Critical patients which requiring admission to intensive care (IT) are a special group of patients. In these patients the prevalence of anemia reported in studies is 75%. This prevalence is similar to that in the retrospective observational study conducted in our intensive care unit(ICU). Of the 783 patients included in the study, 551 (73.37%) had anemia on admission. Frequently anemia is present on discharge from ICU or hospital and may persist for an average of 11 weeks. Some studies have reported the presence of anemia as far as 6 months after discharge. It is widely accepted that anemia has a negative impact on rehabilitation and quality of life, but the treatment can not be exclusively based on blood products due to the risks associated with transfusion. Alternative treatments such as injectable iron or erythropoietin should be considered. The Transfusion Management Initiative Group recently issued recommendations on perioperative anemia. Similar recommendations for ICU have not yet been developed in Romania. The current study has two main purposes. The first to adopt the perioperative anemia diagnostic algorithm and adapt it to anemic patients on ICU; the second to identify patients with mixed anemia (inflammatory and iron deficient anemia) who can benefit from treatment with iron.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,000
Emergency Clinical County Hospital Cluj Napoca
Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania
Municipal Clinical Hospital Cluj
Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania
Change in hemoglobin levels during ICU stay
Time frame: 21 days: day 0=point 1; day 7=point 2; day 14=point 3; day 21 =point 4;
Number of transfusions during ICU stay
Time frame: Up to 3 months of hospital stay
Days spent on ICU
Time frame: Up to 3 months of hospital stay
Days spent in hospital
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Change in hemoglobin level during hospital stay
Time frame: Up to 3 months: week 3=point 1; week 6=point 2; week 9=point 3; week 12=point4
Number of hours of mechanical ventilation during hospital stay
Time frame: Up to 3 months
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