| Título : |
Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2020 |
| Tipo de documento: |
documento electrónico |
| Autores: |
Vincent, Jean-Louis, |
| Mención de edición: |
1 ed. |
| Editorial: |
[s.l.] : Springer |
| Fecha de publicación: |
2020 |
| Número de páginas: |
XI, 689 p. 116 ilustraciones, 94 ilustraciones en color. |
| ISBN/ISSN/DL: |
978-3-030-37323-8 |
| Nota general: |
Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos. |
| Palabras clave: |
Medicina de Terapia Intensiva Medicina de emergencia Medicina Interna Medicina de cuidados intensivos |
| Índice Dewey: |
616.028 |
| Resumen: |
La Actualización Anual recopila revisiones de los desarrollos más recientes en la investigación y práctica de cuidados intensivos clínicos y experimentales y medicina de emergencia en un libro de referencia completo. Los capítulos están escritos por expertos reconocidos en estos campos. El libro está dirigido a todos los involucrados en medicina interna, anestesia, cirugía, pediatría, cuidados intensivos y medicina de emergencia. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Part I. Respiratory Issues -- Physiology of respiratory drive in ICU patients: implications for diagnosis and treatment.-Monitoring patient respiratory effort during mechanical ventilation: lung and diaphragm-protective ventilation -- Ten reasons to use mechanical power to guide ventilator settings in patients without ARDS -- Part II. ARDS -- Extracellular vesicles in ARDS: new insights into pathogenesis with novel clinical applications.-ARDS subphenotypes: understanding a heterogeneous syndrome -- Assessment of VILI risk during spontaneous breathing and assisted mechanical ventilation -- Part III. Biomarkers -- The future of ARDS biomarkers: where are the gaps in implementation of precision medicine? -- Utility of inflammatory biomarkers for predicting organ failure and outcomes in cardiac arrest patients -- Troponin elevations after cardiac surgery: just 'troponitis'? -- Biomarkers of sepsis during continuous renal replacement therapy: have we found the appropriate biomarker to use in thissituation? -- Part IV. Fluids -- Do intensivists need to care about the revised Starling principle? -- Right ventricular dysfunction and fluid administration in critically ill patients.-Intravenous fluids: don't drown in confusion! -- Part V. Hemodynamic Management -- Update in right ventricular hemodynamic, echocardiographic and extra-cardiac ultrasound monitoring -- Management of hypotension: implications for non-cardiac surgery and the intensive care -- Heterogeneity of cardiovascular response to standardized sepsis resuscitation -- Part VI. The Microcirculation -- Clinical relevance of the endothelial glycocalyx in critically ill patients -- Customized monitoring of the microcirculation in patients with a left ventricular assist device -- Monitoring pf the sublingual microcirculation at the bedside: yes, it is possible and useful -- Microcirculation in patients with sepsis: from physiology to interventions -- Part VII. Sepsis -- Macrophage activation syndrome in sepsis: does it exist and how torecognize it? -- Is T cell exhaustion a treatable trait in sepsis? -- Cell-free hemoglobin: a new therapeutic target in sepsis? -- Therapeutic potential of the gut microbiota in the management of sepsis -- Part VIII. Bleeding & Transfusion -- Blood transfusion practice during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: rationale and modern approaches to management -- The use of frozen platelets for the treatment of bleeding -- Viscoelastic assay-guided hemostatic therapy in perioperative and critical care.-Extracorporeal filter and circuit patency: a personalized approach to anticoagulation -- Part IX. Prehospital Intervention -- Prehospital resuscitation with low titer O+ whole blood by civilian EMS teams: rationale and evolving strategies for use -- Mobile stroke units: taking the emergency room to the patient -- Part X. Trauma -- Evaluating quality in trauma systems -- Vasopressors for post-traumatic hemorrhagic shock: friends or foes? -- Extracranial tsunami after traumatic brain injury -- Part XI. Neurological Aspects -- Ten false beliefs about mechanical ventilation in brain injured patients -- Manifestations of critical illness brain injury -- Essential non-invasive multimodality neuromonitoring for the critically ill patient -- Part XII. Organ Donation -- Brain death after cardiac arrest: pathophysiology, prevalence and potential for organ donation -- Organ recovery procedure in donation after controlled circulatory death with normothermic regional perfusion: state of the art -- Part XIII. Oncology -- Admitting adult critically ill patients with hematological malignancies to the ICU: a Sisyphean task or work in progress? -- Onco-nephrology: acute kidney injury in critically ill cancer patients -- Part XIV. Severe Complications -- A clinician's guide to management of intraabdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in critically ill patients -- Update on the management of iatrogenic gas embolism -- Alcohol withdrawal syndrome in the ICU: preventing rather than treating? -- Part XV. Prolonged Critical Illness -- Muscle dysfunction in critically ill children -- Respiratory muscle rehabilitation in patients with prolonged mechanical ventilation: a targeted approach -- Post-intensive care syndrome and chronic critical illness: a tale of two syndromes -- Part XVI. Organizational and Ethical Aspects -- Sepsis as organ and health system failure -- Burnout and joy in the profession of critical care medicine -- Advance directives in the United Kingdom: ethical, legal and practical considerations -- Part XVII. Future Aspects -- Mobile devices for hemodynamic monitoring -- Artificial intelligence in the intensive care unit -- Index. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2020 [documento electrónico] / Vincent, Jean-Louis, . - 1 ed. . - [s.l.] : Springer, 2020 . - XI, 689 p. 116 ilustraciones, 94 ilustraciones en color. ISBN : 978-3-030-37323-8 Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos.
