• Morales Joyner posted an update 6 months ago

    Currently no ideal alternative exists for heparin for cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Dabigatran is a direct thrombin inhibitor for which a reversal agent exists. The primary end point of the study was to explore whether Dabigatran was an effective anticoagulant for 120 minutes of simulated CPB.

    The study was designed in 2 sequential steps. Throughout, human blood from healthy donors was used for each experimental step. Initially, increasing concentrations of Dabigatran were added to aliquots of fresh whole blood, and the anticoagulant effect measured using kaolin/tissue factor-activated thromboelastography (rapidTEG). The dynamics of all thromboelastography (TEG) measurements were studied with repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). Based on these data, aliquots of blood were treated with high-concentration Dabigatran and placed in a Chandler loop as a simple ex vivo bypass model to assess whether Dabigatran had sufficient anticoagulant effects to maintain blood fluidity for 2 hours of continuous c In the Chandler Loop, high doses of Dabigatran prevented clot formation for 120 minutes, but only at doses higher than expected. Idarucizumab decreased R time and reversed anticoagulation in both in vitro and Chandler Loops settings. In the A-V loop bypass simulation, Dabigatran prevented gross thrombus generation for 120 minutes of simulated CPB.

    Using sequential experimental approaches, we showed that direct thrombin inhibitor Dabigatran in high doses maintained anticoagulation of blood for simulated CPB. Idarucizumab reduced time for clot formation reversing the anticoagulation action of Dabigatran.

    Using sequential experimental approaches, we showed that direct thrombin inhibitor Dabigatran in high doses maintained anticoagulation of blood for simulated CPB. Idarucizumab reduced time for clot formation reversing the anticoagulation action of Dabigatran.

    Increased pulse pressure has been associated with adverse cardiovascular events, cardiac and all-cause mortality in surgical and nonsurgical patients. Whether increased pulse pressure worsens myocardial injury and dysfunction after cardiac surgery, however, has not been fully characterized. We examined whether cardiac surgical patients with elevated pulse pressure are more susceptible to myocardial injury, dysfunction, cardiac-related complications, and mortality. Secondarily, we examined whether pulse pressure was a stronger predictor of the outcomes than systolic blood pressure.

    This retrospective observational study included adult cardiac surgical patients having elective isolated on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) between 2010 and 2017 at the Cleveland Clinic. The association between elevated pulse pressure and (1) perioperative myocardial injury, measured by postoperative troponin-T concentrations, (2) perioperative myocardial dysfunction, assessed by the requirement for perioperative inoulse pressure was associated with a modest increase in postoperative troponin-T concentrations, but not postoperative cardiovascular complications or in-hospital mortality in patients having CABG. Pulse pressure was not a better predictor than systolic blood pressure.

    Elevated preoperative pulse pressure was associated with a modest increase in postoperative troponin-T concentrations, but not postoperative cardiovascular complications or in-hospital mortality in patients having CABG. Pulse pressure was not a better predictor than systolic blood pressure.

    Intercostal nerve blocks with liposomal bupivacaine are commonly used for thoracic surgery pain management. However, dose scheduling is difficult because the pharmacokinetics of a single-dose intercostal injection of liposomal bupivacaine has never been investigated. The primary aim of this study was to assess the median time to peak plasma concentration (Tmax) following a surgeon-administered, single-dose infiltration of 266 mg of liposomal bupivacaine as a posterior multilevel intercostal nerve block in patients undergoing posterolateral thoracotomy.

    We chose a sample size of 15 adults for this prospective observational study. Intercostal injection of liposomal bupivacaine was considered time 0. Serum samples were taken at the following times 5, 15, and 30 minutes, and 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 96 hours. The presence of sensory blockade, rescue pain medication, and pain level were recorded after the patient was able to answer questions.

    Forty patients were screened, and 15 patients were enrolledhreshold (2 μg/mL) during the 96-hour study period.

    This study of the pharmacokinetics of liposomal bupivacaine following multilevel intercostal nerve blockade demonstrates significant variability and delay in systemic absorption of the drug. Peak serum concentration occurred at 48 hours or sooner in all patients. The serum bupivacaine concentration always remained well below the described toxicity threshold (2 μg/mL) during the 96-hour study period.In the early stages of a novel pandemic, testing is simultaneously in high demand and low supply, making efficient use of tests of paramount importance. One approach to improve the efficiency of tests is to mix samples from multiple individuals, only testing individuals when the pooled sample returns a positive. To reflect potential clusters of cases that might queue at a testing site and that might increase the efficiency of batch testing, I simulate 10,000 persons being tested in sequence. I use a prevalence ranging from 1% to 45% and batch sizes ranging from 3 to 25 and assume the increased probability of consecutive infections ranges from 0% to 45%. I find that as the likelihood of clustered infections increases, the efficiency of specimen pooling increases. This analysis suggests that when clusters of infected persons exist at testing sites, specimen pooling can remain efficient even as prevalence increases. See video abstract http//links.lww.com/EDE/B729.New graduate nurses face many challenges as they transition into practice. Lacking coping skills, they become stressed and experience symptoms of burnout and an intent to leave. Tivantinib A community hospital implemented a program that included a resilience workshop, group support, and mentoring. A pre-post test design utilized the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale to measure resilience. Findings demonstrated an increase in resilience, thereby highlighting the importance of providing a resiliency program for new graduate nurses.

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