Heart & lung : the journal of critical care
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Multicenter Study
Mortality, rehospitalization, and post-transplant complications in gender-mismatched heart transplant recipients.
Limited research has been published on outcomes in heart transplant (HT) recipients with gender-mismatched donors. ⋯ Female HT recipients with male donors had worse 3-year outcomes as compared to male-mismatch and no-mismatch groups.
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Multicenter Study
Patterns of palliative care service consultation in a sample of critically ill ICU patients at high risk of dying.
Describe patterns of palliative care service consultation among a sample of ICU patients at high risk of dying. ⋯ Among MV ICU patients at high risk of dying, palliative care service consultation occurs late and infrequently, suggesting a role for earlier palliative care.
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Multicenter Study
Comparison of four risk scores for in-hospital mortality in patients undergoing heart valve surgery: A multicenter study in a Chinese population.
To compare four risk scores with regard to their validity to predict in-hospital mortality after heart valve surgery in a multicenter patient population of China. ⋯ Both the STS score and Euroscore II, especially the STS score, were suitable for individual operative risk in Chinese patients undergoing single valve surgery compared with the Ambler score and NYC score, however, all four risk scores were not suitable for prediction in Chinese patients undergoing multiple valve surgery. Therefore, the creation of a new model which accurately predicts outcomes in patients undergoing multiple valve surgery is possibly required in China.
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Explore (1) the characteristics of the Maine population with delayed geographic access to interventional cardiology (IC) services and (2) the effect of delayed geographic IC access on coronary mortality. ⋯ Delayed geographic IC access was associated with disparity but not with increased age-adjusted coronary mortality.
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Multicenter Study
Clinical outcomes in overweight heart transplant recipients.
Few studies have examined the impact of patient weight on heart transplant (HT) outcomes. ⋯ Overweight HT patients had better survival, but more rejections, CAV, and diabetes. Non-overweight HT patients had worse survival, plus more re-hospitalization time, lymphoma, and renal dysfunction.