[Post-intensive care syndrome one month after hospital discharge of critical patients surviving COVID 19.] / Síndrome post-cuidados intensivos al mes del alta hospitalaria de pacientes críticos supervivientes a COVID 19.
Med Intensiva
; 2022 Sep 26.
Article
en Es
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36187363
OBJECTIVES: incidence of post-intensive care syndrome at one month after hospital discharge in surviving critically ill COVID 19 patients and to identify associated factors. DESIGN: prospective cohort study. SETTING: two multipurpose critical care units of the Araba University Hospital.Patients admitted to critical care units for severe acute respiratory failure secondary to COVID 19. INTERVENTION: none. VARIABLES OF INTEREST: demographic variables, length of stay, Charlson index, APACHE II, SOFA, days of mechanical ventilation, tracheotomy, delirium, tetraparesis of the critical patient, EuroQol 5D5L, Minimental Test. RESULTS: a deterioration in the EuroQol health index (HI) from 90.9 ± 16.9 to 70.9 ± 24.7 (p < 0.001) was observed. The impairment of the five EuroQol domains is: mobility (46.1%), usual activities (44.7%), discomfort/pain (30.7%), psychological domain (27.3%) and self-care (20.3%). The 61.5% suffer a significant decrease in their health index. Multivariate analysis by logistic regression shows us that delirium (OR= 3.01; 95%CI: 1.01-8.9; p= 0.047) and tracheostomy (OR= 2.37; 95%CI: 1.09-5.14; p= 0.029) show association with drop in EuroQoL 5D5L SI. The area under the ROC curve of the model is 67.3%, with a confidence interval between 58% and 76%. The model is calibrated using the Hosmer-Lemeshow test:(χ2=0.468; p=0.792). Only 1.2% of patients showed a score ≤ 24, clearly pathological, on the Folstein's Minimental Test. CONCLUSIONS: delirium and need for tracheostomy are associated with post-intensive care syndrome assessed by EuroQol 5D5L.
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Colección:
01-internacional
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Tipo de estudio:
Observational_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
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Risk_factors_studies
Idioma:
Es
Revista:
Med Intensiva
Año:
2022
Tipo del documento:
Article