Background: Assessment of the critically ill patient requires arterial acid-base status. Venous blood could provide a surrogate, with methods transforming venous values to arterial, improving their utility. This manuscript compares two of these methods, a statistical and a physiological method. Where these methods are inadequate to describe critically ill patients, physiological mechanisms are explored to explain discrepancies.
Methods: 1109 paired arterial and central-venous blood samples, from patients diagnosed with acute circulatory failure, were available for retrospective analysis. Of these, 386 samples were used previously to validate the statistical model. The statistical method of Boulain et al. 2016 and the physiological method of Rees et al. 2006 were applied to the 386 sample pairs, and compared using Bland-Altman analysis. A subset of the 1109 samples, where the physiological method could not accurately calculate arterial values, were analysed further to assess the necessary addition of CO or strong acid at the tissues to account for arterio-venous differences.
Results: Bias (LoA) for comparison of calculated and measured arterial values (n = 386) were similar for the statistical method (pH: -0.003 (-0.051 to 0.045), PCO: -0.02 (-1.33 to 1.29 kPa)) and physiological method (pH: 0.009 (-0.033 to 0.052), PCO: -0.08 (-1.20 to 1.03 kPa)). In the 381 cases (of the 1109 sample pairs) defined as not accurately described, addition of a median CO concentration of 0.72 mmol/l in excess of aerobic metabolism, explained this for 333 cases, with the remainder requiring simultaneous strong acid transport.
Conclusion: Both methods appear equal in their ability to transform central-venous values to arterial, albeit warranting caution when using either in a critically ill population. The physiological approach was able to describe arterio-venous differences not explained by aerobic metabolism alone.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmpb.2021.106022 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Pediatr
January 2025
Department of Microbiology, Amala Institute of Medical Sciences, Thrissur, Kerala, 680555, India.
Clin Rheumatol
January 2025
Department of Pulmonology & Interventional Pulmonology, Caritas Hospital and Institute of Health Sciences, Thellakom, Kottayam, Kerala, India.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic, progressive illness marked by persistent synovitis that causes substantial functional disability. Treatment delays frequently affect health-related quality of life. Extra-articular features are prevalent findings in RA, which leads to significant morbidity and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Nutr
January 2025
Federal University of Health Sciences of Porto Alegre, Department of Nutrition, Postgraduate Program in Health Sciences, Porto Alegre, Brazil.
Studies have demonstrated that the quality and transparency of reporting Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs) in healthcare are low. This meta-research aimed to evaluate the adherence of nutrition CPGs for critically ill adults to the reporting RIGHT checklist and its association with the methodological quality assessed by AGREE II, along with other potential publication-related factors. A systematic search for CPGs until December 2024 was conducted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull World Health Organ
February 2025
Dean's Office, Medical College, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan.
Objective: To develop a tele-intensive care service providing peer-to-peer teleconsultation for physicians in remote and resource-constrained health-care settings for treatment of critically ill patients, and to evaluate the outcomes of the service.
Methods: The Aga Khan University started the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) tele-intensive care unit in 2020. A central command centre used two-way audiovisual technology to connect experienced intensive care specialists to clinical teams in remote hospital settings.
Front Sociol
January 2025
Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Dominant narratives of solid-organ transplantation foreground vocabularies of gratitude. Solid-organ transplantation is often celebrated in biomedicine for its high-tech innovation and specialization. But transplantation also includes the organizations that oversee the distribution of donated organs to potential recipients who disproportionately outnumber available organs.
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