Articles: intensive-care-units.
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Journal of critical care · Aug 2024
Multicenter Study Observational StudyLimitations of life-sustaining therapies in South Africa.
Limitations of life sustaining therapies (LLST) are frequent in intensive care units (ICUs), but no previous studies have examined end-of-life (EOL) care and LLST in South Africa (SA). ⋯ Withholding was more common than withdrawing treatment both in SA and worldwide, although both were significantly less frequent in SA compared with the world average.
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Multicenter Study
Exploring the Association of Metabolic Syndrome with In-Hospital Survival of Older Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19: Beyond Chronological Age.
Despite the variability and complexity of geriatric conditions, few COVID-19 reports of clinical characteristic prognostication provide data specific to oldest-old adults (over age 85), and instead generally report broadly as 65 and older. ⋯ Metabolic syndrome measures are important individual predictors of COVID-19 outcomes. Building on prior examinations that metabolic syndrome is associated with death and ARDS across all ages, this analysis supports that metabolic syndrome criteria may be more relevant than chronological age as risk factors for poor outcomes attributed to COVID-19.
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Journal of critical care · Aug 2024
Multicenter StudyA pragmatic calibration of the ROX index to predict outcome of nasal high-flow therapy in India.
Identifying thresholds at which the ROX index would satisfactorily predict HFNC failure across heterogenous resourced contexts is necessary for clinical use. ⋯ When optimally calibrated this index can using a method that can reliably predict the risk of HFNC failure among ICU patients from diverse settings.
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Journal of critical care · Aug 2024
Multicenter Study Observational StudyHow a positive fluid balance develops in acute kidney injury: A binational, observational study.
A positive fluid balance (FB) is associated with harm in intensive care unit (ICU) patients with acute kidney injury (AKI). We aimed to understand how a positive balance develops in such patients. ⋯ Question How does a positive fluid balance develop in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury? Findings Cumulative FB increased after AKI diagnosis and was secondary to persistent crystalloid fluid administration, increasing nutritional fluid intake, and insufficient urine output. Despite the absence of resuscitation fluid and an increasing cumulative FB, there was persistently low diuretics use, ongoing crystalloid use, and a progressive escalation of nutritional fluid therapy. Meaning Current management results in fluid accumulation after diagnosis of AKI, as a result of ongoing crystalloid administration, increasing nutritional fluid, limited urine output and minimal diuretic use.
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Critical care medicine · Aug 2024
Survival of Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients in Sweden During the First Two and a Half Years of the Pandemic.
Some studies have examined survival trends among critically ill COVID-19 patients, but most were case reports, small cohorts, and had relatively short follow-up periods. We aimed to examine the survival trend among critically ill COVID-19 patients during the first two and a half years of the pandemic and investigate potential predictors across different variants of concern periods. ⋯ In this nationwide Swedish cohort covering over two and a half years of the pandemic, ICU survival rates changed over time. Older age was a strong predictor across all periods. Furthermore, most other mortality predictors remained consistent across different variant periods.