Literature DB >> 8873718

Long-term outcome and quality of life of patients requiring multidisciplinary intensive care unit admission after cardiac operations.

J L Trouillet1, A Scheimberg, A Vuagnat, J Y Fagon, J Chastre, C Gibert.   

Abstract

Patients with organ failure or severe infection after cardiac operations may require prolonged stays in the intensive care unit. This study examined long-term mortality and determined quality of life for surviving patients in this group. This observational cohort study was conducted at Bichat Hospital, Paris, an academic tertiary care center. The study group consisted of 116 consecutive patients who underwent cardiac operations and were transferred to the multidisciplinary intensive care unit between January 1986 and December 1987. Patients referred for mediastinitis were automatically excluded. Respiratory failure (88.8%) and hemodynamic instability (81.9%) were the main causes of transfer; an infection was present in 23.3% of patients at entry into the intensive care unit. Twenty-seven patients (23.3%) died in the intensive care unit. Presurgical New York Heart Association functional class, postoperative bacteremia before admission to the intensive care unit, and severity of illness on admission to the intensive care unit were independent predictors of death in the intensive care unit. After an average follow-up of 81 months (range 70 to 93 months), 69% of the patients alive at transfer from the intensive care unit were still alive. Preoperative New York Heart Association functional class was the only long-term independent prognostic factor. Quality of life, as evaluated by the Nottingham Health Profile, was good for more than 70% of the survivors and was not influenced by any recorded variables, with the exception of age.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8873718     DOI: 10.1016/S0022-5223(96)70092-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg        ISSN: 0022-5223            Impact factor:   5.209


  4 in total

1.  Quality of life after complicated elective surgery requiring intensive care.

Authors:  Christian Lamer; Marc Harboun; Lyes Knani; David Moreau; Laurent Tric; Jean-Luc LeGuillou; Isabelle Gasquet; Thierry Moreau
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2004-04-15       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 2.  Structure to function: muscle failure in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Zudin Puthucheary; Hugh Montgomery; John Moxham; Stephen Harridge; Nicholas Hart
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2010-10-20       Impact factor: 5.182

3.  Long-term outcomes and clinical predictors of hospital mortality in very long stay intensive care unit patients: a cohort study.

Authors:  Jan O Friedrich; Gail Wilson; Clarence Chant
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 9.097

4.  Prognosis of critical surgical patients depending on the duration of stay in the ICU.

Authors:  Luciano Santana-Cabrera; Josefa Delia Martín-Santana; Rosa Lorenzo-Torrent; Hugo Rodríguez Pérez; Manuel Sánchez-Palacios; Juan Ramón Hernández Hernández
Journal:  Int J Crit Illn Inj Sci       Date:  2015 Jul-Sep
  4 in total

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