ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia
Cross-source consensus on ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
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Highlighted claims
- Acquired hyperchloraemia was defined as normal chloride at ICU admission followed by hyperchloraemia 48 hours later. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital
- Patients with acquired hyperchloraemia had higher in-hospital mortality than patients with persistent normochloraemia. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital
- After adjustment, ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia remained independently associated with increased all-cause in-hospital mortality. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital
- ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia was the study's main exposure of interest among patients with normal chloride at ICU admission. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital
- Among 1131 included patients with normal chloride at admission, 187 developed acquired hyperchloraemia within 48 hours. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital
- Sensitivity analyses consistently supported the association between acquired hyperchloraemia and higher in-hospital mortality. — Impact of ICU-acquired hyperchloraemia on all-cause in-hospital mortality in adult patients who were critically ill: a retrospective cohort study in a tertiary grade A hospital