Severe Acute Pancreatitis Treated with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy System: Influence of Laboratory Markers.
Bogdan Mihnea CiuntuDan VintilăAdelina TanevskiȘtefan ChiriacGabriela ȘtefnescuIrina Mihaela AbdulanGheorghe G BalanBogdan VeliceasaOana Viola BădulescuGabriela GhigaAna Maria FătuAndrei GeorgescuMihai Bogdan VascuAlin Mihai VasilescuPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2023)
(1) Background: An open abdomen is a serious medical condition that requires prompt and effective treatment to prevent complications and improve patient outcomes. Negative pressure therapy (NPT) has emerged as a viable therapeutic option for temporary closure of the abdomen, offering several benefits over traditional methods. (2) Methods: We included 15 patients with pancreatitis who were hospitalized in the I-II Surgery Clinic of the Emergency County Hospital "St. Spiridon" from Iasi, Romania, between 2011-2018 and received NPT. (3) Results: Preoperatively, the mean IAP level was 28.62 mmHg, decreasing significantly postoperatively to 21.31 mmHg. The mean level of the highest IAP value recorded in pancreatitis patients treated with VAC did not differ significantly by lethality (30.31 vs. 28.50; p = 0.810). In vacuum-treated pancreatitis patients with a IAP level > 12, the probability of survival dropped below 50% during the first 7 days of stay in the ICU, so that after 20 days the probability of survival was approximately 20%. IAP enters the determinism of surgery with a sensitivity of 92.3% and a specificity of 99%, the cut-off value of IAP being 15 mmHg. (4) Conclusions: The timing of surgical decompression in abdominal compartment syndrome is very important. Consequently, it is vital to identify a parameter, easy to measure, within the reach of any clinician, so that the indication for surgical intervention can be made judiciously and without delay.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- healthcare
- surgical site infection
- randomized controlled trial
- emergency department
- public health
- intensive care unit
- early onset
- free survival
- risk factors
- atrial fibrillation
- combination therapy
- acute care
- electronic health record
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- stem cells