1.Hypocalcemia is an "accelerator" for the death of patients with nervous system injury
Nanjun ZHOU ; Zhanhong TANG ; Jie LAI
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2018;30(9):907-909
In clinical diagnosis and treatment, the occurrence of hypocalcemia during severe nervous system damage is not uncommon but is easily neglected so that delayed treatment, further injurie and even death. It can provide theoretical support for the evaluation of the early identification in calcium ion imbalance and the development of standard calcium ion monitoring program for patients with critical disease by integrating the clinical symptoms induced by low blood calcium based on severe nervous system injury and analyzing the correlation among them.
2. Mild hypothermia can delay the occurrence of post-stroke infection: a propensity score matched-cohort study
Nanjun ZHOU ; Jie LAI ; Liangyan JIANG ; Juntao HU ; Yiping PAN ; Zhanhong TANG
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2019;31(12):1435-1439
Objective:
To evaluate the effect of mild hypothermia on the incidence of post-stroke infection and explore the relationship between mild hypothermia and outcome of stroke patients by using propensity score matching.
Methods:
Patients hospitalized in department of intensive care unit (ICU), neurology and neurosurgery in the First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University due to stroke from March 2012 to April 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. According to whether or not mild hypothermia was provided, they were divided into the normal thermic group (NT group) and mild hypothermia treatment group (MHT group). The MHT group patients were matched with the NT group patients by the propensity score matching method at a ratio of 1∶1. The observation period was within the first 7 days after admission. Baseline characteristics including age, gender, type of stroke, comorbidities, acute physiology and chronic health evaluation Ⅱ(APACHEⅡ) score and Glasgow coma score (GCS) on admission, surgical operation, dysphagia, invasive procedures and outcomes of these patients had been analyzed. The primary outcome was incidence of post-stroke infection, and the secondary outcomes included the time of initial infection (TII, the duration from stroke to initial infection), hospital mortality, sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) at discharge, incidence of complications such as arrhythmia, coagulation dysfunction and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS).
Results:
201 stroke patients were enrolled, 41.8% (84/201) of whom underwent mild hypothermia. Comparison with NT group before matching, there were more males in MHT group (71.4% vs. 56.4%), the proportion of surgical operation, mechanical ventilation, deep vein catheterization and gastric catheterization were higher (78.6% vs. 54.7%, 84.5% vs. 39.3%, 90.5% vs. 37.6%, 98.8% vs. 70.9%), and so as incidence of infection (90.5% vs. 72.6%), in-hospital mortality (27.4% vs. 12.8%) and TII [hours: 62.00 (35.25, 93.00) vs. 42.00 (28.50, 69.50)]. All the differences were statistically significant (all