医学
射血分数
急诊科
败血症
内科学
心脏病学
优势比
心肌病
置信区间
回顾性队列研究
单中心
心力衰竭
精神科
作者
Ryan Tucker,Kendrick Williams,Nik Theyyunni,Christopher Fung
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jemermed.2022.06.002
摘要
Sepsis is a high mortality condition characterized by multi-organ dysfunction. Sepsis-induced cardiomyopathy (SIC) refers to cardiac dysfunction in sepsis.Our goal was to determine whether SIC can be detected in the emergency department (ED) using focused cardiac ultrasound (FCU).A retrospective analysis of adults presenting to a single ED with sepsis over a 21-month period was performed. Patients were included if they met clinical sepsis criteria, received an FCU by an emergency physician in the ED, and a baseline echocardiogram performed in the previous 12 months. SIC was defined as a significant decrease in estimated left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) by FCU relative to baseline. Demographic and outcome characteristics were compared between three cohorts: patients with normal baseline LVEF and no decrease on presentation, patients with decreased LVEF and no significant change, and those with a significant decrease in LVEF from their normal baseline (SIC).There were 110 patients that met inclusion criteria: 89 patients (81%) in the normal LVEF group, 12 (11%) in the prior decreased LVEF group, and 9 (8%) in the SIC group. Unadjusted mortality at 90 days for patients with SIC (67%) and prior decreased LVEF (58%) was significantly higher than those with normal EF (29%) (p = 0.019). When adjusted for age, gender, Charlson Index score, and lactate > 4.0 mmol/L, SIC was associated with mortality at 90 days (odds ratio 6.1, 95% confidence interval 1.37-32.92).SIC can be detected using FCU by emergency physicians in the ED and is associated with increased 90-day mortality.
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