AI Article Synopsis

  • Assessing illness severity in ICU patients is vital for predicting deterioration and prognosis, but traditional methods often disregard the interconnectedness of organ systems.
  • This study introduced a novel approach using transfer entropy (TE) to analyze the information flow between heart rate, respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation in sepsis patients, hypothesizing a correlation between TE and patient outcomes.
  • Findings indicated that specific patterns of information flow were linked to reduced mortality and lower risk of deterioration, emphasizing that physiological network mapping could effectively indicate illness severity in critically ill patients.

Article Abstract

Assessing illness severity in the ICU is crucial for early prediction of deterioration and prognosis. Traditional prognostic scores often treat organ systems separately, overlooking the body's interconnected nature. Network physiology offers a new approach to understanding these complex interactions. This study used the concept of transfer entropy (TE) to measure information flow between heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), and capillary oxygen saturation (SpO) in critically ill sepsis patients, hypothesizing that TE between these signals would correlate with disease outcome. The retrospective cohort study utilized the MIMIC III Clinical Database, including patients who met Sepsis-3 criteria on admission and had 30 minutes of continuous HR, RR, and SpO data. TE between the signals was calculated to create physiological network maps. Cox regression assessed the 48 relationship between cardiorespiratory network indices and both deterioration (SOFA score increase of ≥2 points at 48 hours) and 30-day mortality. Among 164 patients, higher information flow from SpO to HR [TE(SpO2→HR)] and reciprocal flow between HR and RR [TE(RR→HR) and TE(HR→RR)] were linked to reduced mortality, independent of age, mechanical ventilation, SOFA score, and comorbidity. Reductions in TE(HR → RR), TE(RR→HR), TE(SpO2→RR), and TE(SpO2→HR) were associated with increased risk of 48-hour deterioration. After adjustment for potential confounders, only TE(HR→RR) and TE(RR→HR) remained statistically significant. The study confirmed that physiological network mapping using routine signals in sepsis patients could indicate illness severity and that higher TE values were generally associated with improved outcomes. XXXX XXXX.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00642.2024DOI Listing

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