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Targeted temperature management in critical care: A report and recommendations from five professional societies*
- Source :
- Critical Care Medicine. 39:1113-1125
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2011.
-
Abstract
- Objective Representatives of five international critical care societies convened topic specialists and a nonexpert jury to review, assess, and report on studies of targeted temperature management and to provide clinical recommendations. Data sources Questions were allocated to experts who reviewed their areas, made formal presentations, and responded to questions. Jurors also performed independent searches. Sources used for consensus derived exclusively from peer-reviewed reports of human and animal studies. Study selection Question-specific studies were selected from literature searches; jurors independently determined the relevance of each study included in the synthesis. Conclusions and recommendations 1) The jury opines that the term "targeted temperature management" replace "therapeutic hypothermia." 2) The jury opines that descriptors (e.g., "mild") be replaced with explicit targeted temperature management profiles. 3) The jury opines that each report of a targeted temperature management trial enumerate the physiologic effects anticipated by the investigators and actually observed and/or measured in subjects in each arm of the trial as a strategy for increasing knowledge of the dose/duration/response characteristics of temperature management. This enumeration should be kept separate from the body of the report, be organized by body systems, and be made without assertions about the impact of any specific effect on the clinical outcome. 4) The jury STRONGLY RECOMMENDS targeted temperature management to a target of 32°C-34°C as the preferred treatment (vs. unstructured temperature management) of out-of-hospital adult cardiac arrest victims with a first registered electrocardiography rhythm of ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia and still unconscious after restoration of spontaneous circulation (strong recommendation, moderate quality of evidence). 5) The jury WEAKLY RECOMMENDS the use of targeted temperature management to 33°C-35.5°C (vs. less structured management) in the treatment of term newborns who sustained asphyxia and exhibit acidosis and/or encephalopathy (weak recommendation, moderate quality of evidence).
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Critical Care
Critical Illness
medicine.medical_treatment
media_common.quotation_subject
MEDLINE
Targeted temperature management
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
Risk Assessment
Sensitivity and Specificity
Body Temperature
Jury
Hypothermia, Induced
Intensive care
medicine
Humans
Relevance (law)
Intensive care medicine
Societies, Medical
Aged
media_common
business.industry
Temperature
Middle Aged
Survival Analysis
United States
Heart Arrest
Clinical trial
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Female
Professional association
Risk assessment
business
Body Temperature Regulation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00903493
- Volume :
- 39
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Critical Care Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....da6d3dfa06e221f0f713e1cba1458026