Literature DB >> 24136084

Elevated blood urea nitrogen and medical outcome of psychiatric inpatients.

Peter Manu1, Zainab Al-Dhaher, Sameer Khan, John M Kane, Christoph U Correll.   

Abstract

Elevated blood urea nitrogen (BUN) is associated with increased severity of illness and mortality, but its predictive value has not been studied in patients admitted to free-standing psychiatric hospitals. To determine the clinical outcome of psychiatric inpatients with elevated BUN on admission and to create a quantitative method of using BUN for predicting deteriorations requiring transfers of psychiatric inpatients to a general hospital we conducted a retrospective cohort study of 939 adults consecutively admitted to a free-standing psychiatric hospital in 2010. Transfer to a general hospital was used as a proxy marker for poor medical outcome. The score Age (years) plus BUN (mg/dL) was used in sensitivity analyses to identify patients with medical deterioration in derivation (N = 523) and validation (N = 414) samples. Fifty-two (5.5%) patients had admission azotemia (BUN >25 mg/dL). Medical deteriorations requiring emergency transfer to a general hospital occurred in 24 (46.2%; 95% confidence interval = 32.6-49.8%) of azotemic patients and 112 (12.6%; 95% confidence interval = 10.4-14.8%) of those with normal BUN (p < 0.0001). Age + BUN ≥ 90 identified 51 transferred patients and had positive and negative predictive values of 39.8 and 89.5%, respectively, in the entire sample. We conclude that psychiatric inpatients with BUN >25 mg/dL or Age + BUN ≥ 90 are at risk for medical deterioration. Free-standing psychiatric hospitals should develop models of care requiring frequent, scheduled medical follow-up and enhanced monitoring for this vulnerable populations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24136084     DOI: 10.1007/s11126-013-9274-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatr Q        ISSN: 0033-2720


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