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Agenda

 

9 - 12 March 2010

ISICEM International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine - Brussels (Belgium)

ISICEM

 

9 -11 June 2010

EACTA European Association of Cardiothoracic Anaesthesiologists - Edinburgh (UK)

EACTA

 

12-15 June 2010

ESA European Society of Anaesthesiology - Helsinki (Finland)

ESA

 

18-22 September 2010

ERS European Respiratory Society - Barcellona (Spain)

ERS

 

9 -13 October 2010

ESICM European Society of Intensive Care Medicine - Barcellona (Spain)

ESICM

  

 

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AEROSOLIZED ANTIBIOTICS IN CRITICALLY ILL VENTILATED PATIENTS PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 01 February 2010
Palmer LB.
Pulmonary Critical Care Division, State University of New York, Department of Medicine, New York, USA
Curr Opin Crit Care. 2009 Oct;15(5):413-8.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review will summarize recent clinical data examining the efficacy of aerosolized antimicrobial therapy in treating respiratory tract infections in mechanically ventilated patients in the ICU.

RECENT FINDINGS: Aerosolized antibiotics provide high levels of drug in the lung and reduce the systemic toxicity associated with intravenous antibiotics. First introduced in the 1970s as a form of prophylaxis for ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), now, more than 30 years later, there is a resurgence of interest in using this mode of delivery as primary or adjunctive treatment for ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis (VAT) or VAP. Increasingly resistant organisms are colonizing and infecting critically ill patients, and direct delivery of antibiotic to the lung is being re-evaluated as a means to treat these highly resistant organisms that may not respond to systemic therapy. There are new data emerging that suggest these agents may effectively treat these pathogens when used in targeted, time limited protocols.

SUMMARY: Aerosolized antibiotic therapy may provide an efficacious means of treating respiratory tract infection when targeted at mechanically ventilated patients with proximal airway infection, VAT (with or without VAP) and with highly resistant organisms.

 
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