Administration of omega-3 fatty acid may reduce mortality, antibiotic use, and length of hospital stay in different diseases. Effects and effect sizes related to fish oil doses are diagnosis dependent. In view of the lack of substantial study literature concerning diagnosis-related nutritional single-substrate intervention in the critically ill, the present data can be used in formulating hypotheses and may serve as reference doses for randomized, controlled studies, which may, for instance, confirm the value of omega-3 fatty acid in the adjunctive therapy of peritonitis and abdominal sepsis.
These findings suggest that infusion of NAC in high doses affects granulocyte functions in critically ill patients. Antimicrobial host defense requires the effective sequence of cell adhesion, phagocytosis, and bactericidal respiratory burst. The enhanced phagocytotic activity might be a compensatory mechanism in states of impaired respiratory burst to maintain tissue sterility. For certain mechanisms of disease, the effects observed might be favorable (e.g., ischemia/reperfusion, endothelial cell activation), for others (infection) this might be detrimental.
Thiopental, propofol, midazolam and ketamine affect E. coli clearance and neutrophil and monocyte oxidative burst and phagocytosis in vitro only in high concentrations, while thiopental inhibited monocytic burst and propofol impaired PMN phagocytosis even in clinically used concentrations. These data suggest that i.v. anesthetics in concentrations recommended for general anesthesia seem to have minor influence on the investigated host defense mechanisms.
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