Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine

Register      Login

Table of Content

2024 | August | Volume 28 | Issue 8

Total Views

EDITORIAL

Dipali Anand Taggarsi

Does the Referral System for Emergency Obstetric Care in India Require a Major Overhaul?

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:3] [Pages No:719 - 721]

Keywords: Emergency obstetric care, Maternal mortality, Obstetric critical care, Obstetric referral audit, Referral system.

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24778  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

361

EDITORIAL

Asif Ahmed, Anu Prasad, Agnideb Bhattacharjee

Management of Paraquat Poisoning—The Way Forward

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:2] [Pages No:722 - 723]

Keywords: Mortality, Hemoperfusion, Paraquat poisoning

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24781  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

748

EDITORIAL

Srinivas Samavedam

Getting to the HEART of Major Adverse Cardiac Events

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:2] [Pages No:724 - 725]

Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome, Chest pain, Global registry of acute coronary events score, HEART score, Major adverse cardiac event, Myocardial Infarction, Risk prediction, Scoring systems, Thrombolysis in myocardial infarction score

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24782  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

270

EDITORIAL

Anant V Pachisia, Deepak Govil

High Flow, High Hope: HFNO in Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:3] [Pages No:726 - 728]

Keywords: Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, COVID pandemic, High-flow nasal oxygen, Humidified inhaled gases, Supplemental oxygenation, Work of breathing

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24779  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

348

VIEWPOINT

Alexandre T Maciel

Optimizing Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury Monitoring Using a Urine Biochemical Approach—Time to Bring More Dynamism to Serum Creatinine Evaluation!

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:5] [Pages No:729 - 733]

Keywords: Elective surgery, Fractional excretion of potassium, Monitoring, Postoperative acute kidney injury, Urine biochemistry, Urinary sodium concentration

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24771  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) impairment is common both intraoperatively and in the early postoperative period of major surgeries, even elective ones. In some patients, such impairment is subtle and short-lasting, not even detected by increases in serum creatinine (sCr) and, consequently, not of sufficient magnitude to fulfill acute kidney injury (AKI) sCr-based criteria. In patients with a GFR decrease of greater magnitude, significant increases in sCr will occur but, unfortunately, usually at a late time in its progression. Both urinary and serum biomarkers have been proposed to be capable of anticipating AKI development but they are not widely available nor cost-effective in most centers. In this context, a urine biochemical approach using urinary sodium concentration (NaU) and the fractional excretion of potassium (FeK) has been proposed, anticipating the level of renal microcirculatory stress and decreases in GFR. An educational postoperative case example is presented highlighting the relevance that this approach can have in the correct interpretation of sCr values, bringing more dynamism to renal function monitoring.

357

Original Article

Sheeba Marwah, Jyotsna Suri, Taru Shikha, Poornima Sharma, Rekha Bharti, Mohit Mann, Geyum Ete, Nivedita Shankar, Bindu Bajaj

Referral Audit of Critically Ill Obstetric Patients: A Five-year Review from a Tertiary Care Health Facility in India

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:7] [Pages No:734 - 740]

Keywords: Critically ill obstetric women, Fetomaternal outcomes, Obstetric ICU referral audit