| Palabras clave: |
Medicina de Terapia Intensiva Medicina de emergencia Medicina Interna Medicina de cuidados intensivos |
| Índice Dewey: |
616.028 |
| Resumen: |
La Actualización Anual recopila revisiones de los desarrollos más recientes en la investigación y práctica de cuidados intensivos clínicos y experimentales y medicina de emergencia en un libro de referencia completo. Los capítulos están escritos por expertos reconocidos en estos campos. El libro está dirigido a todos los involucrados en medicina interna, anestesia, cirugía, pediatría, cuidados intensivos y medicina de emergencia. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Part I. Respiratory Issues -- Physiology of respiratory drive in ICU patients: implications for diagnosis and treatment.-Monitoring patient respiratory effort during mechanical ventilation: lung and diaphragm-protective ventilation -- Ten reasons to use mechanical power to guide ventilator settings in patients without ARDS -- Part II. ARDS -- Extracellular vesicles in ARDS: new insights into pathogenesis with novel clinical applications.-ARDS subphenotypes: understanding a heterogeneous syndrome -- Assessment of VILI risk during spontaneous breathing and assisted mechanical ventilation -- Part III. Biomarkers -- The future of ARDS biomarkers: where are the gaps in implementation of precision medicine? -- Utility of inflammatory biomarkers for predicting organ failure and outcomes in cardiac arrest patients -- Troponin elevations after cardiac surgery: just 'troponitis'? -- Biomarkers of sepsis during continuous renal replacement therapy: have we found the appropriate biomarker to use in thissituation? -- Part IV. Fluids -- Do intensivists need to care about the revised Starling principle? -- Right ventricular dysfunction and fluid administration in critically ill patients.-Intravenous fluids: don't drown in confusion! -- Part V. Hemodynamic Management -- Update in right ventricular hemodynamic, echocardiographic and extra-cardiac ultrasound monitoring -- Management of hypotension: implications for non-cardiac surgery and the intensive care -- Heterogeneity of cardiovascular response to standardized sepsis resuscitation -- Part VI. The Microcirculation -- Clinical relevance of the endothelial glycocalyx in critically ill patients -- Customized monitoring of the microcirculation in patients with a left ventricular assist device -- Monitoring pf the sublingual microcirculation at the bedside: yes, it is possible and useful -- Microcirculation in patients with sepsis: from physiology to interventions -- Part VII. Sepsis -- Macrophage activation syndrome in sepsis: does it exist and how torecognize it? -- Is T cell exhaustion a treatable trait in sepsis? -- Cell-free hemoglobin: a new therapeutic target in sepsis? -- Therapeutic potential of the gut microbiota in the management of sepsis -- Part VIII. Bleeding & Transfusion -- Blood transfusion practice during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: rationale and modern approaches to management -- The use of frozen platelets for the treatment of bleeding -- Viscoelastic assay-guided hemostatic therapy in perioperative and critical care.-Extracorporeal filter and circuit patency: a personalized approach to anticoagulation -- Part IX. Prehospital Intervention -- Prehospital resuscitation with low titer O+ whole blood by civilian EMS teams: rationale and evolving strategies for use -- Mobile stroke units: taking the emergency room to the patient -- Part X. Trauma -- Evaluating quality in trauma systems -- Vasopressors for post-traumatic hemorrhagic shock: friends or foes? -- Extracranial tsunami after traumatic brain injury -- Part XI. Neurological Aspects -- Ten false beliefs about mechanical ventilation in brain injured patients -- Manifestations of critical illness brain injury -- Essential non-invasive multimodality neuromonitoring for the critically ill patient -- Part XII. Organ Donation -- Brain death after cardiac arrest: pathophysiology, prevalence and potential for organ donation -- Organ recovery procedure in donation after controlled circulatory death with normothermic regional perfusion: state of the art -- Part XIII. Oncology -- Admitting adult critically ill patients with hematological malignancies to the ICU: a Sisyphean task or work in progress? -- Onco-nephrology: acute kidney injury in critically ill cancer patients -- Part XIV. Severe Complications -- A clinician's guide to management of intraabdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in critically ill patients -- Update on the management of iatrogenic gas embolism -- Alcohol withdrawal syndrome in the ICU: preventing rather than treating? -- Part XV. Prolonged Critical Illness -- Muscle dysfunction in critically ill children -- Respiratory muscle rehabilitation in patients with prolonged mechanical ventilation: a targeted approach -- Post-intensive care syndrome and chronic critical illness: a tale of two syndromes -- Part XVI. Organizational and Ethical Aspects -- Sepsis as organ and health system failure -- Burnout and joy in the profession of critical care medicine -- Advance directives in the United Kingdom: ethical, legal and practical considerations -- Part XVII. Future Aspects -- Mobile devices for hemodynamic monitoring -- Artificial intelligence in the intensive care unit -- Index. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
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