mdlinx mdlinx

Fatal and Near-Fatal Asthma in Children: The Critical Care Perspective The Journal of Pediatrics, 05/03/2012

Newth CJL et al. – Of the children ventilated in the Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) pediatric intensive care units (PICUs), 96% survived to hospital discharge. Most of the children who died experienced cardiac arrest before admission. Intubation outside the PICU was correlated with shorter duration of ventilation. Complications of barotrauma and neuromyopathy were uncommon. Practice patterns varied widely among the CPCCRN sites.

Methods
  • This was a retrospective chart abstraction across the 8 tertiary care PICUs of the Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN).
  • Inclusion criteria were children (aged 1-18 years) admitted between 2005 and 2009 (inclusive) for asthma who received ventilation (near-fatal) or died (fatal).
  • Data collected included medications, ventilator strategies, concomitant therapies, demographic information, and risk variables.

Results
  • Of the 261 eligible children, 33 (13%) had no previous history of asthma, 218 (84%) survived with no known complications, and 32 (12%) had complications.
  • Eleven (4%) died, 10 of whom had experienced cardiac arrest before admission.
  • Patients intubated outside the PICU had a shorter duration of ventilation (median, 25 hours vs 84 hours; P < .001).
  • African-Americans were disproportionately represented among the intubated children and had a shorter duration of intubation.
  • Barotrauma occurred in 15 children (6%) before admission.
  • Pharmacologic therapy was highly variable, with similar outcomes.

Read this article on The Journal of Pediatrics



Register now to view all the MDLinx contents (FREE)!

  • Stay current on the latest literature, research and clinical news
  • Get special communications and offers from MDLinx and our sponsors
  • Receive invitations to paid market research
View Samples and Register

Stay current - Media Tool

Newsletter
RSS
Follow Us
Facebook

Receive free subspecialty
"5-minute updates" via email

Sign up!

Send the E-mail Newsletter to a Colleague


Send

Subscribe to our free RSS feeds:
Get the latest news in your specialty automatically added to your newsreader or your personal My Yahoo!, Google, My MSN or My AOL page. Learn More

Follow Us on Twitter
Twitter is a rich source of instantly updated information. Join today and follow @MDLinx to start receiving tweets. Learn More

Close