American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
-
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 1998
Acute lung injury in the medical ICU: comorbid conditions, age, etiology, and hospital outcome.
The independent effects of chronic disease, age, severity of illness, lung injury score (LIS) and etiology, and preceding nonpulmonary organ-system dysfunction (OSD) on the outcome of acute lung injury (ALI) have not been examined in an exclusively medical-intensive-care-unit (MICU) population. Therefore, 107 consecutive MICU patients with ALI (76% with acute respiratory distress syndrome [ARDS]) were prospectively investigated. The impact of comorbidities, age > 65 yr, acute physiology score (APS), LIS, etiology of ALI, and OSD on hospital survival were studied. ⋯ Multivariate analysis of the ARDS cohort showed similar results, although cirrhosis and malignancy did not reach statistical significance. We conclude that comorbid conditions, older age, and sepsis etiology are independent predictors of hospital death in exclusively MICU patients with ALI (76% of whom satisfied criteria for ARDS). These factors should be considered in analyzing studies of new therapies and interpreting trends in mortality for ALI and ARDS.
-
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 1998
Biography Historical ArticleBlood gas analysis and critical care medicine.
-
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 1998
Mild hyperlactatemia in stable septic patients is due to impaired lactate clearance rather than overproduction.
A prospective study was conducted on 34 stable septic patients to determine whether mild hyperlactatemia is a marker of lactate overproduction or an indicator of lactate underutilization during sepsis. Plasma lactate clearance and lactate production were evaluated by modeling the lactate kinetic induced by an infusion of 1 mmol/kg L-lactate over 15 min. ⋯ A second analysis including all the patients confirmed that the blood lactate concentration was closely linked to the reciprocal of lactate clearance (r2 = 0.73, p < 0.001) but not to lactate production (r2 = 0.03, p = 0.29). We conclude that a mild hyperlactatemia occurring in a stable septic patient is mainly due to a defect in lactate utilization.
-
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 1998
Nosocomial pneumonia in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome.
To describe the epidemiologic and microbial aspects of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), we prospectively evaluated 243 consecutive patients who required mechanical ventilation (MV) for > or = 48 h, 56 of whom developed ARDS as defined by a Murray lung injury score > 2.5. We did this with bronchoscopic techniques when VAP was clinically suspected, before any modification of existing antimicrobial therapy. For all patients, the diagnosis of pneumonia was established on the basis of culture results of protected-specimen brush (PSB) (> or = 10(3) cfu/ml) and bronchoalvelolar lavage fluid (BALF) (> or = 10(4) cfu/ml) specimens, and direct examination of cells recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) (< or = 5% of infected cells). ⋯ The organisms most frequently isolated from patients with ARDS and VAP were methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (23%), nonfermenting gram-negative bacilli (21%), and Enterobacteriaceae (21%). These findings confirm that microbiologically provable VAP occurs far more often in patients with ARDS than in other ventilated patients. Because these patients are often treated with antibiotics early in the course of the syndrome, the onset of VAP is frequently delayed after the first week of MV, and is then caused mainly by methicillin-resistant S. aureus and other multiresistant microorganisms.
-
Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 1998
Risk factors and outcome of nosocomial infections: results of a matched case-control study of ICU patients.
Intensive-care-unit (ICU) patients are at risk for both acquiring nosocomial infection and dying, and require a high level of therapy whether infection occurs or not. The objective of the present study was to precisely define the interrelationships between underlying disease, severity of illness, therapeutic activity, and nosocomial infections in ICU patients, and their respective influences on these patients' outcome. In a 10-bed medical ICU, we conducted a case-control study with matching for initial severity of illness, with daily monitoring of severity of illness and therapeutic activity scores, and with analysis of the contribution of nosocomial infections to patients' outcomes. ⋯ Such consequences were observed in patients who developed multiple infections. These findings suggest that a persistent high level of therapeutic activity and persistent impaired consciousness are risk factors for nosocomial infections in ICU patients. These infections are responsible for excess mortality, prolongation of stay, and excess therapeutic activity resulting in important cost overruns for health-care systems.