RISK-FACTORS FOR PNEUMONIA AND FATALITY IN PATIENTS RECEIVING CONTINUOUS MECHANICAL VENTILATION

  • 1 May 1986
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 133 (5), 792-796
Abstract
We studied risk factors for nosocomial pneumonia and fatality in 233 intensive care unit patients requiring continuous mechanical ventilation. Ventilator-associated pneumonia was diagnosed in 49 (21%) of the 233 patients. Of the 8 risk factors univariately associated with the development of pneumonia, only the presence of an intracranial pressure monitor (p < 0.002), treatment with cimetidine (p < 0.01), hospitalization during fall-winter seasons (p < 0.04), and mechanical ventilator circuit changes every 24 h rather than every 48 h (p < 0.02) remained significant after stepwise logistic regression. The overall fatality rate for the 49 patients who developed ventilator-associated pneumonia was 55%. Ventilator-associated pneumonia was 1 of 18 variables univariately associated with overall patient fatality, but it was not among the 7 variables present after multivariate analysis. The data delineate risk factors associated with the development of nosocomial pneumonia and fatality in patients receiving continuous mechanical ventilation.

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