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Introduction It is postulated that the effects of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) delivered as hemofiltration (CVVH-ST150) might benefit critically ill patients with sepsis-associated acute kidney injury (AKI), by better clearing large toxic inflammatory cytokines.
A relatively high protein intake might benefit critically ill patients, but the daily administration of protein should not exceed the upper limit of the recommended range.
Consequently, it is postulated that hemofiltration might benefit critically ill patients with AKI by better clearing large toxic inflammatory cytokines [ 9].
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Music has the potential to benefit critically ill patients.
As such, MH could benefit critically ill intubated and mechanically ventilated patients.
Many clinicians believe that early tracheostomy insertion may benefit critically ill patients requiring mechanical ventilation.
5 Only in a few cases and places can critically injured patients who might benefit from such care receive it from NHS-commissioned pre-hospital critical care physician-based teams.
A number of authors have hypothesized that subgroups of the critically ill, particularly those with sepsis or multi-organ failure, might benefit from a more intensive CRRT.
At this time, most clinicians appear to prefer hemofiltration or hemodiafiltration in critically ill patients with AKI, because of the belief that convective clearance might benefit patients by better removal of toxic inflammatory solutes, which are in the middle molecular range.
As only half of critically ill patients with sepsis are known to receive thromboprophylaxis, 31 many surgical patients with sepsis might benefit from thromboprophylaxis as a simple and efficient way of preventing venous thromboembolism.
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