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24762  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Background: In resource-limited facilities, the greatest number of unfavorable maternal–fetal outcomes at referral hospitals is chronicled from emergency obstetric referrals of critically ill patients from lower health facilities. An efficient obstetric referral system is thus necessitated for improving maternal health. Referral practices have not been optimized effectively till date, owing to paucity of a detailed profile of referred women and indigenous barriers encountered during implementation process. Materials and methods: This five-year retrospective audit was conducted in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, VMMC and Safdarjung Hospital, New Delhi from September 2018 to 2023, in which records of all critically ill obstetric women referred were reviewed. The primary outcomes included were proportion and pattern of patients being referred, while secondary outcomes included demographic variables, referring hospital, reason and number of steps in referral, duration of hospital stay and fetomaternal outcome. The data were recorded on a predesigned case proforma and analyzed using the SPSSv23 version of software, after application of appropriate statistical tests. Results: The referral rate to obstetric intensive care unit (ICU) ranged from 39 to 47% in last 5 years; hypertensive disorder of pregnancy (31%) being the foremost cause of the referrals. Around 2/3rd women were transferred without escort (70%) or prior communication (90.6%) and referral slips were incomplete in half the admissions. Conclusion: Ensuring emergency obstetric care (EmOC) at various levels by up-gradation of health infrastructure would go a long way in improving fetomaternal health outcomes. There is need of standardized referral slips tailor-made to each state and contextualized protocols for early recognition of complications and effective communication between referral centers.

347

Original Article

Priya Goyal, Shruti Sharma, Vaibhav Taneja

A Study of Paraquat Poisoning Presentation, Severity, Management and Outcome in a Tertiary Care Hospital: Is There a Silver Lining in the Dark Clouds?

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:7] [Pages No:741 - 747]

Keywords: Hemoperfusion, Immunosuppression, Mortality, Paraquat, Poisoning, Renal failure

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24764  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Introduction: Accidental or intentional ingestion of paraquat leads to many local and systemic effects and the mortality rate is very high. There is limited data from North India and our objectives were to study the spectrum of presentation, treatment given, and its relation with outcome in a tertiary care setting. Materials and methods: This retrospective observational study was conducted after ethical approval and data regarding demography, clinical features, duration of presentation, organ involvement, renal replacement therapy (RRT), management, and outcome was collected. Statistical analysis was done by calculating mean and standard deviation (SD). Chi-square (χ2) test was applied to categorical variables and the Fisher exact test was used when the expected frequency was less than 5. Results: The study population consisted of 91 male (84%) and 18 female patients. Out of 109 patients, 13 survived (12%) and 88% had a fatal outcome. Nearly 92% of patients belonged to rural background, and 68% were of younger (<30 years) age group. Age, gender, occupation, and amount taken did not have any significant relation with mortality. Patients having metabolic acidosis (58.7%), altered renal (75.2%), and hepatic function (62.3%) at presentation had a statistically significant relation with mortality. Duration of presentation was significantly lesser in patients who survived (17.26 ± 17.23, median 14 hours vs 80.18 ± 90.07, median 48 hours) compared to patients who did not survive. Renal replacement therapy (n = 57) had no relation with mortality whereas 36% of the patients who received hemoperfusion (HP) survived (p = 0.03). Conclusion: Treatment should be started early as the duration of the presentation has a significant association with the outcome. Currently there is no antidote available. Supportive treatment includes oxygenation, immunosuppression, antioxidants, RRT, and HP wherever the resources are available.

475

Original Article

Isha Anwar, Darryl Sony

HEART Score: Prospective Evaluation of Its Accuracy and Applicability

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:5] [Pages No:748 - 752]

Keywords: Age, risk factors, and troponin I score, Cardiology, Emergency medicine, History electrocardiogram, Major adverse cardiac events, Myocardial infarction, Risk stratification

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24773  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Background: The History, Electrocardiogram, Age, Risk factors, and Troponin I (HEART) score is a simple method to risk stratify patients with chest pain according to the risk for incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACEs). Materials and methods: A 202-patient prospective, single center study at Sri Siddhartha Medical College, Tumkur. Patients included were those who were presented to the emergency department (ED) due to non-traumatic chest pain, irrespective of age or any previous medical treatments, and were later referred to the cardiac care unit (CCU), cardiology department (CD). The end point of the study was the incidence of MACE. Results: There was a high occurrence of endpoint-myocardial infarction (MI) as MACE among patients with a high-risk HEART score (p < 0.001). About 52 patients (81.3%) who had MI had a high-risk score and 2 patients (3.1%) who had an endpoint of MI had a low-risk score. Sensitivity of HEART score to anticipate MACE was 91%, and the specificity was 80%. Conclusions: Our prospective study demonstrates the high sensitivity of the HEART score to effectively risk stratify patients and project the phenomenon of MACE. We support the use of the HEART score as a fast and accurate risk stratification tool in the ED.

