There is a growing interest in research aimed at better understanding the disease status or predicting the prognosis of patients with simple blood tests associated with systemic inflammation. The neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), lymphocyte-monocyte ratio (LMR), platelet-lymphocyte ratio (PLR), and mean platelet volume (MPV) can be used as factors to determine the prognosis of patients in various clinical situations. However, reference values for these attributes based on large, healthy populations have yet to be determined.From January 2014 to December 2016, data from routine blood analyses were collected from healthy patients in the checkup center of a tertiary hospital in Seoul, South Korea. Retrospective data review was then performed on an electronic medical record system. Data were treated anonymously as only age, sex, body mass index, medical history including cancer diagnosis, medications, and smoking status were considered. After the initial screen, we had a collection of 12,160 samples from patients without any medical history, including cancer treatment. This patient pool consisted of 6268 (51.5%, median age 47 years) and 5892 (48.5%, median age 46 years) male and female patients, respectively. The mean NLR across all ages was 1.65 (0.79), and the values for men and women were 1.63 (0.76) and 1.66 (0.82), respectively. The mean LMR, PLR, and MPV were 5.31 (1.68), 132.40 (43.68), and 10.02 (0.79), respectively. This study provides preliminary reference data on LMR, PLR, and MPV from different age and sex groups in South Korea. The results suggest that different cutoff values should be applied to the various patient populations.
Malnutrition is common in the critically ill patients and known to cause a variety of negative clinical outcomes. However, various conventional methods for nutrition assessment have several limitations. We hypothesized that body composition data, as measured using bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA), may have a significant role in evaluating nutritional status and predicting clinical outcomes in critically ill patients. We gathered clinical, biochemical, and BIA data from 66 critically ill patients admitted to an intensive care unit. Patients were divided into three nutritional status groups according to their serum albumin level and total lymphocyte counts. The BIA results, conventional indicators of nutrition status, and clinical outcomes were compared and analyzed retrospectively. Results showed that the BIA indices including phase angle (PhA), extracellular water (ECW), and ECW/total body water (TBW) were significantly associated with the severity of nutritional status. Particularly, PhA, an indicator of the health of the cell membrane, was higher in the well-nourished patient group, whereas the edema index (ECW/TBW) was higher in the severely malnourished patient group. PhA was positively associated with albumin and ECW/TBW was negatively associated with serum albumin, hemoglobin, and duration of mechanical ventilation. In non-survivors, PhA was significantly lower and both ECW/TBW and %TBW/fat free mass were higher than in survivors. In conclusion, several BIA indexes including PhA and ECW/TBW may be useful for nutritional assessment and represent significant prognostic factors in the care of critically ill patients.
Our results show that autonomic alterations could be a significant feature of patients with delirium in the ICU, suggesting the potential for the automatic prediction and early detection of delirium based on HRV with machine learning.
SummaryProlongation of the corrected QT (QTc) interval is associated with various anaesthetic drugs. The QTc prolongation may become more exacerbated during laryngoscopy and intubation, which is possibly caused by sympathetic stimulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of fentanyl on the QTc interval during propofol induction in healthy patients. The patients were randomly allocated to receive either fentanyl (n = 25) or saline (n = 25) before induction. The QTc interval was significantly prolonged immediately after intubation in control group compared to preceding values, but it did not change in the fentanyl group. The number of patients with the prolonged QTc interval exceeding 20 ms immediately after intubation compared to the baseline values was 14 in the control group and seven in the fentanyl group. In conclusion, pretreatment with fentanyl 2 μg.kg−1 significantly attenuated QTc prolongation associated with laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation during propofol induction.
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