Internal and emergency medicine
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Multicenter Study
The Fenice project to evaluate and improve the quality of healthcare in high-dependency care units: results after the first year.
High-Dependency care Units (HDUs) have been introduced worldwide as intermediate wards between Intensive Care Units (ICUs) and general wards. Performing a comparative assessment of the quality of care in HDU is challenging because there are no uniform standards and heterogeneity among centers is wide. The Fenice network promoted a prospective cohort study to assess the quality of care provided by HDUs in Italy. ⋯ The expertise of HDUs in managing complex and fragile patients is supported by both the available equipment and the characteristics of admitted patients. The limited proportion of patients transferred to ICUs supports the hypothesis of preventing of ICU admissions. The heterogeneity of HDU admissions requires further research to define meaningful patients' outcomes to be used by quality-of-care assessment programs.
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Observational Study
Real-world analysis on the use of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid for alcohol withdrawal syndrome in hospitalized patients with diagnosis of cirrhosis.
The present real-world analysis aimed to evaluate and describe the use of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) for alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS) in hospitalized patients with diagnosis of liver cirrhosis. An 11-year observational retrospective study on patients affected by liver cirrhosis and alcohol use disorder (AUD) was performed using data from the Medical Toxicology Unit of Careggi University Hospital in Florence (Italy). A multivariate logistic regression was performed to estimate the probability of having a CIWA-Ar Max 3-4 during hospitalization, an AWS length > 36 h, a hospitalization > 9 days, and the probability of developing drowsiness. ⋯ GHB dose ≥ 100 mg/kg was not associated with the occurrence of drowsiness. Patients exposed to other sedative agents were more likely to experience drowsiness (OR 7.22 [95% CI 1.46-35.61]). The present real-world analysis underlines that GHB could be a valuable and safe option for the management of AWS in AUD patients affected by liver cirrhosis, also when administered early and even at higher than recommended dosages.
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Adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) is a rare systemic autoinflammatory disorder of unknown etiology characterized by systemic inflammation, high fever, salmon-colored skin rash, arthralgia, and arthritis. Patients with AOSD may also present with elevated inflammatory markers, hyperferritinemia, anemia, leukocytosis, hepatosplenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy. Glucocorticoids and biological disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, including the anti-interleukin-1 agent anakinra, are used in the management of AOSD. ⋯ Mild adverse events occurred in 11 patients (32.3%) with injection site reactions being the most common. One patient (2.9%) was diagnosed with tuberculosis within the treatment period. Anakinra is an effective and generally safe option for biological treatment initiation in the management of AOSD.
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The purpose is to analyze the prevalence of intestinal infection in patients with pneumonia in intensive care units (ICU) and the impact of intestinal infection on the prognosis of patients with pneumonia, so as to explore the bidirectional association between pneumonia and intestinal infection. The study aims to investigate the correlation between the occurrence of pneumonia and intestinal infection among patients in the ICU, utilizing the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV (MIMIC-IV) database, as well as the impact of intestinal infection on the prognosis of pneumonia patients. The enrolled patients were first divided into pneumonia group and non-pneumonia group, and the primary outcome was that patients developed intestinal infection. ⋯ Patients in the intestinal infection group exhibited a longer length stay in ICU and hospital than those without intestinal infection (P < 0.001). In the ICU, patients with pneumonia were more likely linked to intestinal infection. In addition, the presence of concurrent intestinal infections can prolong both ICU and hospital stays for pneumonia patients.