Background and Purpose-Procedures requiring specific skill sets often have been shown to depend on institutional volume, that is, centers receiving a higher volume observe better outcomes in those patients. This relationship recently has been shown to exist for subarachnoid hemorrhage(SAH) patients in a large study in the United States. We aim to examine this relationship for SAH patients in England, restricting analysis to specialist neurosurgical units. Methods-Aggregate counts of patients with SAH in 25 specialist neuroscience centers in England, from 2005 to 2011, were obtained from the Hospital Episode Statistics database maintained by the National Health Service Information Center. These data were linked with national mortality statistics to obtain counts of deaths. Poisson regression was used to investigate the relationship between institutional caseload of SAH and 6-month mortality from any cause. Six-month mortality rates and mortality ratios were computed. Results-Annual institutional caseload of admissions with SAH was inversely related to 6-month mortality (P=0.009; r 2 =0.26). Each 100-patient increase in annual patient volume was associated with a 24% reduction in mortality (adjusted mortality ratio, 0.76; confidence interval, 0.67-0.87). This relationship was consistent across the entire range of annual institutional caseloads examined (29-367 cases for the lowest and highest volumes seen in a single center in 1 year).
Conclusions-Our
Maximum deviation from preoperative serum sodium value is associated with increased hospital mortality in patients undergoing in-patient non-cardiac surgery. Specific preoperative and perioperative factors are associated with significant serum sodium changes.
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