465

Original Article

Doaa M Magdy

Outcome of Early Initiation of High-flow Nasal Oxygen Therapy among Pneumonia Patients Presenting with Acute Hypoxemic Respiratory Failure

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:7] [Pages No:753 - 759]

Keywords: Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure, High-flow nasal oxygen, Pneumonia

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24769  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Background: High-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) therapy is an upcoming and beneficial modality for patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF). Objectives: To evaluate whether early use of HFNO in pneumonia patients with AHRF can reduce the need for invasive ventilation. Patients and methods: In this prospective, randomized controlled trial, 160 patients who fulfilled the criteria were included. The patient's characteristics, sequential organ failure assessment score, and simplified acute physiology score were recorded. Respiratory rate (RR), and oxygenation parameters (PaO2/FiO2), and RR-oxygenation index at selected time intervals were collected and analyzed. The primary outcome was the number of patients who needed intubation. Secondary outcomes included length of intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital stay and mortality at day 28. Results: The rate of intubation was not statistically significant between the two groups 15 vs 18.7%; difference 3.7% [(95% confidence interval (CI): 2.5–5.7%]. In 48-hour time periods, the mean PaO2/FiO2 ratio was significantly increased in the HFNO group compared with the non-invasive ventilation (NIV) group. The RRs and heart rate (HR) showed a significant decrease in the HFNO group. The length of ICU and hospital stays was not different between both groups. No significant differences were found in mortality rates between the HFNO and NIV groups 9 (11.2%) and 10 (12.5%), with 1.3% (95% CI: 0.7–3.8%) (p = 0.21). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that low baseline PaO2/FiO2, Respiratory rate-oxygenation index (ROX index) ≤ 5.4 measured at 12 hour and high severity scores were independent risk factors for intubation. Conclusion: Treatment with HFNO did not reduce the need for intubation among patients with pneumonia-induced AHRF, despite the improved PaO2/FiO2 observed with HFNO compared with NIV.

506

Original Article

Dinoop K Ponnambath, Ganesh Divakar, Jincy Mamachan, Shiny Biju, Kavita Raja, Mathew Abraham

Development of an Evidence-based Care Bundle for Prevention of External Ventricular Drain-related Infection: Results of a Single-center Prospective Cohort Study and Literature Review

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:9] [Pages No:760 - 768]

Keywords: Care bundles, Cerebrospinal fluid drainage, External ventricular drain, Meningitis, Ventriculitis

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24768  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Background: External ventricular drain (EVD)-related infection (ERI) is a common complication in cranial neurosurgery practice with high mortality. The risk factors associated with ERI are not well studied in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) like India. Identifying the risk variables is a necessity to design robust evidence-based care bundles for ERI prevention. Materials and methods: This is a single-center prospective cohort study. Patients with and without ERI during the 2-year study period were analyzed along with literature review to identify the risk variables associated with ERI. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) comprehensive flowchart was used to develop the concept care bundle for ERI prevention. Results: A total of 211 EVD were inserted during the study period. 15 ERI (7.1%) were identified based on IDSA criteria, with an average infection rate of 11.12 per 1000 EVD days. Gram negative bacteria (GNB) were the predominant pathogen (12/15, 80%), with Klebsiella pneumoniae (6/15, 40%) being the most common bacteria isolated. In multivariate analysis, the risk variables associated with ERI were use of broad spectrum pre-surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis for long duration, choice of posterior craniometric points for EVD insertion, EVD duration >7 days, EVD leak and surveillance cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sampling at periodic intervals. Based on the risk variables identified in this study and literature review, a consensus decision on the care elements for the insertion and maintenance phases was chosen for the concept care bundle for ERI prevention. Conclusion: An evidence-based concept care bundle for ERI prevention is proposed for further multicentric evaluation and validation.

