Literature DB >> 8986477

The intensive care management, mortality and prognostic indicators in severe community-acquired pneumococcal pneumonia.

P D Potgieter1, J M Hammond.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine mortality and factors that might predict outcome in severe community-acquired pneumococcal pneumonia treated by a standard protocol.
DESIGN: Prospective, non-concurrent study.
SETTING: Respiratory intensive care unit (ICU) in a teaching hospital. PATIENTS: 63 patients who were diagnosed by positive blood culture or Gram stain and culture of sputum or tracheal aspirate were included. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: Clinical features, severity scores including Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II, organ failure and lung injury scores, and the clinical course in the ICU were documented; 79% of patients required mechanical ventilation. Bacteraemia was present in 34 patients (54%); there were no distinguishing clinical features between bacteraemic and non-bacteraemic cases. The overall mortality was 21%, with only 5 deaths (15% mortality) in the bacteraemic group. Shock and a very low serum albumin (< 26 g/l) were the only clinical features that differentiated survivors from non-survivors; lung injury, APACHE II and multiple organ failure scores were all predictive of outcome. The positive predictive value and specificity in predicting death in individuals for the modified British Thoracic Society rule 1 were 26 and 64%; APACHE II > 2057 and 88%; > 2 organ failure 64 and 92%; and lung injury > 233 and 73%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that even in bacteraemic cases mortality should be below 25% with intensive care management and that conventional scoring systems, while predictive of group mortality, are unreliable in individuals.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8986477     DOI: 10.1007/bf01709542

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Intensive Care Med        ISSN: 0342-4642            Impact factor:   17.440


  26 in total

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6.  Pneumococcal bacteremia in adults over a 10-year period at University Hospital, Leiden.

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8.  Severe community-acquired pneumonia: factors influencing need of intensive care treatment and prognosis.

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9.  Pneumococcal bacteremia--no change in mortality in 30 years: analysis of 104 cases and review of the literature.

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5.  Urea-to-Albumin Ratio and In-Hospital Mortality in Severe Pneumonia Patients.

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6.  Blood urea nitrogen to serum albumin ratio independently predicts mortality and severity of community-acquired pneumonia.

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7.  Impact of positive chest X-ray findings and blood cultures on adverse outcomes following hospitalized pneumococcal lower respiratory tract infection: a population-based cohort study.

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