Articles: mortality.
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For many elderly patients, an acute medical illness requiring hospitalization is followed by a progressive decline, resulting in high rates of mortality in this population during the year following discharge. However, few prognostic indices have focused on predicting posthospital mortality in older adults. ⋯ Our prognostic index, which used 6 risk factors known at discharge and a simple additive point system to stratify medical patients 70 years or older according to 1-year mortality after hospitalization, had good discrimination and calibration and generalized well in an independent sample of patients at a different site. These characteristics suggest that our index may be useful for clinical care and risk adjustment.
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The acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a life-threatening syndrome that may occur in any patient without any predisposition and that is mostly triggered by underlying processes such as sepsis, pneumonia, trauma, multiple transfusions, and pancreatitis. ARDS is defined by (1) acute onset, (2) bilateral infiltrates in chest x-rays, (3) absence of left ventricular failure, and (4) severe arterial hypoxemia with a PaO2/FiO2 ratio less than 200 mmHg. Still, ARDS is feared (mortality 30-40%) and relatively frequent (incidence between 13.5 per 100,000 to 75 per 100,000). ⋯ Despite ongoing and intensive scientific research in this area, the mechanisms underlying ALI/ARDS are still not completely understood, and until recently, there were no studies demonstrating any beneficial effect of a single treatment modality in ARDS. The recent report that a specific approach to ventilatory support can significantly reduce mortality in ARDS underscores the need for better understanding of the pathophysiological events occurring in this syndrome. This review therefore summarizes the current pathophysiological concepts underlying the evolution of acute hypoxemic respiratory failure and focuses on: (1) possible reasons for the development of ALI/ARDS; (2) cellular and humoral mediator responses leading to a sustained and self-perpetuating inflammation of the lung; (3) consequences with regard to fluid balance, pulmonary perfusion, ventilation, and efficiency of gas exchange; and (4) mechanisms underlying the aggravating complications commonly seen in ARDS, especially ventilator-associated lung injury, ventilator-associated pneumonia, and lung fibrosis.
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Children with complex chronic conditions (CCCs) might benefit from pediatric supportive care services, such as home nursing, palliative care, or hospice, especially those children whose conditions are severe enough to cause death. We do not know, however, the extent of this population or how it is changing over time. ⋯ Population-based planning of pediatric supportive care services should use measures that best inform our need to provide care for time-limited events (perideath or bereavement care) versus care for ongoing needs (home nursing or hospice). Pediatric supportive care services will need to serve patients with a broad range of CCCs from infancy into adulthood.
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Semin Respir Crit Care Med · Jun 2001
Ventilator-associated pneumonia complicating the acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Pulmonary infections span a wide spectrum, ranging from self-limited processes (e.g., tracheobronchitis) to life-threatening infections including both community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP). Together, pneumonia and influenza rank as the sixth leading cause of death in the United States and lead all other infectious diseases in this respect. Pneumonia is the second-most-common hospital-acquired infection in the United States, accounting for 17.8% of all hospital-acquired infections and 40,000 to 70,000 deaths per year. ⋯ The greater hospital mortality associated with these "high-risk'' pathogens has been attributed to the virulence of these bacteria and the increased occurrence of inadequate initial antibiotic treatment of VAP due to the presence of antibiotic resistance. This review provides an overview of the clinical importance of VAP. We then describe how this nosocomial infection influences the management and outcomes of patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).