Literature DB >> 18206526

Pulmonary edema prognostic score predicts in-hospital mortality risk in patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema.

Marcin Fiutowski1, Tomasz Waszyrowski, Maria Krzemińska-Pakula, Jaroslaw D Kasprzak.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Congestive heart failure is a common cardiac disorder associated with a high mortality. There are a limited number of prognostic scales predicting in-hospital outcomes after an acute episode of congestive heart failure.
OBJECTIVES: The goal of this investigation was to develop a simple prognostic score predicting in-hospital outcome in patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema.
METHODS: We retrospectively studied 276 consecutive patients hospitalized with acute pulmonary edema from the years 1998 to 2000.
RESULTS: During the initial hospitalization, 58 patients (21%) died and 218 patients (79%) were discharged. Statistical analyses revealed that the most significant predictors of inhospital mortality were acute myocardial infarction, heart rate greater than 115/beats/min, systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or less, and white blood cell count greater than 11,500/mm3 on presentation. The presence of each factor was scored as 1 point, and the absence was scored as 0 points. The Pulmonary Edema Prognostic Score (PEPS) was defined as a sum of all points. Patients with a PEPS of 0 had good short-term prognosis with a 2% in-hospital mortality rate, whereas mortality in patients with a PEPS of 4 was 64%.
CONCLUSIONS: The PEPS is a simple tool that can be easily calculated using common clinical diagnostic tests (electrocardiogram, blood pressure, heart rate, and white cell count) to determine in-hospital mortality risk in patients with an acute episode of cardiogenic pulmonary edema.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18206526     DOI: 10.1016/j.hrtlng.2007.05.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Lung        ISSN: 0147-9563            Impact factor:   2.210


  5 in total

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  5 in total

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