Severity of illness scoring systems in community-acquired Legionella pneumonia (original) (raw)
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Critical Care, 2010
Introduction In 2002, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign defi ned a strategy that aimed to reduce the high mortality due to sepsis. One point of this strategy was a recommendation to recognize that sepsis is a frequent cause of death and high economic costs in the pediatric intensive care unit. Knowledge of the disease is the fi rst step to impact it. There are few studies on pediatric sepsis epidemiology in the world and none in Colombia. Hypothesis The epidemiological features of Colombian children are diff erent from other countries. Methods We constructed a website where 14 intensive care units across the country reported in a prospective way the epidemiological features of children with sepsis using an electronic process [1]. We asked for sociodemographics, microbiological data, sepsis classifi cation, complications, and outcome. Results We collected 253 patients from March to May 2009. Fifty-fi ve percent of the cases were male and 45% were female; 53% were less than 1 year old. A total of 67.2% came from urban areas and 33% came from rural villages. Eighty-fi ve percent were very poor (score 1 and 2 over 6 used in Colombia as socioeconomic classifi cation). Forty-fi ve percent have governmentsupported insurance. In total, 23.72% of the population presented with sepsis; 30.04% with severe sepsis; and 46.5% with septic shock. The infection origin was respiratory in 54.55%, followed by abdominal in 17.39%. In 50.2% no cause was identifi ed. A total of 75.1% required mechanical ventilation. The mortality rate was 20.4%. Conclusions Sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock is a common diagnosis in Colombian intensive care units. The majority of pediatric patients are 2 years or younger and from the poorest communities. It aff ected males more. In the majority, the process starts in the respiratory system. We had diffi culty identifying the cause. The disease causes high mortality and cost for a developing society. We need a complete survey to fi nd a correct approach to the problem. Reference 1. Sepsis en Columbia [www.sepsisencolombia.com\] P2 Randomized controlled trials are not designed to prove the safety of third-generation hydroxyethyl starch for resuscitation: results from a systematic review
Risk of neonatal septicemia associated with neonatal-maternal-bacterial determinants
Critical Care, 2010
Introduction In 2002, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign defi ned a strategy that aimed to reduce the high mortality due to sepsis. One point of this strategy was a recommendation to recognize that sepsis is a frequent cause of death and high economic costs in the pediatric intensive care unit. Knowledge of the disease is the fi rst step to impact it. There are few studies on pediatric sepsis epidemiology in the world and none in Colombia. Hypothesis The epidemiological features of Colombian children are diff erent from other countries. Methods We constructed a website where 14 intensive care units across the country reported in a prospective way the epidemiological features of children with sepsis using an electronic process [1]. We asked for sociodemographics, microbiological data, sepsis classifi cation, complications, and outcome. Results We collected 253 patients from March to May 2009. Fifty-fi ve percent of the cases were male and 45% were female; 53% were less than 1 year old. A total of 67.2% came from urban areas and 33% came from rural villages. Eighty-fi ve percent were very poor (score 1 and 2 over 6 used in Colombia as socioeconomic classifi cation). Forty-fi ve percent have governmentsupported insurance. In total, 23.72% of the population presented with sepsis; 30.04% with severe sepsis; and 46.5% with septic shock. The infection origin was respiratory in 54.55%, followed by abdominal in 17.39%. In 50.2% no cause was identifi ed. A total of 75.1% required mechanical ventilation. The mortality rate was 20.4%. Conclusions Sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock is a common diagnosis in Colombian intensive care units. The majority of pediatric patients are 2 years or younger and from the poorest communities. It aff ected males more. In the majority, the process starts in the respiratory system. We had diffi culty identifying the cause. The disease causes high mortality and cost for a developing society. We need a complete survey to fi nd a correct approach to the problem. Reference 1. Sepsis en Columbia [www.sepsisencolombia.com\] P2 Randomized controlled trials are not designed to prove the safety of third-generation hydroxyethyl starch for resuscitation: results from a systematic review
Colombia Medica, 2011
Objective: To determine factors associated with mortality by sepsis syndrome in children. Methods: We performed an analytical study of cases and controls, which included patients between 31 days and 14 years of age, treated at Hospital Universitario del Valle in Cali, Colombia, with sepsis syndrome between 1999 and 2003. Information was gathered from medical records and books. The outcome variable was the status on discharge from hospital (alive or dead). All the dead children were verified in the hospital records and all the living children were confirmed alive four weeks after discharge. The exposure control variables were age, gender, origin, socioeconomic status, educational level of mothers, family order of the child, classification and origin of sepsis, nutritional status, underlying disease, presence and type of immunosuppression, invasive procedures, duration of surgery, broad-spectrum antibiotics, as well as preoperative, hospital and intensive care stay. Results: We evalua...
