American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2022
Observational StudyHourly Kinetics of Critical Organ Dysfunction in Extremely Preterm Infants.
Rationale: Use of severity of illness scores to classify patients for clinical care and research is common outside of the neonatal ICU. Extremely premature (<29 weeks' gestation) infants with extremely low birth weight (<1,000 g) experience significant mortality and develop severe pathology during the protracted birth hospitalization. Objectives: To measure at high resolution the changes in organ dysfunction that occur from birth to death or discharge home by gestational age and time, and among extremely preterm infants with and without clinically meaningful outcomes using the neonatal sequential organ failure assessment score. ⋯ Conclusions: The neonatal sequential organ failure assessment score discriminates between survival and nonsurvival on the first day of life. The major contributor to score variation occurred at the patient level. There was a direct association between scores and major adverse outcomes, including death.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2022
Reduced Exercise Capacity in Adults Born Very Low Birth Weight: A Population-Based Cohort Study.
Rationale: Population-based data regarding the consequences of very low birth weight (VLBW) and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) on adult exercise capacity are limited. Objectives: To compare exercise capacity in a national VLBW cohort with term-born controls and explore factors contributing to the differences. Methods: At 26-30 years of age, 228 VLBW survivors and 100 controls underwent lung function tests, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, and assessment of resting cardiac structure and function using echocardiography. ⋯ BPD with other prematurity-related perinatal factors (ventilation, antenatal steroids, extremely low birth weight, and extreme preterm) were not associated with a reduced exercise capacity. Conclusions: Exercise capacity was significantly reduced in adults with VLBW, which we speculate is from combined effects of impaired lung function, altered heart structure and function, and reduced physical activity. Perinatal factors including BPD were not associated with a reduced exercise capacity.
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Jan 2022
Observational StudyAsthma Phenotypes and COVID-19 Risk: A Population-based Observational Study.
Rationale: Studies have suggested some patients with asthma are at risk of severe coronavirus disease (COVID-19), but they have had limited data on asthma phenotype and have not considered if risks are specific to COVID-19. Objectives: To determine the effect of asthma phenotype on three levels of COVID-19 outcomes. Compare hospitalization rates with influenza and pneumonia. ⋯ Atopy and blood eosinophil count were not associated with severe COVID-19 outcomes. Conclusions: More severe asthma was associated with more severe COVID-19 outcomes, but type 2 inflammation was not. The risk of COVID-19 hospitalization appeared to be similar to the risk with influenza or pneumonia.