Results 261 to 270 of about 148,592 (309)
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Septic Shock

2011
info:eu-repo/semantics ...
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The Pharmacotherapy of Septic Shock

Critical Care Clinics, 1989
Septic shock is a common clinical problem in the intensive care setting. The high mortality rate associated with septic shock, regardless of age, reflects the inadequacy of available therapeutic approaches. The purpose of this article is to review the current pharmacologic approaches to the treatment of septic shock with an emphasis on the ...
J L, Boyd, G G, Stanford, B, Chernow
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Naloxone and Septic Shock

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983
Excerpt To the editor: We read with interest the report by Higgins and associates (1) on the reversal of hypotension by continuous infusion of naloxone in a ventilator-dependent patient.
G S, Hughes   +3 more
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HYPOTHERMIN IN SEPTIC SHOCK

Survey of Anesthesiology, 1962
Abstract 1. 1. A review of the rationale for the use of hypothermia in infectious shock, especially severe peritonitis, is presented. 2. 2. Experience in the use of hypothermia in eighteen patients with severe peritonitis is presented and discussed. 3. 3. Hypothermia is an adjuvant in the therapy of infectious shock and severe peritonitis,
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PEDF and Septic Shock

Current Molecular Medicine, 2010
Septic shock is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality. Endotoxin plays an important role in the pathogenesis of septic shock. Lack of clinical success with anti-endotoxin or anti-cytokine therapies has shifted interest to extracorporeal therapies to reduce circulating levels of various mediators for septic shock patients.
T, Nakamura, S-I, Yamagishi
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Septic Shock

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1984
Shock has traditionally been viewed as a perfusion deficit: "That state in which the supply of blood to the tissues of the body is inadequate to meet the body's metabolic demands." 1 This definition, although appropriate to cardiogenic and hypovolemic shock, is inadequate for septic shock. The manifestations of septic shock do not relate to a perfusion
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Treatment of Septic Shock

Medical Clinics of North America, 1979
Septic shock can result from infections with either gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria and is defined by a systolic blood pressure value of less than 90 mm Hg or by a fall of more than 50 mm Hg in the systolic pressure of a previously hypertensive individual. Treatment of septic shock has 2 objectives.
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Septic Shock: Phenomenology

Psychiatry in Medicine, 1971
This is an autobiographical account of an episode of life-threatening endotoxin shock experienced in the intensive care unit of a university-affiliated V.A. hospital. It was written within a day of the event by a psychiatrist interested in sharing with other physicians and nurses his harrowing time as a patient.
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Septic Shock and Corticosteroids

New England Journal of Medicine, 1981
The use of a massive dose of a glucocorticoid in the patient with septic shock remains controversial.
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Management of Septic Shock

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
To the Editor.— The article by William Schumer, MD (242:1906, 1979), on the management of septic shock makes several dubious statements and recommendations. The statement, "If... [the septic shock is due to a] pneumonitis, which is caused by Gram-positive bacteria, then a penicillin, a cephalosporin, or an aminoglycoside can be used," is rather ...
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