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. 1988 Dec;16(12):1171-6.
doi: 10.1097/00003246-198812000-00001.

Prospective study of clinical bleeding in intensive care unit patients

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Prospective study of clinical bleeding in intensive care unit patients

R B Brown et al. Crit Care Med. 1988 Dec.

Abstract

We investigated prospectively clinical bleeding in 1,328 consecutive patients admitted to a medical/surgical ICU over 1 yr. One hundred thirty-eight (10.4%) patients bled after ICU admission, and an additional 388 (29.2%) bled coincident with admission. The upper GI tract was the site of bleeding in 34.8% of patients whose bleeds commenced in the ICU, and accounted for 22% of total sites. Patients with clinical bleeding after ICU admission had a significantly (p less than .001) higher likelihood of death than those who did not bleed, and those with multiple bleeding sites had a higher mortality (54.9%) than those with single sites (31%) (p less than .006). Multiple logistic regression analyses revealed that risk ratios (RR) for bleeding after ICU admission were mechanical ventilation (RR = 1.82), nutritional failure (RR = 3.45), acute renal failure (RR = 3.36), antiulcer medication (RR = 3.36), and anticoagulants (RR = 4.19). No antibiotics could be specifically incriminated. This study defines the scope, characteristics, and importance of bleeding in ICU patients and establishes risk factors.

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