Objective: To determine the performance of each of the available pediatric index of mortality (PIM) scores, by assessing the capability for discrimination and calibration in patients admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit in Bogotá.
Design And Setting: We designed a retrospective, observational cohort study, which included all patients aged between a month and 17 years and 364 days, admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit of a high complexity university hospital between April 1, 2016 and December 31, 2018. We analyzed the standardized mortality ratio, discrimination, calibration, and net reclassification index (NRI) for each model.
Major interventions in cardiovascular surgery of patients with aortic pathology can result in the compromise of perfusion of organs distant from the surgery site, the gastrointestinal tract being one of the most sensitive to hemodynamic changes, especially in extreme age groups with a high risk of morbidity and mortality. The case of a young infant is reported, with a history of Turner syndrome, who is led to correction of aortic coarctation plus arch hypoplasia, presenting as a postoperative complication a picture of emphysematous gastritis with systemic compromise, a process that was favored by low cardiac output post-pump and the presence of early urosepsis, all of which was interpreted as part of the spectrum of non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia syndrome. Its early diagnosis made possible a prompt intervention consisting of parenteral nutritional support, acid brake, broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy and strict radiological follow-up, achieving complete resolution of her symptoms, without short-term complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF