• Am. J. Surg. · Mar 2008

    Comparative Study

    Hyperbilirubinemia: a risk factor for infection in the surgical intensive care unit.

    • Erin Field, H Mathilda Horst, Ilan S Rubinfeld, Craig F Copeland, Usman Waheed, Jack Jordan, Aaron Barry, and Mary-Margaret Brandt.
    • Department of Surgery, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI, USA. efield1@hfhs.org
    • Am. J. Surg. 2008 Mar 1; 195 (3): 304-6; discussion 306-7.

    BackgroundHyperbilirubinemia in intensive care unit (ICU) patients is common. We hypothesized that hyperbilirubinemia in the surgical ICU predisposes patients to infection.MethodsPatients with bilirubin < or = 3 mg/dL were compared to patients with bilirubin > 3 mg/dL. We then compared the low bilirubin patients to high bilirubin patients who developed infection after their hyperbilirubinemia.ResultsThere were 1,620 infections in 5,712 patients with low bilirubin (28%), compared with 284 in 409 patients in the high bilirubin group (69%, P < .001). After removing the patients in whom hyperbilirubinemia developed after infection, we found infection in 156 of 281 remaining patients (56%, P < .001). This group had a 3-fold increased risk of infection compared with low bilirubin (odds ratio [OR] 3.17, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.48-4.03, P < .001).ConclusionsThere is an increased susceptibility to infection among jaundiced surgical ICU (SICU) patients that persists even when sepsis-related hyperbilirubinemia patients are excluded.

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