Monitorización invasiva y no invasiva en pacientes ingresados a UCI

Critical patient monitoring is essential to optimize the patient's hemodynamics, ventilation, temperature, nutrition, and metabolism. Most of the monitoring is performed on invasive procedures such as central and peripheral venous catheterization, arterial approach, nasogastric and bladder tube...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Moreno Sasig, Nelson Geovanny, Vélez Muentes, José Ricardo, Campuzano Franco, Manuel Antonio, Zambrano Córdova, Jaime Roberto, Vera Pinargote, Ronal Gabriel
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: 2021
Subjects:
UCI
ICU
Online Access:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=8056959
Source:RECIMUNDO: Revista Científica de la Investigación y el Conocimiento, ISSN 2588-073X, Vol. 5, Nº. 3, 2021, pags. 278-292
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Summary: Critical patient monitoring is essential to optimize the patient's hemodynamics, ventilation, temperature, nutrition, and metabolism. Most of the monitoring is performed on invasive procedures such as central and peripheral venous catheterization, arterial approach, nasogastric and bladder tubes, to obtain hemodynamic, ventilatory and metabolic information. However, there are also specialized technological equipment and new algorithms that can help obtain the greatest number of variables and parameters in a non-invasive way to achieve the same objective. This article does not intend to establish comparative criteria on the advantages and disadvantages of invasive and non-invasive monitoring techniques, but rather to present, in a descriptive way, their availability as alternatives in the care of the critical patient. For this, an exhaustive investigation was carried out in different literatures to present the ideal content, with an important contribution to the knowledge of the subject.