2011
Objective: To determine factors associated with mortality by sepsis syndrome in children. Methods: We performed an analytical study of cases and controls, which included patients between 31 days and 14 years of age, treated at Hospital Universitario del Valle in Cali, Colombia, with sepsis syndrome between 1999 and 2003. Information was gathered from medical records and books. The outcome variable was the status on discharge from hospital (alive or dead). All the dead children were verified in the hospital records and all the living children were confirmed alive four weeks after discharge. The exposure control variables were age, gender, origin, socioeconomic status, educational level of mothers, family order of the child, classification and origin of sepsis, nutritional status, underlying disease, presence and type of immunosuppression, invasive procedures, duration of surgery, broad-spectrum antibiotics, as well as preoperative, hospital and intensive care stay. Results: We evalua...
Epidemiología de la sepsis en unidades de cuidado intensivo en Colombia
Biomedica Revista Del Instituto Nacional De Salud, 2013
lead the EPI-SEPSIS project in Colombia. Guillermo Ortiz and Carmelo Dueñas analyzed the data and drafted the section on the subgroup of patients in intensive care units in the final document. All authors participated in data collection.
Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, 2012
Introduction In 2002, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign defi ned a strategy that aimed to reduce the high mortality due to sepsis. One point of this strategy was a recommendation to recognize that sepsis is a frequent cause of death and high economic costs in the pediatric intensive care unit. Knowledge of the disease is the fi rst step to impact it. There are few studies on pediatric sepsis epidemiology in the world and none in Colombia. Hypothesis The epidemiological features of Colombian children are diff erent from other countries. Methods We constructed a website where 14 intensive care units across the country reported in a prospective way the epidemiological features of children with sepsis using an electronic process [1]. We asked for sociodemographics, microbiological data, sepsis classifi cation, complications, and outcome. Results We collected 253 patients from March to May 2009. Fifty-fi ve percent of the cases were male and 45% were female; 53% were less than 1 year old. A total of 67.2% came from urban areas and 33% came from rural villages. Eighty-fi ve percent were very poor (score 1 and 2 over 6 used in Colombia as socioeconomic classifi cation). Forty-fi ve percent have governmentsupported insurance. In total, 23.72% of the population presented with sepsis; 30.04% with severe sepsis; and 46.5% with septic shock. The infection origin was respiratory in 54.55%, followed by abdominal in 17.39%. In 50.2% no cause was identifi ed. A total of 75.1% required mechanical ventilation. The mortality rate was 20.4%. Conclusions Sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock is a common diagnosis in Colombian intensive care units. The majority of pediatric patients are 2 years or younger and from the poorest communities. It aff ected males more. In the majority, the process starts in the respiratory system. We had diffi culty identifying the cause. The disease causes high mortality and cost for a developing society. We need a complete survey to fi nd a correct approach to the problem. Reference 1. Sepsis en Columbia [www.sepsisencolombia.com\] P2 Randomized controlled trials are not designed to prove the safety of third-generation hydroxyethyl starch for resuscitation: results from a systematic review
Epidemiological study of pediatric severe sepsis in Argentina
Archivos Argentinos de Pediatria, 2019
Introduction. Severe sepsis (SS) is one of the leading causes of pediatric mortality in Argentina. The objective was to describe the epidemiological characteristics and to analyze risk factors associated with mortality from SS among patients hospitalized in pediatric intensive care units (PICU) in Argentina. Population and Methods. Observational, prospective cohort study among patients with SS hospitalized in PICUs in Argentina from 8/1/2008 to 9/30/2008. Results. Two thousand five hundred and fifty nine patients were admitted at 59 PICUs. A total of 315 patients (335 events) were included. Patients' median age was 8 months (1-182). The frequency was 13.8 %, and 28-day mortality was 31.6 %. Patients with a higher mortality were those who were coming from rural areas, had comorbidities at the time of admission or a history of cancer, had shock or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), were administered low-dose corticosteroids or vasoactive drugs or more than 60 ml/kg of fluid in the first hour and in the first 6 hours, and had severe malnutrition. Following adjustment by severity using a multivariate logistic regression model, only coming from a rural area, having shock or ARDS remained associated with 28-day mortality. Forty per cent of patients received antibiotics 60 minutes after diagnosis. Conclusions. SS is an event with a high frequency and mortality in Argentina. In the severity adjusted multivariate analysis, only coming from a rural area, having ARDS and/or shock were associated with higher mortality.