OTHER THERAPEUTIC MODALITIES
The development of pharmacological agents to treat or, more importantly, prevent ARDS would represent a major advancement. Early administration of high-dose corticosteriods over a brief period is of questionable value in gram-negative sepsis and has no proven efficacy in ARDS due to other etiologies. Antiprostaglandin agents, e.g., ibuprofen, affect the course of experimental disease leading to ARDS, but extension to the bedside is premature.
Antibiotics are the most important group of agents, as correct treatment of infection may be lifesaving while the failure to recognize infection ensures the continuation of the pulmonary capillary leak. As far as possible, antibiotics should be selected on the basis of reliable microbial studies, but until the results are known empiric therapy is not only appropriate but necessary. Continued sepsis in the face of appropriate antibiotics raises the spectre of an abscess and should lead to an aggressive diagnostic search, as this is a common cause of persistent ARDS and a fatal outcome. The lungs and the peritoneal cavity are the commonest sites of undiagnosed infection.
Appropriate fluid management is important to ensure adequate cardiac output and thus 02 delivery. Fluid loading to maintain adequate cardiac filling pressures in the face of the high intrathoracic pressures generated during mechanical ventilation must be balanced against the resultant increase in microvascular pressure and its tendency to increase the extravascular lung water accumulation. The controversy over the use of colloid vs. crystalloid therapy is moot in the presence of such marked alterations in microvascular permeability. Until more is known concerning the dynamics of fluid movement in this disease, a good rule of thumb is to maintain filling pressures in a normal range (pulmonary artery wedge pressures of about 10 cm H20).
- AORTIC DISEASE - AORTIC ANEURYSMS
- Hematopoietic System
- BENIGN NEOPLASMS
- Chronic Interstitial Nephritis
- RADIOGRAPHIC AND ENDOSCOPIC PROCEDURES IN GASTROENTEROLOGY
- Clinical Manifestations
- ARTERJAL BLOOD GASES
- ORIGIN OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- RAYNAUD’S PHENOMENON
- Visceral Angiography
- Renal Biopsy and Other Diagnostic Tests
- OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASE
- CARCINOMA OF THE COLON
- Pulmonary Vasculitis
- NORMAL INTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY
- Gardner's Syndrome
- Vitamin Dresistant Rickets
- Women’s Health Program
- Pulmonary Infiltrates with Eosinophilia PIE
- Muscular and Articular System
- New Eligibility System
- CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- TESTS OF HEPATIC FUNCTION
- RHEUMATIC FEVER
- HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA
- Therapy
- SMOKE INHALATION
- RENAL PHARMACOLOGY
- Multiple Myeloma
- NONATHEROSCLEROTIC CAUSES OF CORONARY ARTERY OBSTRUCTION
- TREATMENT
- Focal Glomerular Sclerosis (FQS)
- Visualization of the Biliary Tree
- MOTOR DISORDERS OF THE ESOPHAGUS
- Upper GI Bleeding