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1.
Tanaffos ; 18(1): 74-78, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31423144

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Fluid balance and oliguria influence outcome in critically ill patients. Although, osmotic dieresis with hypernatraemia is a predictor of mortality in critically ill patients, the purpose of this study was to demonstrate the effect of polyuria as an independent predictor on weaning outcome in mechanically ventilated patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective, single center, cohort study was carried out at Imam Teaching Hospital Intensive Care Unit (ICU) on 263 adult mechanically ventilated patients. We collected data of these patients during the mean seven consecutive days before weaning from mechanical ventilator. Patients with polyuria (sustained urine output greater than 3000 ml/day) were compared with patients without polyuria. The primary endpoint was successful weaning and the secondary endpoints were the mechanical ventilation duration, post weaning length of ICU stay, post weaning length of hospitalization and rate of mortality. RESULTS: In 93 patients with polyuria, the mean age was 45.14±19.47 years in comparison of 170 patients without polyuria with mean age of 52.9±21.37 years (P=0.004). Fluid intake, urine output and temperature were significantly higher in patients with polyuria, but there were no statistical differences in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, serum electrolytes, urea and creatinine. No significant differences were found in primary and secondary endpoints including successful weaning, post weaning length of ICU stay, post weaning hospital duration and mortality, except for duration of mechanical ventilation (P=0.014). The area under the ROC curve for variables showed only seven days mean creatinine level before weaning which may act as a predictor of successful weaning (ROCAUC=0.67, 95% CI 0.61-0.73, P=0.0002). Serum creatinine level of 0.8 provided best overall combination of sensitivity and specificity for successful weaning (sensitivity 72.22%, 95% CI 54.8-85.8; specificity 61.19%, 95% CI 54.1-68.0). CONCLUSION: Polyuria cannot predict weaning outcome but maybe considered as a predictor of longer duration of mechanical ventilation and is probably associated with a subclinical renal dysfunction.

2.
J Biol Inorg Chem ; 13(1): 57-74, 2008 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17906879

ABSTRACT

Despite its importance in iron-overload diseases, little is known about the composition of plasma non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI). Using 30-kDa ultrafiltration, plasma from thalassemic patients consisted of both filterable and non-filterable NTBI, the filterable fraction representing less than 10% NTBI. Low filterability could result from protein binding or NTBI species exceeding 30 kDa. The properties of iron citrate and its interaction with albumin were therefore investigated, as these represent likely NTBI species. Iron permeated 5- or 12-kDa ultrafiltration units completely when complexes were freshly prepared and citrate exceeded iron by tenfold, whereas with 30-kDa ultrafiltration units, permeation approached 100% at all molar ratios. A g = 4.3 electron paramagnetic resonance signal, characteristic of mononuclear iron, was detectable only with iron-to-citrate ratios above 1:100. The ability of both desferrioxamine and 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyridin-4-one to chelate iron in iron citrate complexes also increased with increasing ratios of citrate to iron. Incremental molar excesses of citrate thus favour the progressive appearance of chelatable lower molecular weight iron oligomers, dimers and ultimately monomers. Filtration of iron citrate in the presence of albumin showed substantial binding to albumin across a wide range of iron-to-citrate ratios and also increased accessibility of iron to chelators, reflecting a shift towards smaller oligomeric species. However, in vitro experiments using immunodepletion or absorption of albumin to Cibacron blue-Sepharose indicate that iron is only loosely bound in iron citrate-albumin complexes and that NTBI is unlikely to be albumin-bound to any significant extent in thalassemic sera.


Subject(s)
Ferric Compounds/metabolism , Thalassemia/metabolism , Chelating Agents/metabolism , Humans , Kinetics , Metals/metabolism , Thermodynamics , Ultrafiltration
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