Microdialysis enables the chemistry of the extracellular interstitial space to be monitored. Use of this technique in patients with acute brain injury has increased our understanding of the pathophysiology of several acute neurological disorders. In 2004, a consensus document on the clinical application of cerebral microdialysis was published. Since then, there have been significant advances in the clinical use of microdialysis in neurocritical care. The objective of this review is to report on the International Microdialysis Forum held in Cambridge, UK, in April 2014 and to produce a revised and updated consensus statement about its clinical use including technique, data interpretation, relationship with outcome, role in guiding therapy in neurocritical care and research applications.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00134-015-3930-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
The TCCDS is a non-invasive bedside technique that is valid for determining MLS in patients with traumatic brain injury. Due to the risks involved in the transportation of traumatic brain-injured patients to the radiology department, this bedside technique is specially interesting in these patients.
Echocardiographic abnormalities of myocarditis are polymorphous and nonspecific. The presence of increased ventricular wall thickness, typically transient, is an infrequent finding in myocarditis that can correspond to an improvement in the clinical status of the patient and the ejection fraction. We report the case of a patient with acute myocarditis and the echocardiographic abnormalities observed during the course of his myocarditis: transient left ventricular "hypertrophy" associated with improvement of the left ventricular function.
SummaryBackground: Sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) complicating the acute phase of myocardial infarction (AMI) is a quite rare event but with short-term unfavorable prognosis. The clinical characteristics as well as the therapeutic implications have not yet been well defined.Hypothesis: This paper attempts to prove that VT may be considered a marker of inadequate myocardial perfusion after thrombolysis.Methods: To assess the clinic-electroangiographic characteristics and prognosis of patients with VT occurring within the first 4 days of an AMI, a case-control study was carried out in 23 patients from a total of 1,100 patients (1.9%) hospitalized with AMI between March 1993 and July 1997. These patients were compared with a control group of 131 patients hospitalized consecutively. A statistical analysis was made using the chi-square test, t-test, and logistic regression.Results: There were no differences among groups with regard to age, gender, and area of necrosis. Average time for the onset of VT was 26 h (range 0-92 h). Sixteen patients underwent coronary angiography: 4 patients had left main coronary artery disease, 2 had single-vessel disease, 8 had lesions in two vessels, and 2 had triple-vessel disease. Univariate analysis showed that patients with VT had a higher incidence of crea-
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