475

Original Article

Khalid Nabeel Almulhim, Razan Anwar Alabdulqader, Mohammed Khalid Alghamd, Alwaleed A Alqarni, Farah M Althikrallah, Ahmed A Alarfaj

Assessing Point-of-care Ultrasound Knowledge and Utilization among Emergency Physicians in Saudi Arabia: A Cross-sectional Survey

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:8] [Pages No:769 - 776]

Keywords: Emergency, Health centers, Point-of-care ultrasound, Saudi Arabia

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24763  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Background: This study aims to assess the knowledge, perceptions, and utilization of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) among emergency physicians (EPs) in Saudi Arabia. Point-of-care ultrasound has emerged as a valuable tool in emergency medicine, providing real-time diagnostic information at the bedside. Understanding the current state of POCUS integration and the factors influencing its adoption is crucial for optimizing patient care in emergency settings. Materials and methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted across various hospitals in Saudi Arabia over six months. The study included 100 EPs, encompassing residents and specialists. Data were collected through an online self-administered questionnaire, exploring demographic factors, POCUS training, equipment availability, and physicians’ perceptions. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS version 28.0, including descriptive statistics and Chi-square tests. Results: The study revealed diverse demographic factors, with a majority of physicians working in regional emergency medical centers. While 84.0% of respondents had used an ultrasound device, varying levels of knowledge about POCUS were observed. Regional disparities and differences in training exposure were evident. The majority expressed positive perceptions of POCUS utility, with 67.0% recognizing its usefulness in primary care health centers. However, 31.0% only partially agreed on its daily practice utility, highlighting potential areas for intervention. Conclusion: This study provides a comprehensive assessment of POCUS awareness, knowledge, and perceptions among EPs in Saudi Arabia. The findings underscore the need for targeted educational initiatives, resource allocation, and regional considerations to enhance POCUS integration. Addressing perceived barriers and regional variations can contribute to the widespread adoption of POCUS, ultimately optimizing patient care in emergency settings.

688

Original Article

Rupali Patnaik, Afzal Azim, Kritika Singh, Vikas Agarwal, Prabhaker Mishra, Mohan Gurjar, Shakti B Mishra

Serial Trend of Neutrophil CD64, C-reactive Protein, and Procalcitonin as a Prognostic Marker in Critically Ill Patients with Sepsis/Septic Shock: A Prospective Observational Study from a Tertiary Care ICU

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:8] [Pages No:777 - 784]

Keywords: C-reactive protein, Mortality, Neutrophil CD64, Procalcitonin, Sepsis, Septic shock, Survivor

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24777  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Aim and background: Neutrophil CD64 (nCD64) is evolving as a prognostic biomarker in sepsis. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate whether serial trend of nCD64, procalcitonin (PCT), and C-reactive protein (CRP) predict 28-day mortality in patients with sepsis/septic shock, as per Sepsis-3 criteria. Materials and methods: This prospective, observational single-center cohort study included 60 adult patients (age ≥18 years) with sepsis. Serial biomarker levels with SOFA score were measured at admission (day 0), on day 4, and on day 8. Results: Of the 60 patients, 42 (70%) had septic shock. Biomarker levels at admission did not differ between patients with sepsis and septic shock. Thirty-seven patients survived and 23 were non-survivors by day 28. There was a significant fall in serial trend of all three biomarkers from admission till day 8 (Friedman p < 0.001) in survivors compared to a non-significant change in non-survivors. On multivariate analysis, SOFA score at admission (OR 1.731), more days with vasopressor support (OR 1.077), rise in CD64 from day 0 to day 8 (OR 1.074), and rise in CRP from day 0 to 8 (OR 1.245) were the significant predictors of 28-day mortality (p < 0.05). The highest area under the ROC curve was obtained for more days of vasopressor therapy (0.857), followed by a rise in CD64 from day 0 to day 8 (0.798). Conclusion: Serial trend of biomarkers has prognostic utility. The rise in CD64 from day 0 to day 8 was a good predictor of mortality compared to the trend of other biomarkers.

