Publications by authors named "Spadaro S"

Introduction: In critically ill patients, individualised strategies for red blood cell transfusion (RBCT) are lacking. The objective of this study is to demonstrate the potential advantages of employing an individualised transfusion strategy compared with a restrictive approach, in unselected intensive care unit (ICU) patients.

Methods: This will be a randomised, multicentre, international trial.

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  • The study aimed to compare the effects of personalized positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) versus a standard low PEEP/FiO2 table on patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) undergoing pressure support ventilation (PSV).
  • Researchers conducted a cross-over randomized trial with 30 ARDS patients, measuring how different PEEP settings affected lung mechanics and patient comfort.
  • Results showed that the personalized PEEP significantly improved lung function, reduced respiratory effort, and did not lead to lung overdistension, making it a promising approach for treating ARDS during ventilation.
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  • Researchers believe that lung ultrasound scores (LUS) can better predict cardiac risks in elderly patients undergoing hip fracture surgery, compared to existing methods like the Revised Cardiac Risk Index and ASA Physical Status.
  • The study involved 877 patients across 11 Italian hospitals, finding a significant correlation between higher LUS scores and complications, with a notable incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE).
  • Results showed that a preoperative LUS score of 8 or higher was more effective at predicting MACE than traditional scoring methods, indicating its potential as a valuable tool for risk assessment in this patient population.
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Background: Discomfort can be the cause of noninvasive respiratory support (NRS) failure in up to 50% of treated patients. Several studies have shown how analgosedation during NRS can reduce the rate of delirium, endotracheal intubation, and hospital length of stay in patients with acute respiratory failure. The purpose of this project was to explore consensus on which medications are currently available as analgosedatives during NRS, which types of patients may benefit from analgosedation while on NRS, and which clinical settings might be appropriate for the implementation of analgosedation during NRS.

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The fight against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) continues. Since the pandemic's onset, several biomarkers have been proposed to assess the diagnosis and prognosis of this disease. This research aimed to identify potential disease severity biomarkers in serum samples of patients with COVID-19 during the disease course.

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: To investigate the impact of patient characteristics and treatment factors on excessive respiratory drive, effort, and lung-distending pressure during transitioning from controlled to spontaneous assisted ventilation in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). : Multicenter cohort observational study of patients with ARDS at four academic intensive care units. Respiratory drive (P), diaphragm electrical activity (EAdi), inspiratory effort derived from EAdi (∆Pmus) and from occlusion of airway pressure (∆Pocc) (Pmus), and dynamic transpulmonary driving pressure (ΔP) were measured at the first transition to assisted spontaneous breathing.

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The management of patients with life-threatening respiratory disease in the ICU and at home has become increasingly of interest over the past decades. Growing knowledge supports the use of NRS, aimed at improving patient comfort and improving quality of life. However, its role during palliative care is not well defined, and evidence of support remains limited.

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  • Automated analysis of lung CT scans can help classify different subphenotypes of acute respiratory illness in COVID-19 patients by combining CT features with clinical and lab data.
  • A study of 559 spontaneously breathing COVID-19 patients identified two subphenotypes: one with older patients, higher inflammation, more severe hypoxemia, and a higher mortality rate, while the other had distinct lung imaging features and lower mortality.
  • The findings emphasize the potential of using machine learning and lung-CT imaging to improve the understanding and treatment of respiratory failure in COVID-19 patients.
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Background: Cardiac risk evaluation prior to noncardiac surgery is fundamental to tailor peri-operative management to patient's estimated risk. Data on the degree of adherence to guidelines in patients at cardiovascular risk in Europe and factors influencing adherence are underexplored.

Objectives: The aim of this analysis was to describe the degree of adherence to [2014 European Society of Cardiology (ESC)/European Society of Anaesthesiology (ESA) guidelines] recommendations on rest echocardiography [transthoracic echocardiography (TTE)] and to stress imaging prior to noncardiac surgery in a large European sample and to assess factors potentially affecting adherence.

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Background: The recruitment-to-inflation ratio (R/I) has been recently proposed to bedside assess response to PEEP. The impact of PEEP on ventilator-induced lung injury depends on the extent of dynamic strain reduction. We hypothesized that R/I may reflect the potential for lung recruitment (i.

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Purpose: Growing evidence shows the complex interaction between lung and kidney in critically ill patients. The renal resistive index (RRI) is a bedside measurement of the resistance of the renal blood flow and it is correlated with kidney injury. The positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) level could affect the resistance of renal blood flow, so we assumed that RRI could help to monitoring the changes in renal hemodynamics at different PEEP levels.

