{"title":"Effect of pH, lactate, electrolyte, and strong ion difference variability on prediction of intensive care unit mortality: A retrospective study","authors":"Furkan Tontu, S. Aşar, Beyza Oren Bilgin","doi":"10.4103/2221-6189.357458","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objective: To investigate the effect of the variability of Nas, Cls, Ks, lactate values and sodium effect (NaEffect), chloride effect (ClEffect), non-lactate strong ion difference (SIDnl) values calculated according to Stewart’s approach on predicting intensive care unit (ICU) mortality. Methods: The study was conducted on 1539 patients, retrospectively. Serum Na (Nas), serum Cl (Cls), serum K (Ks), serum Ca (Cas), serum Mg (Mgs), lactate, pH values and SIDnl, NaEffect, ClEffect, APACHE II (first, last), and SOFA (first, last) scores were recorded. Radiometer ABL 800 (Denmark) was used for blood gas analysis. The variability of each parameter was calculated. The effect of variability of each parameter on 30-day ICU mortality was analyzed. Results: The variability of lactate (P<0.001, OR=0.580, 95% CI=0.505-0.652), pH (P=0.001, OR=0.004, 95% CI=0.000-0.104), NaEffect (P<0.001, OR=0.550, 95% CI=0.378-0.592), Ks (P<0.001, OR=0.385, 95% CI=0.244-0.565) values were protective factors of ICU mortality and Cls value was a risk factor (P=0.004, OR=1.095, 95% CI=1.024-1.164). Variability of ClEffect, SIDnl values did not affect ICU mortality. Conclusions: The variability of electrolytes is important. Electrolyte, effects, and lactate variability can guide treatment and fluid applications in ICU.","PeriodicalId":45984,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Acute Disease","volume":"11 1","pages":"194 - 198"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Acute Disease","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4103/2221-6189.357458","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the effect of the variability of Nas, Cls, Ks, lactate values and sodium effect (NaEffect), chloride effect (ClEffect), non-lactate strong ion difference (SIDnl) values calculated according to Stewart’s approach on predicting intensive care unit (ICU) mortality. Methods: The study was conducted on 1539 patients, retrospectively. Serum Na (Nas), serum Cl (Cls), serum K (Ks), serum Ca (Cas), serum Mg (Mgs), lactate, pH values and SIDnl, NaEffect, ClEffect, APACHE II (first, last), and SOFA (first, last) scores were recorded. Radiometer ABL 800 (Denmark) was used for blood gas analysis. The variability of each parameter was calculated. The effect of variability of each parameter on 30-day ICU mortality was analyzed. Results: The variability of lactate (P<0.001, OR=0.580, 95% CI=0.505-0.652), pH (P=0.001, OR=0.004, 95% CI=0.000-0.104), NaEffect (P<0.001, OR=0.550, 95% CI=0.378-0.592), Ks (P<0.001, OR=0.385, 95% CI=0.244-0.565) values were protective factors of ICU mortality and Cls value was a risk factor (P=0.004, OR=1.095, 95% CI=1.024-1.164). Variability of ClEffect, SIDnl values did not affect ICU mortality. Conclusions: The variability of electrolytes is important. Electrolyte, effects, and lactate variability can guide treatment and fluid applications in ICU.
期刊介绍:
The articles published mainly deal with pre-hospital and hospital emergency medicine, cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation, critical cardiovascular disease, sepsis, severe infection, multiple organ failure, acute and critical diseases in different medical fields, sudden cardiac arrest, Intensive Care Unit (ICU), critical care medicine, disaster rescue medicine (earthquakes, fires, floods, mine disaster, air crash, et al.), acute trauma, acute toxicology, acute heart disease, and related topics. JAD sets up columns for special subjects in each issue.