Innovative Cell Population Data (CPD) have been used as early biomarkers for diagnosing sepsis in adults. We assessed the usefulness of CPD in pediatric patients with sepsis/septic shock, in terms of early recognition and outcome prediction. We revised 54 patients (0-15 y) admitted to our Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) for sepsis/septic shock during a 4-year period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Some evidence indicates that exogenous surfactant therapy may be effective in infants with acute viral bronchiolitis, even though more confirmatory data are needed. To date, no large multicentre trials have evaluated the effectiveness and safety of exogenous surfactant in severe cases of bronchiolitis requiring invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV).
Methods And Analysis: This is a multicentre randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind study, performed in 19 Italian paediatric intensive care units (PICUs).
Background: Pediatric ARDS still represents a difficult challenge in Pediatric Intensive Care Units (PICU). Among different treatments proposed, exogenous surfactant showed conflicting results. Aim of this multicenter retrospective observational study was to evaluate whether poractant alfa use in pediatric ARDS might improve gas exchange in children less than 2 years old, according to a shared protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To evaluate the performance of the newest version of the Pediatric Index of Mortality 3 score and compare it with the Pediatric Index of Mortality 2 in a multicenter national cohort of children admitted to PICU.
Design: Retrospective, prospective cohort study.
Setting: Seventeen Italian PICUs.
Exogenous surfactant is a therapeutic option for newborns, children and adults with acute respiratory distress disorders. Although tracheal instillation is still reputed as the classical method of surfactant delivery, alternative techniques have been investigated. Surfactant administration by using thin intra-tracheal catheters, bronchoscopy, laryngeal mask airway, or nebulisation, although variably effective, appear to be less invasive when compared to tracheal intubation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeptic shock remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality among children, mainly due to acute hemodynamic compromise and multiple organ failures. In the last decade, international guidelines for the management of septic shock, as well as clinical practice parameters for hemodynamic support of pediatric patients, have been published. Early recognition and aggressive therapy of septic shock, by means of abundant fluid resuscitation, use of catecholamines and other adjuvant drugs, are widely considered of pivotal importance to improve the short and long-term outcome of these patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
October 2010
Neurally adjusted ventilator assist (NAVA) is a new mode of partial ventilatory support, in which neural inspiratory activity is monitored through the continuous esophageal recording of the electrical activity of the diaphragm. Assistance is triggered and cycled off in according to this signal and is delivered in proportion to its intensity. NAVA can improve patient-ventilator synchrony while maintaining spontaneous breathing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To assess how children requiring endotracheal intubation are mechanically ventilated in Italian pediatric intensive care units (PICUs).
Design: A prospective, national, observational, multicenter, 6-month study.
Setting: Eighteen medical-surgical PICUs.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is necessary in about 1-2% of all newly born infants in their first minutes of life. However, CPR may also be needed in newborns beyond the time of birth, particularly in high risk categories of infants admitted in the NICU or in other less specialised units. In all these scenarios, the role of nurses is essential for several aspects, including early recognition of a deteriorating infant, with the aim to prevent cardiac arrest, as well as the starting of immediate basic life support manoeuvres at the bedside, whenever needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To compare the accuracy of procalcitonin (PCT) in early-onset neonatal sepsis (EOS) using standard cut-off values and a multilevel probabilistic approach.
Design And Methods: A retrospective study of PCT was performed in 149 newborns at risk of EOS, including preterm or prolonged rupture of membranes, chorioamnionitis or maternal infection, GBS colonization and signs of fetal distress. PCT values were analysed according to time of assay, i.
Pediatr Pulmonol
September 2004
Phrenic nerve paralysis is a condition typically occurring after invasive procedures in the chest and neck. Here we describe a case of transient unilateral diaphragmatic paralysis in a child with status asthmaticus complicated by complete right lung atelectasis. Common causes of this disorder and possible implications for our case are discussed.
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