Clinical predictors of the adult respiratory distress syndrome

Paul E. Pepe, Ralph T. Potkin, Diane Holtman Reus, Leonard D. Hudson, C. James Carrico

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

517 Scopus citations

Abstract

One hundred thirty-six patients meeting our criteria for one or more of eight clinical conditions were prospectively observed for the development of the adult respiratory distress syndrome. A high risk population was identified, including those with sepsis syndrome (38 percent), documented aspiration of gastric contents (30 percent), multiple emergency transfusions (24 percent), and pulmonary contusion (17 percent). The risk from multiple major fractures appeared low but contributed to the risk from other factors. The risk associated with just one factor (25 percent) was compounded by the presence of two (42 percent) and three (85 percent) simultaneous factors, and this finding was more predictive of ARDS than the injury severity score or initial arterial oxygenation. Of the ARDS cases, 76 percent occurred in the initial 24 hours after meeting the criteria. ARDS did not occur after 72 hours unless there was late development of sepsis (3 of 136 patients).

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)124-130
Number of pages7
JournalThe American Journal of Surgery
Volume144
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1982

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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