Background: Gram-negative Multi-Drug-Resistant Organisms (GNMDROs) cause an increasing burden of disease in Intensive Care Units (ICUs). We deployed a multifaceted intervention to control selection and transmission of GNMDROs and to estimate at which rate GNMDROs would decline with our interventional bundle.
Methods: Interventions implemented in 2015: in-ward Antimicrobial-Stewardship-Program for appropriate management of antimicrobial prescription; infection monitoring with nasal/rectal swabs and repeated procalcitonin assays; 24 h microbiological support (since 2016); prevention of catheter-related infections, VAPs and in-ward GNMDROs transmission; education of ICU personnel.
Background: In critically ill patients with colonization/infection of multidrug-resistant organisms, source control surgery is one of the major determinants of clinical success. In more complex cases, the use of different tools for sepsis management may allow survival until complete source control.
Case Presentation: A 42-year-old white man presented with traumatic hemorrhagic shock.
Background: The increased survival after a severe acquired brain injury (sABI) raise the problem of making most effective the treatments in Intensive Care Unit (ICU)/Neurointensive Care Unit (NICU), also integrating rehabilitation care. Despite previous studies reported that early mobilization in ICU was effective in preventing complications and reducing hospital stay, few studies addressed the rehabilitative management of sABI patients in ICU/NICU.
Aim: To collect clinical and functional data about the early rehabilitative management of sABI patients during ICU/NICU stay.
Introduction: Conscious sedation has traditionally been used for laparoscopic tubal ligation. General anesthesia with endotracheal intubation may be associated with side effects, such as nausea, vomiting, cough, and dizziness, whereas sedation offers the advantage of having the patient awake and breathing spontaneously. Until now, only diagnostic laparoscopy and minor surgical procedures have been performed in patients under conscious sedation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although associated with certain advantages, laparoscopic repair of inguinal hernias implies longer operative times, increased intra-abdominal injuries, and a higher rate of urinary retention. To address these issues, we developed the transabdominal rivet technique (TART) for laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair.
Methods: Three patients underwent bilateral inguinal hernia repair: two underwent TART only, and one underwent a standard transabdominal preperitoneal technique on one side and TART on the other for comparison.