
Glycocalyx Damage in Critically Ill Patients
Critical IllnessThe hypothesis to be tested: GCX damage and its dynamics correlate to various patient related factors and to using organ-supporting measures. There is a correlation between length of organ support and GCX damage. The aim of the study: Evaluation of the relationship between GCX damage and duration of various organ supporting measures. Type of the study: Observational. Subjects: Adult patients admitted to ICU and requiring organ supporting therapy. Sample size: We plan enrollment of 75 patients on invasive ventilatory support in the duration of least 5 days, 50 patients on renal supporting therapy lasting at least 5 days and 20 patients with target temperature management for neuroprotection. Intervention: none Data to be recorded and analysed: Demographics, type of patients (trauma, post surgical, medical, after cardiac arrest), severity score - Apache II, SOFA, fluid balance, presence of delirium, clinical outcome, sublingual microcirculation by SDF imaging at time points: before or at the start of organ support, after 24 hours (day 1), day 3, 5, 7 and/or at discharge or before death, microcirculatory data, and Perfused Boundary Region.

Pediatric International Nutrition Study 2018
Pediatric Critical IllnessThis is a multi-site study of how nutrition is delivered to critically ill patients in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs) around the world. Each site will include mechanically ventilated children in their respective PICUs and record the details of what type and amount of nutrition was received. These details will be compared to goals designated by the clinicians caring for each patient. Data will be entered in a secure online remote data capture tool and managed by the lead researchers in Pediatric Critical Care Nutrition at Boston Children's Hospital, Nilesh Mehta, MD and Lori Bechard, PhD, RD. Data will be analyzed to better understand how different types and amounts of nutrition impact important PICU outcomes such as length of stay, ventilator time, incidence of infections, and mortality.

Meeting Protein Targets in Critically Ill Patients
Critical IllnessDietary ModificationThis is a retrospective study of protein and energy intake in enterally fed critically ill adult patients before and after the introduction of a very high protein enteral nutrition formula in a single center medical/surgical ICU.

Optimization of PK/PD Target Attainment for Meropenem in Critically Ill Patients With Sepsis
Critical IllnessPharmacokineticsWP1.1. PK/PD target attainment: Plasma exposure, Excretion via urine & ELF exposure; WP1.2. Predictive dosing algorithm; WP1.3. ECMO subset

Predictive Value of Transabdominal Intestine Sonography in Critically Ill Patients
Gastrointestinal DysfunctionCritical Illness1 moreIt is very important to evaluate the degree of gastrointestinal dysfunction in critical ill patients. Thus the investigators conducted transabdominal intestine ultrasonography(US) in critical ill patients to evaluated the degree of gastrointestinal dysfunction under the acute gastrointestinal injury (AGI)

Second Survey of Intensive Care in India
Critical IllnessINDICAPS was the first large scale, multicentre survey launched by the ISCCM. The aim was to gather information about ICUs, organizational characteristics, patient casemix, the types and severity of illness, monitoring and therapeutic modalities used, types of infections, and other such data. This was performed between July 2010 and April 2011 and published in 2016.[1] Over the last 8 years, there has been a significant difference in the delivery of intensive care services, critical care education, socioeconomic indicators, antibiotic resistance patterns and other aspects of practices in Indian ICUs. It is therefore necessary to revisit and resurvey the current trends in intensive care practices in India, and to reflect the vast spectrum of critical care illness, services and practices. Similar to INDICAPS, which was a point-prevalence study of all patients present in the ICU on four different days over a one-year period, INDICAPS II will record data of all patients admitted to the ICU on 4 different days.

Muscle Function After Intensive Care
Critically IllColorectal Surgery2 moreFinal objective of critical care is no longer only survival. The role of medical and paramedical teams should also be to restore functional capacities, autonomy and quality of life. What has been call "intensive care unit - acquired weakness" (ICU-AW) is associated to acute and long term increased mortality, prolonged ICU and hospital stay, prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation, altered quality of life in survivors and increased health-related costs. In order to target efficient secondary prevention and early rehabilitation, prompt identification of muscle weakness is crucial. Several methods, aiming to assess muscle mass, muscle strength or physical function, are described. Manual muscle testing using the Medical Research Council (MRC) scale is still the most commonly utilized tool to diagnose ICU-AW (MRC <48/60). Dynamometry is an objective alternative and one of the most accurate clinimetric tool to assess muscle strength. Literature is overflowing with insufficiently standardized dynamometry data. Using the investigator's published standardized protocol of quadriceps strength (QS) assessment, this observational study aim to describe physical performances of CC patients and thus to define the weakest ones, by comparing them to surgical and healthy subjects.

Diaphragmatic Echography in Critically Ill patientS
Respiratory FailureAcute respiratory failure (ARF) is characterised by a discrepancy between load imposed on respiratory muscles and their capacity. Recently, diaphragmatic ultrasonography has been introduced in the clinical practice to evaluate diaphragmatic function. In particular, the investigators will focus on Diaphragmatic Displacement measured by M-mode ultrasonography. The aim of this study was to compare the diaphragmatic displacement with traditional weaning parameters in potentially ready to be extubated patients undergoing a spontaneous breathing trial (SBT).

Drug Resistance Factors In Healthcare-associated Pneumonia
PneumoniaCritical IllnessRecently clinical guidelines categorize pneumonia in to three types: community, healthcare-associated, and hospital-acquired. Much of the existing research to describe the epidemiology of pneumonia in critically ill patients comes from single-center studies or from retrospective database analyses, which limit generalizability and lead to over-prescription of broad-spectrum antibacterial agents. This will be a prospective, multicenter epidemiological study to characterize pneumonia epidemiology in critically ill adult patients.

Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of 187 Critically Ill Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019...
COVID-19This case series describes the clinical characteristics, treatment and outcomes of patients with laboratory confirmed COVID-19 admitted to a 35 beds intensive care unit of a tertiary hospital in Northeast Brazil.