5% indicated that they routinely evaluated delirium and 56% of them used confussion assessment method for ICU. The awareness of 2013 American College of Critical Care Medicine (ACCM) guideline for the management of pain, agitation, and delirium was only 38%. The results of this survey have indicated some areas to be improved, such as low incidence of written sedation protocols, frequent use of benzodiazepines, and delirium screening. A national guideline should be prepared taking pain, agitation, and delirium in focus.
Prognostic Significance of Red Blood Cell
Critical IllnessRed blood cell (RBC) distribution width (RDW), calculated by dividing the standard deviation of RBC volume by the mean corpuscular volume and multiplied by 100, is routinely reported as part of the complete blood count (CBC) using automated flow cytometry. RDW has been traditionally used as additional information in the differential diagnosis of the cause of anemia. RDW has been recently reported as a strong prognostic factor in several diseases of various organ systems, including the cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, neurologic, and gastrointestinal systems.It also showed significant associations with ventilator-free days, postoperative outcome, intensive care unit (ICU) discharge outcome, out-of-hospital outcome, and all-cause mortality in critically ill patients. However, most studies were conducted in adult patients. Only a few studies have investigated RDW in children, especially in the critically ill pediatric population.
Frailty, Outcomes, Recovery and Care Steps of Critically Ill Patients
Critical IllnessThis pilot study will study the impact of critical illness and ICU processes of care on the trajectory and development of frailty. It is hypothesize that frailty in survivors of critical illness will be measurable at hospital discharge, will correlate with processes of care while in ICU and will better discriminate long term outcomes when compared to severity of illness or the degree of frailty present on ICU admission. This pilot study will be conducted in a tertiary medical surgical ICU at Kingston General Hospital- Kingston, Ontario. It will inform the feasibility, timelines and sample size for the multi-center study and will allow for the refinement of study procedures and data collection methods. This study will be published separately as a stand-alone pilot.
Functional Recovery in Critically Ill Children, the Wee-Cover Multicentre Study
Pediatric Critical IllnessWhen children suffer from a critical-illness, the investigators focus on resuscitating and saving lives. Once these children leave the pediatric intensive care unit, very little is known about what happens to them - how long it takes for them to recover, how families cope, and what factors that impede their recovery. The specific objective of this research project is to evaluate how children and their families recover after a critical illness. Research Hypotheses: Following a critical illness in children, 1) the rate and degree of health and functional recovery is influenced by the following factors: age, pre-admission co-morbid status, critical illness severity, discharge functional status, and time to initiating acute rehabilitation; 2) functional recovery is influenced by caregiver burden and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL).
The Value of Memory B Cells Marker (CD27) and Howell Jelly Bodies Detrection in Critically Ill Patients...
SepsisA total of ninety - five patients (54men and 41women) were included in the study. Fifty-eight patients developed septic complication during ICU stay (sepsis group). Forty seven patients were critically ill without evidence of infectious organism (SIRS group). At admission, Patients data include clinical status; SOFA score; central venous pressure; laboratory analysis and arterial blood gas analysis were measured. Routine cultures were obtained. The attending physician evaluated the patients for sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock as long as their stay in ICU. Memory B cells and Heinz bodies were monitored.
Gluconeogenesis Rates and Its Precursors in Pediatric Sepsis
SepsisHyperglycemia1 moreCritically ill children have abnormal utilization of nutrients such as glucose, lipids and protein. Often sick children have increased glucose concentrations in blood. However, the origin of the high glucose has not been determined in these populations. There is a close interrelationship between protein and energy metabolism. An increase in the energy supply will not promote nitrogen retention unless the amino acid supply is adequate, and conversely, an increased amino acid supply will be useless if energy is limiting, hence the importance of adequate protein and energy intake. Our study aims to investigate the protein-energy interactions in critically ill septic children and adolescents with the objective to eventually provide the best nutritional support for these patients.
Leuven Growing Into Deficit Follow-up Study
Heart DefectsCongenital3 moreThe key objective of the Leuven growing-into-deficit (GID) follow-up-study is to test the hypothesis that children with a congenital heart disease (CHD) show more neurocognitive impairment at the second follow-up at 7 years old than at the first follow-up at the age of 4, compared to healthy controls.