Publication | Open Access
Outcome of adults with sickle cell disease admitted to critical care – experience of a single institution in the UK
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Citations
3
References
2010
Year
Heart FailureSickle Cell DiseaseAcute CareClinical EpidemiologyPatient SafetyOutcomes ResearchScd PatientsCardiac CareChest InjuryAcute MedicineAcute Care SurgerySingle InstitutionMedicineHigh MortalityPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHospital Medicine
Sickle cell disease (SCD) patients are perceived to have a high mortality when admitted to the Critical Care Unit (CCU). We performed a retrospective analysis of all adult sickle admissions to CCU at a single centre over an 8-year period (1 January 2000 to 31 December 2007). Thirty-eight patients (14 male) were admitted 46 times to CCU; the commonest reasons for admission were acute chest syndrome (14, 30%), multi-organ failure (8, 17%) and planned post-elective surgery (7, 15%). CCU mortality for SCD patients was 19.6%, comparable to a CCU-wide mortality of 17.6% during the study period in the same institution. Re-admission to CCU was high (16% over the 8-year period) but did not increase mortality risk.
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