Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Jan 2015
Variations in Organism-Specific Severe Sepsis Mortality in the United States: 1999-2008.
Recent studies have reported decreased overall severe sepsis mortality, but associations with organism trends have not yet been investigated. This study explored organism-specific severe sepsis mortality trends from 1999 to 2008 in a large hospital-based administrative database. ⋯ We not only confirmed an overall decline in severe sepsis mortality from 1999 to 2008 but also identified previously unreported variations in organism-specific severe sepsis mortality. Gram-negative organisms predominate, whereas anaerobes and methicillin-resistant S. aureus are significant predictors of mortality. Future clinical trials exploring new treatments in severe sepsis should incorporate individual organism trends to elucidate potential effect on mortality.
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Critical care medicine · Jan 2015
Observational StudyThe Relationship Between Obesity, Nutritional Status, and Mortality in the Critically Ill.
The association between obesity and mortality in critically ill patients is unclear based on the current literature. To clarify this relationship, we analyzed the association between obesity and mortality in a large population of critically ill patients and hypothesized that mortality would be impacted by nutritional status. ⋯ In a large population of critically ill adults, the association between improved mortality and obesity is confounded by malnutrition status. Critically ill obese patients with malnutrition have worse outcomes than obese patients without malnutrition.