The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is straining the healthcare system, particularly for patients with severe outcomes requiring admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU). This study investigated the potential associations of obesity and diabetes with COVID-19 severe outcomes, assessed as ICU admittance. Medical history, demographic and patient characteristics of a retrospective cohort (1158 patients) hospitalized with COVID-19 were analysed at a single centre in Kuwait. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to explore the associations between different variables and ICU admittance. Of 1158 hospitalized patients, 271 had diabetes, 236 had hypertension and 104 required admittance into the ICU. From patients with available measurements, 157 had body mass index (BMI) ≥25 kg/m . Univariate analysis showed that overweight, obesity class I and morbid obesity were associated with ICU admittance. Patients with diabetes were more likely to be admitted to the ICU. Two models for multivariate regression analysis assessed either BMI or diabetes on ICU outcomes. In the BMI model, class I and morbid obesities were associated with ICU admittance. In the diabetes model, diabetes was associated with increased ICU admittance, whereas hypertension had a protective effect on ICU admittance. In our cohort, overweight, obesity and diabetes in patients with COVID-19 were associated with ICU admittance, increasing the risk of poor outcomes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cob.12414 | DOI Listing |
Diagnostics (Basel)
December 2024
Clinic of Lung Diseases, Ankara University Health Practise and Research Hospitals, 06050 Ankara, Türkiye.
Hypercapnic respiratory failure (HRF) is a primary cause of admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU). This study aimed to investigate the factors that affect the length of hospital stay in HRF patients. This study was designed as a retrospective, cross-sectional analysis of patients who were admitted to the ICU because of HRF between 2022 and 2024.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Crit Care
January 2025
Eliotte L. Hirshberg is an assistant professor of pediatrics, Shock Trauma Intensive Care Unit, Intermountain Medical Center, Murray, Utah; Center for Humanizing Critical Care, Intermountain Health, Murray, Utah; Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Intermountain Medical Center, Salt Lake City, Utah; and Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City.
Background: Family satisfaction with intensive care is a measure of patient experience and patient-centered care. Among the factors that might influence family satisfaction are the timing of patient admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU), the ICU environment, and individual health care providers.
Objective: To evaluate family satisfaction with the ICU and to explore associations between satisfaction and specific characteristics of the ICU stay.
Chemotherapy
November 2024
Department of Internal Medicine and Clinical Immunology, Archet Hospital, Côte d'Azur University, Nice, France.
Introduction: Our study aimed to identify relevant features associated with the reprisal of antineoplastic treatment in patients with solid cancers after unplanned admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU) and to assess 60th-month survival in patients with solid neoplasms admitted to the ICU.
Methods: This single-centre retrospective study of critically ill patients with active cancers was performed over a 13-year period (2005-2018). Patients' characteristics, overall survival, and antineoplastic treatment reprisal were extracted from digital medical files and compared.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol
December 2024
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Maastricht University Medical Center+, Maastricht, Netherlands (the); Maastricht University Medical Center+, GROW-School for Oncology and Developmental Biology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, PO Box 5800, 6202 AZ Maastricht, Netherlands (the).
Antibiotics (Basel)
September 2024
Department of Life Science, Atlantic Technological University, F91 YW50 Sligo, Ireland.
Neonatal infectious disease continues to result in high rates of infant morbidity and mortality. Early- and late-onset disease represent difficult to detect and difficult to treat illnesses, particularly when antimicrobial resistant pathogens are present. Newborns are immunodeficient and are at increased risk of vertical and horizontal infection, with preterm infants increasingly susceptible.
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