Intensive Care Med
April 2001
Biomed Tech (Berl)
December 1998
Mimicking the physiological characteristics of the circulatory system, pulsatile bloodflow has also been introduced into extracorporeal perfusion to avoid known postoperative complications. In a mathematical consideration of the situation bloodflow is seen as a function of time F(t) for approximately constant vessel diameter over a given time. The kinetic energy of a column of blood produced by the heart-lung machine is transmitted directly to the arterial circulation via the aorta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: Multiple organ failure alters the dosage of drugs during hemofiltration. To separate factors, we utilized in vitro hemofiltration to investigate different blood flows, protein concentrations and intracellular drug partition with the FH77H polyamide membrane.
Methods: One liter of warm heparinized fresh human blood was hemofiltrated in two series: (1) with digoxin, netilmycin, phenobarbital, ceftriaxone and teicoplanin, and (2) with amikacin, theophylline, ceftazidim, phenytoin and vancomycin and, in addition, with cell-free fresh frozen plasma.
J Clin Pharmacol
December 1996
Continuous hemofiltration is used widely in the management of patients with acute renal failure, but administration guidelines for many drugs have yet to be established. In this study, the pharmacokinetics of ceftriaxone were compared in patients with normal renal function (n = 9), mild renal insufficiency (n = 5), and acute renal failure receiving continuous veno-venous hemofiltration (n = 6). Pharmacokinetic parameters were determined under steady state conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with acute renal failure are commonly treated by continuous renal replacement therapies. To understand drug disposition in multiple organ failure patients, the pharmacokinetics of 18 drugs were evaluated in 243 patients. Continuous hemofiltration served as a model for constant elimination rates.
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