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. 2010 Dec;57(10):639-47.
doi: 10.1016/s0034-9356(10)70300-5.

[Perioperative mortality: retrospective cross-sectional study of surgical patients who died between 2004 and 2008 in a tertiary care hospital]

[Article in Spanish]
Affiliations

[Perioperative mortality: retrospective cross-sectional study of surgical patients who died between 2004 and 2008 in a tertiary care hospital]

[Article in Spanish]
A Sabaté et al. Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim. 2010 Dec.

Abstract

Objective: Retrospective analysis of all surgical, early postoperative, and 1-week to detect risk factors.

Material and methods: A database was established to record clinical, anesthetic, and surgical variables, grouped as preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative factors, and reflecting comorbidities and postoperative complications. Each patient's cause of death was also recorded. Factors influencing mortality during surgery, at 48 hours, and at 1 week were explored by comparing frequencies to detect correlations.

Results: From 2004 to 2008, a total of 809 deaths occurred in the 82412 hospitalized surgical patients. Patients who died during surgery or within 48 hours were younger, had a higher ASA physical status classification, had more cardiovascular risk factors, were less likely to have a diagnosis of cancer, and had spent less time in hospital before the operation. Intraoperative complications, particularly bleeding and cardiac events, were more frequent in patients whose condition was more complex and who died during surgery; that pattern was similar but less marked in patients dying within 48 hours. The patients who died within 48 hours had a higher rate of postoperative hemodynamic complications; the patients who died during the week following surgery had higher rates of septic, neurologic, and respiratory complications.

Conclusions: Emergency surgery stands out as an important predictor of death during or after surgery; other significant risk factors are postoperative complications.

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