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Biosensors Data for Systems Analysis DuringConvalescence Palmer Q. Bessey, MD Burn Center Weill Medical College Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Systems Analysis : “.. study of a system... in an attempt to elucidate its effectiveness or performance... and the effect of parameter variations on these quantities.” System : Multiple components (subsystems) Large and complex. Complicated inter-relationships Integrity – Common purpose Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Systems Analysis : “.. study of a system... in an attempt to elucidate its effectiveness or performance... and the effect of parameter variations on these quantities.” System : Multiple components (subsystems) Large and complex. Complicated inter-relationships Integrity – Common purpose Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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The Surgical Patient is a System Components (Sub-systems) : CardiovascularMetabolic PulmonaryNeurologic RenalHematologic Gastro-intestinalImmunologic Large and complex. Complicated Inter-relationships Integrity. Common purpose: Recovery Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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The Surgical Patient is a System Altered Normal Homeostasis. Threats of Operation (Injury) : Tissue Disruption Hemorrhage Ischemia / Hypoxia Acidosis Bacterial ContaminationTransfusion Re-perfusionHypothermia Complicated Inter-relationships. Integrity. Common purpose: Recovery Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Task of Convalescent Care : Guide the patient through recovery. Systems Analysis : Gather and assemble performance data Analysis – Efficacy. Risk assessment. Decision making regarding intervention Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007 Hypothesis : The care and treatment of... patients is best done using numerical data in an orderly set of rules.
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Data Sources : Events Vital signs Nurse observations MD observations Physiologic measuresLab data Special studies Imaging Analysis and Decision Making : Gathering dataMultiple individuals Knowledge differencesEfficiency Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Interventions : Risk AssessmentLead time End point – DoseFeed back Issues : Time consuming Multiple steps CommunicationIncomplete data Error prone Delayed feed back Risks – All interventions / monitoring Opportunites : Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis – Opportunities More Complete Performance Data : For any / all compents (sub-systems) Cardiac performance (organ perfusion) Respiratory work / efficacy (gas exchange) Blood glucose Hematology / Immunology Wound healing Balance usefulness vs. invasiveness Less invasive is better. Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis – Opportunities More Timely Data : Point of care testing. Real time data More Efficient Decision Making Standardized patient care protocols. Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Hyperglycemia Clinical Effects : Impairs PMN / Immunologic defenses Increased incidence of infection Increased vascular tone / hypoperfusion. Increased ventilatory work (CO 2 Production) Exaggerate hypermetabolism Impaired wound healing Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007 Control of Hyperglycemia Van Den Bergh, 2001
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Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007 Control of Hyperglycemia Van Den Bergh, 2001
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ONGOING INSULIN DOSING Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007 Control of Hyperglycemia
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43 yom, Sepsis, ARDS, Renal Failure 65% BSAB PBD # 11 - 12 Tube Feedings
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Insulin Protocol - Nursing Work Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Insulin Protocol - Performance Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Insulin Protocol Summary and Conclusions : N = 17 patients, 99 24-hour periods Nutritional Intake: 1,938 ± 57 kcal/24 hr Total daily insulin dose: 133 ± 12 U/24 hr POC Glucose determinations: 1,849 Hourly POC Glucose: 1,528 (83 %) Under 60 or over 180 mg/dl: 79 (4.3%) Conclusion : Insulin protocol safe and effective. Adds substantially to nursing work load. Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis in Surgical Patients Hypothesis : The care and treatment of... patients is best done using numerical data in an orderly set of rules. Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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Systems Analysis – Opportunities Automation : Sheppard et al, Ann Surg, 1968. 154 Cardiac Surgery Patients BP, LAP, Urine output, Chest tube drainage. Automated protocol for blood infusion -- Rules More reliable, consistent More efficient Cost effective Safer Biomedical Engineering Retreat Ithaca, NY 27 July 2007
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