• The Global ICU

    If we look at intensive care in the global context, a myriad of challenges, issues, and also opportunities present themselves, where involvement and commitment from developed and developing nations is increasingly recognised as necessary to reach targeted improvements. From working to enhance intensive care in developing nations and resource-poor...

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  • C. Difficile Researchers Reveal Potential Target to Fight Infections

    Researchers have discovered how Clostridium difficile , a common germ in healthcare-associated infections, sends the body's natural defenses into overdrive, actually intensifying illness while fighting infection. The discovery at Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech in the US, which was recently published in PLOS One,...

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  • West Nile Virus Encephalitis: Recognising and Diagnosing Infection

    The increasing spread of West Nile virus (WNV) infection is worrying and requires that all intensivists be ready to recognise and diagnose the disease. Most individuals infected with WNV are asymptomatic, while one-fifth experience a flu-like illness and less than 1% develop neuroinvasive disease. Introduction West Nile...

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  • Valuing Prevention as the New Paradigm in Global Health

    Managing Population Immunity for Vaccine Preventable Diseases One lesson from progress towards polio eradication suggests that using models and measurements together to manage population immunity may play a key role in supporting the paradigm shift required to value prevention and realise...

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  • Improving Obstetrical Critical Care in Developing Nations

    A Thematic Review of Challenges and Solutions ringing down maternal morbidity and mortality rates and thereby improving reproductive health services has been a major concern in developing nations for the past few decades. In spite of adopting on the various measures and implementing new strategies, the adversity in maternal health...

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  • Pharmaconutrition with Antioxidants in the Critically Ill

    Is Selenium Monotherapy the Cornerstone of this Strategy? This article explores the evolving paradigm of pharmaconutrition using antioxidant micronutrients, looking at the available evidence for antioxidant supplementation in the critically ill. In particular it discusses the protective mechanisms of action of selenite...

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  • Management of Candiduria: Grey Zones Still Exist

    Candida species cause a wide spectrum of diseases, of which the prevalence of candiduria varies considerably between nosocomial settings, being most prevalent among patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). However, lacking management and treatment guidelines and the existence of dilemmas have inhibited efforts to curtail cases of...

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  • Therapeutic Hypothermia in the ICU: Indication, Sedation and Prognostication

    Mild therapeutic hypothermia (TH) applied for 24 hours in the intensive care unit (ICU) is now recommended in comatose survivors of an outof- hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), though some uncertainty around indication, clinical management and prognostication still remains. We will probably see this exciting field of intensive care further evolve...

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  • Collective Global Action in Critical Care: An Interview with Dr. Edgar Jimenez

    As President of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine (WFSICCM), as well as Head of the Corporate Division of Critical Care Medicine at Orlando Health Physicians Group, Dr. Edgar Jimenez is an expert in intensive care on many levels. In this interview, Dr. Jimenez tells us about the most significant developments...

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  • Overview of Current Intensive Care Services in Hungary

    Introduction The Hungarian Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Therapy (MAITT) was founded as a section within the Hungarian Surgical Society in 1958. Since then, anaesthesia became an independent specialty, and in 1978 it was linked with intensive care. There are four medical universities in Hungary, and during the late 1970s all of...

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