Supplementary Files

538

SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Albin Joseph, Tony P Jose

Coping with Distress and Building Resilience among Emergency Nurses: A Systematic Review of Mindfulness-based Interventions

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:7] [Pages No:785 - 791]

Keywords: Critical care nursing, Emergency nurses, Mindfulness-based interventions, Occupational distress, Resilience, Stress, Systematic review

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24761  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Aims and background: Emergency nurses are working in a stress-prone environment. It is critical to ensure adequate psychological aids to cope with the distress at work. The objective of this systematic review was to explore and evaluate the studies that have discussed the role of mindfulness-based interventions on occupational distress and resilience among emergency nursing professionals. Materials and methods: This study was a systematic review. The databases used for this review were PubMed and Scopus from 2018 to 2023. Interventional studies published in English that used mindfulness-based techniques among emergency and critical care nurses to alleviate their occupational distress and burnout and improve resilience were considered for review. This systematic review adheres to the PRISMA guidelines. The study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42024512071). Results: Ten studies were found to be eligible and included in this review. Out of the 10 studies included, nine studies demonstrated the improvement of psychological well-being, compassion, and resilience followed by the intervention. Conclusion: The findings of this systematic review suggest that mindfulness-centered interventions can be an effective strategy to cope with distress and burnout and in building compassion and resilience among the healthcare professionals who are employed at the emergency and critical care department in a hospital. Clinical significance: Incorporating mindfulness-based practices and interventions in healthcare settings, especially among critical care and emergency departments may help in ameliorating the professional well-being of the staff which may result in a resilient work environment and improvement in the quality of patient care.

1,357

BRIEF RESEARCH COMMUNICATION

Supradip Ghosh

Polymyxin B Plus Aerosolized Colistin vs Polymyxin B Alone in Hospital-acquired Pneumonia (“AEROCOL” Study): A Feasibility Study

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:4] [Pages No:792 - 795]

Keywords: Aerosolized colistin, Extensive drug resistance, Gram negative pathogens, Hospital-acquired pneumonia, Polymyxin-B

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24767  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Introduction: In hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) due to extensively drug resistant gram-negative pathogens, can treatment with high-dose colistin aerosolization using specific aerosol delivery protocol, improve clinical outcome in addition to systemic polymyxin-B? Materials and methods: In a randomized control trial, invasively ventilated adult ICU patients with HAP in whom clinicians decided to start systemic polypeptide antibiotics, were randomized to receive either intravenous polymyxin-B plus high-dose colistin nebulization (5-MIU 8-hourly) using specific protocol or intravenous polymyxin-B alone. Results: The study was closed early after recruiting 60% of planned patients because of slow rate of recruitment (24 patients in over 30 months). Treatment success (Primary outcome) was nonsignificantly higher in intervention group (63.66 vs 30.77%; p = 0.217). There was higher rate of microbiological cure in intervention group (60 vs 9.09%: p = 0.018). Numerically better secondary outcomes including fever-free days, ventilator- or vasopressor free days at day-7, ICU and hospital mortality also did not reach statistical significance. Two episodes of transient hypoxia were seen during aerosol delivery. However, overall incidences of adverse effects were not different between groups. Conclusion: This study could not confirm superiority of high-dose colistin aerosolization plus systemic polymyxin-B strategy over polymyxin-B alone in treating HAP due to extensive drug resistance (XDR) gram-negative pathogens.