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Background: Postoperative pulmonary complications can increase hospital length of stay, postoperative morbidity, and mortality. Although many factors can increase the risk of postoperative pulmonary complications, it is not known whether intraoperative ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) mismatch can be associated with an increased risk of postoperative pulmonary complications after major noncardiac surgery.

Methods: This study enrolled patients undergoing general anesthesia for noncardiac surgery and evaluated intraoperative V/Q distribution using the automatic lung parameter estimator technique.

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Introduction And Objectives: Quantifying breathing effort in non-intubated patients is important but difficult. We aimed to develop two models to estimate it in patients treated with high-flow oxygen therapy.

Patients And Methods: We analyzed the data of 260 patients from previous studies who received high-flow oxygen therapy.

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Advanced respiratory monitoring encompasses a diverse range of mini- or noninvasive tools used to evaluate various aspects of respiratory function in patients experiencing acute respiratory failure, including those requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support. Among these techniques, key modalities include esophageal pressure measurement (including derived pressures), lung and respiratory muscle ultrasounds, electrical impedance tomography, the monitoring of diaphragm electrical activity, and assessment of flow index. These tools play a critical role in assessing essential parameters such as lung recruitment and overdistention, lung aeration and morphology, ventilation/perfusion distribution, inspiratory effort, respiratory drive, respiratory muscle contraction, and patient-ventilator synchrony.

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Our study investigates the post-mortem findings of the diaphragm's muscular structural changes in mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients. Diaphragm samples of the right side from 42 COVID-19 critically ill patients were analyzed and correlated with the type and length of mechanical ventilation (MV), ventilatory parameters, prone positioning, and use of sedative drugs. The mean number of fibers was 550±626.

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  • Transpulmonary pressure calculation typically requires esophageal pressure, which is a complicated process to calibrate.
  • A new digital filter that removes heartbeat noise from central venous pressure (CVP) waveforms, resulting in a filtered CVP (f-CVP), was developed to simplify this measurement.
  • In this study, f-CVP was evaluated and found to estimate esophageal respiratory swings more accurately than CVP alone and effectively identify high transpulmonary pressure levels in patients with acute respiratory failure.
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In critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure, thoracic images are essential for evaluating the nature, extent and progression of the disease, and for clinical management decisions. For this purpose, computed tomography (CT) is the gold standard. However, transporting patients to the radiology suite and exposure to ionized radiation limit its use.

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  • The 2022 European Society of Cardiology guidelines for preoperative evaluations aimed to improve the detection of pathological findings compared to the 2014 guidelines.
  • A study analyzed data from 15,529 patients and found that the updated recommendations changed testing protocols for many, but did not enhance the overall effectiveness of cardiac testing.
  • The use of B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) for risk estimation did not improve pathological findings, and adherence to the new guidelines showed no significant link to major adverse cardiovascular events.
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Prone positioning (PP) represents a therapeutic intervention with the proven capacity of ameliorating gas exchanges and ventilatory mechanics indicated in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). When PP is selectively applied to moderate-severe cases of ARDS, it sensitively affects clinical outcomes, including mortality. After the COVID-19 outbreak, clinical application of PP peaked worldwide and was applied in 60% of treated cases, according to large reports.

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  • * This study aimed to identify specific molecular changes in endothelial cells caused by factors found in the blood of COVID-19 patients.
  • * The results showed that COVID-19 serum leads to increased cell death, loss of barrier function, and heightened clotting tendencies in endothelial cells, primarily through the activation of a receptor called PAR-2, suggesting it could be a target for future treatments.
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Background: Both general anesthesia and pneumoperitoneum insufflation during abdominal laparoscopic surgery can lead to atelectasis and impairment in oxygenation. Setting an appropriate level of external PEEP could reduce the occurrence of atelectasis and induce an improvement in gas exchange. However, in clinical practice, it is common to use a fixed PEEP level (i.

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Serum proteomics has matured and is now able to monitor hundreds of proteins quantitatively in large cohorts of patients. However, the fine characteristics of some of the most dominant proteins in serum, the immunoglobulins, are in these studies often ignored, due to their vast, and highly personalized, diversity in sequences. Here, we focus exclusively on these personalized features in the serum proteome and distinctively chose to study individual samples from a low diversity population: elderly donors infected by severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).

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