Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Professor Lord Ara Darzi KBE
- Preface
- Section 1 Perioperative care
- Consent and medico-legal considerations
- Elective surgery
- Special situations in surgery: the diabetic patient
- Special situations in surgery: the jaundiced patient
- Special situations in surgery: patients with thyroid disease
- Special situations in surgery: steroids and surgery
- Special situations in surgery: surgical considerations in the pregnant woman
- Haematological considerations: thrombosis in surgery
- Haematological considerations: bleeding
- Haematological considerations: haemorrhage (massive-bleeding protocol)
- Haematological considerations: blood products and transfusion
- Shock
- Fluid management
- Electrolyte management
- Pain control
- Nutrition
- Antibiotic prescribing in surgery
- Critical care: the critically-ill patient, decision making and judgement
- Critical care: cardiovascular physiology and support
- Critical care: respiratory pathophysiology and support
- Critical care: renal support
- Critical care: other considerations
- Postoperative complications
- Surgical drains
- Abdominal stoma care
- Section 2 Surgical emergencies
- Section 3 Surgical disease
- Section 4 Surgical oncology
- Section 5 Practical procedures, investigations and operations
- Section 6 Radiology
- Section 7 Clinical examination
- Appendices
- Index
Critical care: other considerations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by Professor Lord Ara Darzi KBE
- Preface
- Section 1 Perioperative care
- Consent and medico-legal considerations
- Elective surgery
- Special situations in surgery: the diabetic patient
- Special situations in surgery: the jaundiced patient
- Special situations in surgery: patients with thyroid disease
- Special situations in surgery: steroids and surgery
- Special situations in surgery: surgical considerations in the pregnant woman
- Haematological considerations: thrombosis in surgery
- Haematological considerations: bleeding
- Haematological considerations: haemorrhage (massive-bleeding protocol)
- Haematological considerations: blood products and transfusion
- Shock
- Fluid management
- Electrolyte management
- Pain control
- Nutrition
- Antibiotic prescribing in surgery
- Critical care: the critically-ill patient, decision making and judgement
- Critical care: cardiovascular physiology and support
- Critical care: respiratory pathophysiology and support
- Critical care: renal support
- Critical care: other considerations
- Postoperative complications
- Surgical drains
- Abdominal stoma care
- Section 2 Surgical emergencies
- Section 3 Surgical disease
- Section 4 Surgical oncology
- Section 5 Practical procedures, investigations and operations
- Section 6 Radiology
- Section 7 Clinical examination
- Appendices
- Index
Summary
Acute neurological problems
Surgical trainees will encounter many patients with an acutely depressed conscious level resulting from:
▪ Trauma
▪ Drugs
▪ Acute intracranial event (e.g. infarction, haemorrhage)
▪ Encephalopathy of critical illness.
There are two important points to make:
▪ Never forget to check the blood sugar level.
▪ Any patient with a Glasgowcoma score (GCS)<8 or who fails to localize to pain requires intubation and ventilation, aswell as investigation and specific treatment.
There is a tendency to try and avoid intubating such patients pending investigation. Unless the patient should not have active management of an intra-cranial disaster under any circumstances (in which case investigation is pointless), this is a mistake. A patient with a GCS < 8needs to be intubated. If a CT scan shows an unrecoverable situation, then treatment can be withdrawn at that point as described in the introduction.
Nutrition
Nutritional support is needed when the patient is unlikely to resume normal oral intake within 7–10 days of it ceasing. If nutritional support is inevitable it should be started as soon as the patient is stabilized.
The timing of commencement of feeding is often a bone of contention between surgeons and intensivists. A mutually acceptable compromise can usually be worked out.
Preferred Routes For Feeding
The ideal route of nutrition is the subject of much dogma and little evidence. There is no doubt that enteral feeding is cheaper and easier, and therefore preferable. The evidence for a protective effect on the intestinal mucosa is much weaker than commonly realized, and the complications of enteral feeding are generally under-reported in the literature.
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- Information
- Hospital SurgeryFoundations in Surgical Practice, pp. 126 - 129Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009