Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Dec 2018
A Comparison of the Quick Sequential (Sepsis-Related) Organ Failure Assessment Score and the National Early Warning Score in Non-ICU Patients With/Without Infection.
The Sepsis-3 task force recommended the quick Sequential (Sepsis-Related) Organ Failure Assessment score for identifying patients with suspected infection who are at greater risk of poor outcomes, but many hospitals already use the National Early Warning Score to identify high-risk patients, irrespective of diagnosis. We sought to compare the performance of quick Sequential (Sepsis-Related) Organ Failure Assessment and National Early Warning Score in hospitalized, non-ICU patients with and without an infection. ⋯ The National Early Warning Score outperforms the quick Sequential (Sepsis-Related) Organ Failure Assessment score, irrespective of infection status. These findings suggest that quick Sequential (Sepsis-Related) Organ Failure Assessment should be reevaluated as the system of choice for identifying non-ICU patients with suspected infection who are at greater risk of poor outcome.
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Critical care medicine · Dec 2018
Meaning of Intracranial Pressure-to-Blood Pressure Fisher-Transformed Pearson Correlation-Derived Optimal Cerebral Perfusion Pressure: Testing Empiric Utility in a Mechanistic Model.
Time-averaged intracranial pressure-to-blood pressure Fisher-transformed Pearson correlation (PRx) is used to assess cerebral autoregulation and derive optimal cerebral perfusion pressure. Empirically, impaired cerebral autoregulation is considered present when PRx is positive; greater difference between time series median cerebral perfusion pressure and optimal cerebral perfusion pressure (ΔCPP) is associated with worse outcomes. Our aims are to better understand: 1) the potential strategies for targeting optimal cerebral perfusion pressure; 2) the relationship between cerebral autoregulation and PRx; and 3) the determinants of greater ΔCPP. ⋯ These mechanistic simulations provide insight into the empiric basis of optimal cerebral perfusion pressure and the significance of PRx and ΔCPP. PRx and optimal cerebral perfusion pressure deviations do not directly reflect changes in cerebral autoregulation but are, in general, related to the presence of complex states involving well-described clinical progressions with raised intracranial pressure.
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Critical care medicine · Dec 2018
Observational StudyRisk Factors for Persistent Cognitive Impairment After Critical Illness, Nested Case-Control Study.
Persistent cognitive impairment after critical illness is an important healthcare problem forecasted to worsen in the near future. However, the epidemiology is insufficiently explored. We aimed to determine potentially modifiable risk factors during ICU hospitalization that play a significant role in developing persistent cognitive impairment. ⋯ Cognitive dysfunction is highly prevalent in ICU patients. Incident new and persistent cognitive impairment is less common but important, potentially preventable problem after critical illness. Chronic comorbidities and number of ICU stays increase the risk of post-ICU cognitive dysfunction irrespective of age. Modifiable ICU exposures were identified as potential targets for future prevention trials.
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Critical care medicine · Dec 2018
Magnitude and Pace of Improvement in Performance of Hospitals Treating Mechanically Ventilated Children in the United States: Analysis From Two National Databases.
To use two national databases to quantify the pace and magnitude of improvement in hospital performance (as measured by mortality) across hospitals caring for critically ill children in the United States. ⋯ This study provides insight into the magnitude of improvement in patient mortality in hospitals caring for critically ill children in the United States. This study quantifies hospital performance in pediatric critical care over time, and it provides benchmarks against which individual hospitals can assess their own performance. In future pediatric epidemiologic studies, we should identify outcomes other than mortality to quantify improvement in hospital performance.
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Critical care medicine · Dec 2018
The Statistical Curriculum Within Randomized Controlled Trials in Critical Illness.
Incomplete biostatistical knowledge among clinicians is widely described. This study aimed to categorize and summarize the statistical methodology within recent critical care randomized controlled trials. ⋯ Physicians assessing recent randomized controlled trials in critical illness encounter results derived from a substantial and potentially expanding range of biostatistical methods. In-depth training in the assumptions and limitations of these current and emerging biostatistical methods may not be practically achievable for most clinicians, making accessible specialist biostatistical support an asset to evidence-based clinical practice.