| Literature DB >> 21722363 |
Karina de Leeuw1, Marianne K Nieuwenhuis, Anuschka S Niemeijer, Hans Eshuis, Gerard I J M Beerthuizen, Wilbert M Janssen.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: It is difficult to adjust fluid balance adequately in patients with severe burns due to various physical changes. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is emerging as a potential marker of hydration state. Proteinuria is used as a predictor of outcome in severe illness and might correlate to systemic capillary leakage. This study investigates whether combining BNP and proteinuria can be used as a guide for individualized resuscitation and as a predictor of outcome in patients with severe burns.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21722363 PMCID: PMC3387595 DOI: 10.1186/cc10297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Characteristics at admission
| Patients ( | Patients with low BNP ( | Patients with high BNP ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 45 (37 to 60) | 46 (31 to 59) | 47 (37 to 63) | |
| 28 (74%) | 15 (79%) | 13 (68%) | |
| 87 (74 to 100) | 90 (77 to 112) | 85 (70 to 99) | |
| | 29 (76%) | 14 (74%) | 15 (79%) |
| | 9 (24%) | 5 (26%) | 4 (21%) |
| | 5 (13%) | 3 (16%) | 2 (11%) |
| 33 (87%) | 17 (89%) | 16 (84%) | |
| 15 with inhalation | 9 with inhalation | 6 with inhalation | |
| 5 (13%) | 2 (11%) | 3 (16%) | |
| 29 (76%) | 14 (74%) | 15 (79%) | |
| 32 (24 to 42) | 35 (24 to 41) | 28 (20 to 43) | |
| 15 (8 to 25) | 17 (8 to 32) | 13 (5 to 23) | |
| 139 (88 to 190) | 149 (122 to 193) | 109 (81 to 192) |
Data are presented by median (interquartile range).
CVD, cardiovascular disease; DM, diabetes mellitus; TBSA, total burned body surface area.
Figure 1B-type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP) levels during follow up. This figure demonstrates the BNP levels during follow-up. A plateau level is reached at Day 3.
Figure 2Total received fluid and SOFA scores in patients with high and low BNP. A. Received fluid, B. Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores. Dashed line presents patients with a high B-type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP), closed line patients with a low BNP.
Characteristics of the different groups divided based on median BNP and median proteinuria
| High BNP, low prot ( | Low BNP, low prot ( | High BNP, high prot ( | Low BNP, high prot ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 43 (35 to 63) | 55 (31 to 63) | 48 (39 to 61) | 38 (37 to 46) | |
| 5 (71%) | 8 (75%) | 8 (75%) | 7 (100%) | |
| 70 (70 to 100) | 91 (78 to 117) | 87 (76 to 97) | 90 (76 to 100) | |
| 6 (86%) | 10 (83%) | 10 (83%) | 7 (100%) | |
| 2 (29%) | 6 (50%) | 7 (58%) | 6 (86%) | |
| 28 (25 to 45) | 31 (21 to 40) | 32 (20 to 43) | 37 (30 to 45) | |
| 95 (80 to 148) | 148 (116 to 188) | 122 (81 to 200) | 156 (131 to 206) | |
| 0 | 1 (8%) | 3 (25%) | 0 | |
| 0 (0 to 1) | 0 (0 to 3) | 1 (0 to 3.5) | 3 (1 to 4) |
Data are presented by median (interquartile range)
(Inhalation: P likelihood P = 0.157, lineair P = 0.03)
SOFA, sequential organ failure assessment; TBSA, total burned body surface area
Figure 3SOFA scores in groups of patients divided based on median BNP and median proteinuria.