Selected article for: "mechanical ventilation and refractory hypoxemia"

Author: Dushianthan, Ahilanandan; Abdul, Nabil; Dmochowski, Josh; James, Izabela; Heesom, Lesley; Westwood, Jennifer; Effney, Judith; Bruty, Sarah; Saeed, Kordo; Rangarajan, Savita; Kazmi, Rashid
Title: Predictive Role of Haematological Determinants on Outcomes of Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients Admitted to Intensive Care Unit
  • Cord-id: abd1r5y8
  • Document date: 2021_7_30
  • ID: abd1r5y8
    Snippet: Background: The mortality of patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with COVID-19 remains significantly high. Severe COVID-19 pneumonia is characterised by refractory hypoxemia with significant shunting due to a combination of alveolar damage, vascular vasoconstriction, and occlusion due to microthrombi. Similar pathological features are seen in extra-pulmonary organs. However, the influence of thrombotic markers on the risk of mechanical ventilation (MV) and the development of acute
    Document: Background: The mortality of patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with COVID-19 remains significantly high. Severe COVID-19 pneumonia is characterised by refractory hypoxemia with significant shunting due to a combination of alveolar damage, vascular vasoconstriction, and occlusion due to microthrombi. Similar pathological features are seen in extra-pulmonary organs. However, the influence of thrombotic markers on the risk of mechanical ventilation (MV) and the development of acute kidney injury (AKI) is not fully defined. Methods: This was a cross-sectional evaluation of haemostatic and thrombotic markers of COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU to determine their predictability for the development of thromboembolism and the need for non-invasive or invasive MV, development of AKI, and mortality. Results: An extended coagulation profile was obtained in 71 SARS-CoV-2 positive patients admitted to the ICU. All patients had acute severe hypoxic respiratory failure and required non-invasive or invasive MV. There were increases in peak D-dimer (3.0 mg/L), factor VIII levels (255 IU/dL) vWF antigen (471 IU/dL) with low ADAMTS13 activity (54.7 IU/dL) compared to the reference ranges. Peak D-dimer was consistently raised in patients who developed AKI and required invasive MV. ADAMTS13/vWF/platelet axis was associated with disease severity, multi-organ dysfunction, and mortality. Conclusions: Haematological abnormalities are a common feature of severe COVID-19 pneumonia. We found peak D-dimer and vWF-ADAMTS13-platelet axis are associated with increased ICU severity and outcome in severe COVID-19 patients admitted to ICU. Larger studies are needed to evaluate this more comprehensively.

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