Abstract:
Introduction: Real-time, bedside (point-of-care) medical image is actually a valuable tool in the diagnosis and management of
intensive care patients. In order to illustrate, we present a case with acute chronic respiratory acidosis and hypercapnic coma,
when the use of visual medicine shortened the intervention time frame and minimized the complication risks.
Case presentation: A male, 64 years old patient, admitted to Internal Medicine with the diagnosis of chronic obstructive
bronchopneumopathy exacerbation (respiratory infection) and multiple co-morbidities presents on the 7th day rapid aggravation
and has emergency ICU admittance with coma (GCS=8), polypnea (36 breath/min), hypoxemia (SpO2=55%), abundant tracheobronchial secretion retention, arterial hypotension (65/45 mm Hg), tachyarrhythmia (150b/min), acute on chronic respiratory
acidosis (pH=7.21, PaCO2=105 mmHg). The emergency management included: video-assisted oro-tracheal intubation (after
tube insertion, plugging with abundant secretions) and ventilatory support; vascular access (ultrasound guided central venous
and arterial catheterization); fiberoptic-bronchoscopic removal of purulent and bloody abundant secretions; transthoracic
echocardiography (severe LV hypokinezia, EF-30%, diffuse subepicardial ischemia). Under complex intensive care treatment
(antibiotics, water and electrolyte correction, inotropic support, antiarrhythmic drugs, anticoagulants, mucolytics, antipyretics,
enteral nutrition) the condition improves and results in weanning from ventilatory support (the 5th day), from inotropic
support (the 7th day) and ICU discharge (the 8th day).
Discussion: In critical emergencies, the use of bedside, real-time medical images during diagnostic, monitoring or therapeutic
procedures results in several advantages: it shortens the implementation time (tracheal intubation, vascular access), allows
rapid evaluation and proper management institution (echocardiography), allows a significant decrease of complication risk
(video-assisted laryngoscopy, fiberoptic-bronchoscopy, vascular access).
Conclusions: Point-of-care visual medicine – the use of real-time, bedside medical images is an imperative necessity in modern
intensive care.
Description:
Moinesti Emergency Country Hospital Moinesti, Romania, The 5th International Congress of the Society of Anesthesiology and Reanimatology of the Republic of Moldova, 16th Edition of the International Course of Guidelines and Protocols in Anesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, 28th Meeting of the European Society for Computing and Technology in Anesthesia and Intensive Care, September 27-29, 2018, Chisinau, the Republic of Moldova