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Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury In A Paediatric Intensive Care Unit Of Pakistan.

2018· article· en· 5 citations· W2770763547 sur OpenAlex

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Porte sur le CanadaSon objet est le Canada, où que soient ses auteurs.

Aucune affiliation canadienne. Une base fondée sur la seule affiliation (le devis habituel) n'aurait jamais vu ce travail. C'est l'un des travaux qui justifient l'inversion de la base.

Le tri à trois modèles

les 1 000 travaux triés →

Les trois modèles l'ont jugé hors champ.

strate : about_only · poids de sondage : 3321.24 (l'échantillon est stratifié ; tout taux calculé sans le poids est faux)
Claude Opus 4.8OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

Cohort study of transfusion-related lung injury in a Pakistani PICU; a clinical epidemiology question.

GPT-5.6 (high)OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

This studies transfusion-related lung injury in children, not research itself.

Grok 4.5OUT
genre : empirical
porte sur le Canada: non
confiance: high

Clinical cohort study of TRALI incidence in a Pakistani PICU; transfusion medicine outcomes.

Résumé

BACKGROUND: Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury (TRALI) is a major cause of transfusionrelated morbidity and mortality in the intensive care unit setting. There is a paucity of such data from Pakistan. The purpose of this study is to assess the incidence and outcome of TRALI in critically ill children admitted in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) of Pakistan. METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study of all critically ill or injured children who developed TRALI or "possible" TRALI after blood transfusion based on Canadian Conference Consensus criteria in a closed multidisciplinary-cardiothoracic PICU from January 2012 to June 2016. The demographic, pertinent clinical data, transfusion-related variables and outcome of all cases of TRALI were recorded. RESULTS: Of total 2975 admissions in the PICU during study period, 35.8% (1066) received 5124 blood components. Eleven cases developed TRALI in our cohort. The incidence of TRALI was 1.03% per patient transfused and 0.19% (19/100,000 per blood product transfused). Median age was 8 (range 1-14) yr., 70 % (n=8) were male. Mean PRISM-III score was 16.3±6.7. Mean time interval for onset of TRALI was 2.73±1.67 hr. The postoperative cardiac surgical and hematology-oncology patients were most common categories (63.6%). Plasma and platelets were the most commomly identified trigger of TRALI. The case-specific mortality was 63.6% and the overall mortality was 10.7% (p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of TRALI in critically ill children is low, but is associated with high mortality. Critically ill children with high PRISM-III score, postoperative cardiac surgical and hematology-oncology patients are often affected by TRALI.

Conservé avec la notice de tri, où il sert de preuve aux étiquettes ci-dessus.

La notice

Revue
PubMed
Thématique
Blood transfusion and management
Domaine
Medicine
Établissements canadiens
Organismes subventionnaires
Mots-clés
MedicineIncidence (geometry)Pediatric intensive care unitIntensive care unitBlood productRetrospective cohort studyCohortTransfusion-related acute lung injuryBlood transfusionCohort studyPediatricsGuidelineIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineInternal medicineLungSurgeryPulmonary edema
Résumé présent dans OpenAlex
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