Virtual Journal Club

Please note: This website is for discussion purposes only. The information provided at this website is not intended to provide treatment advice, or to diagnose or treat any medical disorder. The creator of this website is not responsible for events that occur as a result of decisions made based on the information presented here.

Citations powered by PubMed

Entries Tagged as 'Hong Kong Med J'

Renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients.

May 9th, 2009 · Start a Discussion

Related Articles

Renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients.

Hong Kong Med J. 2009 Apr;15(2):122-9

Authors: Leung AK, Yan WW

OBJECTIVE: To provide updated information (including on treatment) in relation to renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SELECTION: Literature search of Medline and PubMed till June 2008. DATA EXTRACTION: Original studies, literature review, and book chapters. DATA SYNTHESIS: The prevalence of acute renal failure in critically ill patients remains high and mortality is up to 60%. Both the practice of renal replacement therapy (continuous against intermittent, haemofiltration against haemodialysis) and patient outcomes vary widely between studies. To better understand this heterogeneous group of patients, a unified classification of acute renal failure proposed by the Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative allows better understanding of the epidemiology and outcome of this disease. Similar to patients with chronic renal failure, there exists a direct relationship between the dose of dialysis and survival; 35 mL/kg/h is the accepted norm. However, this traditional practice is being challenged by recent trials. Although the use of citrate as anticoagulant in renal replacement therapy can prolong circuit patency and decrease bleeding risk, its use is limited by the complex set up and metabolic problems. CONCLUSIONS: The RIFLE classification allows an accurate description of the epidemiology and outcome of critically ill patients with acute renal failure. The well-accepted continuous renal replacement therapy dose of 35 mL/kg/h in critically ill patients needs further verification from ongoing clinical trials. The complex set-up and the use of citrate anticoagulant has limited the use of such dialysis, which can nevertheless be overcome with the support of pharmaceutical companies.

PMID: 19342738 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

[Read more →]

Tags: Hong Kong Med J

B-type natriuretic peptide in the management of heart failure.

November 3rd, 2008 · Start a Discussion

Related Articles

B-type natriuretic peptide in the management of heart failure.

Hong Kong Med J. 2008 Jun;14(3):216-9

Authors: Maurellet JD, Liu PT

OBJECTIVE: To review the current literature on the use of B-type natriuretic peptide in the diagnosis and management of heart failure. DATA SOURCES: Literature search of PubMed was performed up to September 2007. STUDY SELECTION: Key words for the literature search were ‘heart failure’ and ‘B-type natriuretic peptide’. DATA EXTRACTION: Original papers and review articles related to the use of B-type natriuretic peptide in the diagnosis and management of heart failure. DATA SYNTHESIS: Heart failure is common in Hong Kong, and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Heart failure is often misdiagnosed. B-type natriuretic peptide may be regarded as a quantitative marker of heart failure; its levels have good diagnostic accuracy and can be measured with a rapid and simple bed-side assay and are useful in the assessment of patients with acute dyspnoea. Factors, such as obesity and renal impairment, alter B-type natriuretic peptide levels. Measurement of B-type natriuretic peptide facilitates improved medical outcomes, is cost-effective, and constitutes a good prognostic indicator for death and cardiac events. CONCLUSIONS: Determination of B-type natriuretic peptide levels is useful in the assessment of patients with acute dyspnoea, to exclude or diagnose heart failure, to facilitate improved medical outcomes, and is cost-effective. In addition, it is a good long-term prognostic indicator and can be used to guide heart failure treatment.

PMID: 18525091 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

[Read more →]

Tags: Hong Kong Med J