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Showing 487 pages, articles and journal scans about ""
Article
July 2013
A regional program for POCT service to emergency departments – results and remaining challenges
In a regional top-management decision, our laboratory was given the mission to control and quality assure all POCT activities in a regional network of 10 hospitals with emergency units. Based on previous work, new region-wide recommendations, procurements, IT connectivity, services, training, accreditation (ISO...
Process optimization
Point-of-care testing
Blood gases/acid-base
Glucose
Lactate
Creatinine/urea
D-dimer
CRP
Journal Scan
July 2013
Record-breaking blood pH - survival following extreme acidosis
Normal cellular metabolism and function require that blood pH be maintained within narrow limits, 7.35-7.45. Even mild excursion outside this range has deleterious effect, and pH of less than 6.8 or greater than 7.8 is considered – according to medical and physiology texts – incompatible with life. Such a view is...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
July 2013
A protocol for exclusion of myocardial infarction using hs-cTnT
Diagnosis of myocardial infarction in the absence of characteristic electrocardiographic (ECG) changes depends on measurement of circulating cardiac troponin (cTn); either cardiac troponin I (cTnI) or cardiac troponin T (cTnT).
By definition myocardial infarction is associated with increased serum cTnI and cTnT;...
Cardiac markers
Troponins
Journal Scan
July 2013
Timing of sampling for blood gases following change in oxygen therapy
Patients with chronic obstruction pulmonary disease (COPD) may need long-term oxygen therapy, monitored with blood gas analysis (pO2(a) and sO2(a)). It is important that when adjustments are made to this therapy (either increase or decrease in fraction inspired oxygen, FIO2) there should be delay until a new steady...
Blood gases/acid-base
Preanalytical phase
Journal Scan
July 2013
Improving nurse understanding of blood gas analysis
According to the nurse authors of this valuable review article, nurses working in intensive care units often have difficulty understanding the intricacies of acid-base balance as well as interpreting the results of blood gas analysis relating to the critically ill patients in their care. To address this issue and...
Blood gases/acid-base
Journal Scan
July 2013
Hypocalcemia in critical illness
Reduced plasma calcium (hypocalcemia) is a common feature of critical illness. A recent clinical study sought to document the course of hypocalcemia during the early days of critical illness, its significance for mortality, and the efficacy of calcium supplementation. The study population comprised 1038 patients...
Electrolytes
Article
June 2013
How to optimize patient flow and outcome in ED - The impact of point of care
Emergency Department (ED) overcrowding is becoming an increasingly international issue.
Although the problem is not only resolved by ED change management (but rather requires a system-wide solution recognizing the complex interdependencies of consumer expectations, human resources, information systems immaturity and...
Point-of-care testing
Process optimization
Blood gases/acid-base
Electrolytes
Cardiac markers
Glucose
Hemoglobins
Bilirubin
D-dimer
Troponins
Article
April 2013
Predictive value of C-reactive protein in children with appendicitis
Few studies have addressed the predictive value of C-reactive protein at different cutoff values in appendicitis. We have determined the cutoff values for C-reactive protein levels at different periods during clinical evolution of appendicitis and established their use to support the diagnosis of appendicitis.
The...
Infection/sepsis
Point-of-care testing
CRP
Journal Scan
April 2013
Proposal for more judicious use of oxygen therapy
By measurement of partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) and oxygen saturation (sO2), arterial blood gas analysis provides the gold standard method for assessment of blood oxygenation and the means for monitoring supplemental oxygen therapy. More frequent use of arterial blood gases for this purpose will be required if the...
Process optimization
Journal Scan
April 2013
In favor of point-of-care sodium measurement
When monitoring the plasma/serum sodium concentration of sick newborn babies in neonatal intensive care units, it may be preferable to use direct ion-specific electrode (ISE) methodology incorporated in point-of-care analyzers (including blood gas analyzers), rather than the indirect ISE methodology commonly employed...
Neonatology
Point-of-care testing
Quality assurance
Electrolytes