Supplementary File

435

PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE

Shipra Agrwal, Mridna Jha, Urmila Jhamb, Pallavi

Comparison of pSOFA with PRISM III and PIM 2 as Predictors of Outcome in a Tertiary Care Pediatric ICU: A Prospective Cross-sectional Study

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:6] [Pages No:796 - 801]

Keywords: Acute kidney injury, Calibration, Mechanical ventilation, Pediatric logistic organ dysfunction, Sequential organ failure assessment score, Severity score

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24772  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

Abstract

Aims and background: Severity scores are used to predict the outcome of children admitted to the intensive care unit. A descriptive score such as the pediatric sequential organ failure assessment (pSOFA) may be useful for prediction of outcome. This study was planned to compare the pSOFA score with these well-studied scores for prediction of mortality. Materials and methods: This prospective cross-sectional study was conducted at the pediatric intensive care units (PICU) of a tertiary care hospital. Children aged from 1 month to 12 years were enrolled sequentially. The pediatric index of mortality (PIM 2) score was calculated within 1 hour, and pediatric risk of mortality (PRISM) III and pSOFA scores were calculated within 24 hours of PICU admission. The pediatric sequential organ failure assessment score was recalculated after 72 hours. The primary outcome variable was hospital mortality, and secondary outcome variables were duration of PICU stay, need for mechanical ventilation, and occurrence of acute kidney injury (AKI). Appropriate statistical tests were used. Results: About 151 children with median (IQR) age of 36 (6, 84) months were enrolled. Mechanical ventilation was required in 87 (57.6%) children. Mortality was 21.2% at 28 days. The median (IQR) predicted mortality using PRISM III and PIM 2 score were 3.4 (1.5%, 11%) and 8.2 (3.1%, 16.6%) respectively. Area under ROC for prediction of mortality was highest for pSOFA 72 with a cut-off of 6.5 having sensitivity of 83.3% and specificity of 76.9%. Conclusion: The pSOFA score calculated at admission and at 72 hours had a better predictive ability for the PICU mortality compared to PRISM III and PIM 2 score.

350

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Dipasri Bhattacharya, Antonio M Esquinas, Mohanchandra Mandal

Oxygen Delivery Devices in Postoperative Patients: Proper Selection of Patients Matters!

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:1] [Pages No:802 - 802]

Keywords: Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, Functional residual capacity, High-flow nasal cannula, Noninvasive ventilation, Venturi mask

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24729  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

247

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Susri Mishra, Nikhil Kothari, Ankur Sharma, Shilpa Goyal

Author Response: Oxygen Delivery Devices in Postoperative Patients: Proper Selection of Patients Matters!

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:1] [Pages No:803 - 803]

Keywords: Hypoxemia, Oxygenation, Ratio of partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (PaO2) and fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2)

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24776  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

186

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Vijay Sundarsingh

Emphasizing Patient-centered Outcomes and Improved Exclusion Criteria in Randomized Controlled Trials for Clinical Nutrition in Critically Ill Patients

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:2] [Pages No:804 - 805]

Keywords: Bias, Indirect calorimetry, Nutrition, Quadriceps muscle thickness, Randomized controlled trial

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24759  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

217

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Deepak Govil, Aravind Chandrasekaran, Anant V Pachisia, Rahul Harne, Sweta J Patel

Author Response: Emphasizing Patient-centered Outcomes and Improved Exclusion Criteria in Randomized Control Trials for Clinical Nutrition in ICU

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:2] [Pages No:806 - 807]

Keywords: Indirect calorimetry, Intensive care unit, Sarcopenia

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24774  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

270

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Praveen Dhakne

Emphysematous Gastritis: An Ominous Condition Masquerading as Enterocolitis in Immunocompromised Host

[Year:2024] [Month:August] [Volume:28] [Number:8] [Pages:2] [Pages No:808 - 809]

Keywords: Emphysematous gastritis, Gastric emphysema, Immunocompromised host

   DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10071-24770  |  Open Access |  How to cite  | 

279

© Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers (P) LTD.