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  4. Effects of Slowness, Frailty, Insufficient Intake, and Delirium in Patients Following Cardiac Surgery: A Cohort Study
 
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Effects of Slowness, Frailty, Insufficient Intake, and Delirium in Patients Following Cardiac Surgery: A Cohort Study

Journal
The Journal of cardiovascular nursing
Journal Volume
36
Journal Issue
6
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Teng, Chiao-Hsin
RON-BIN HSU  
NAI-HSIN CHI  
Wang, Shoei-Shen
YIH-SHARNG CHEN  
SSU-YUAN CHEN  
CHERYL CHIA-HUI CHEN  
DOI
10.1097/JCN.0000000000000797
URI
https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/589443
URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85118598009
Abstract
Background: Slow gait, frailty, insufficient postoperative caloric intake, and delirium, although seemingly distinct, can appear simultaneously in patients who underwent cardiac surgery.

Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate how these 4 factors overlap and how they individually and cumulatively affect cardiac surgery outcomes.

Methods: The effects of slowness (gait speed <0.83 m/s), frailty (≥3/5 Fried criteria), insufficient postoperative intake (<800 kcal/d), and delirium (defined by the Confusion Assessment Method) on hospital length of stay (LOS) and 3-month mortality were analyzed in 308 adult patients.

Results: Slowness, frailty, insufficient intake, and delirium affected 27.5%, 29.5%, 31.5%, and 13.3% of participants, respectively; only 42.2% (130/308) were free from these risks. Risk overlap was prevalent, as 26.3% (n = 81) had 2 or more risk factors. The most obvious overlap was in delirium (80% of delirious participants had other risks), suggesting that delirium cannot be managed in isolation. Individually, whereas slowness was associated only with longer LOS, frailty, insufficient intake, and delirium all led to longer LOS and higher mortality. When equally weighting each risk factor to analyze their cumulative effects, LOS increased by 4.4 days (95% confidence interval, 3.0-5.7) and 3-month mortality increased by 2.6-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.4-4.6), with each risk factor added, independent of participants' educational level, body mass index, and risk for cardiac surgery (EuroSCORE II ≥6).

Conclusions: Because a clinical overlap of slowness, frailty, insufficient postoperative intake, and delirium was evident in patients who underwent cardiac surgery, and risk of death and longer hospital stay increased with each factor added, care should be revised to consider these overlapping factors to maximize patient outcomes.

Results: Slowness, frailty, insufficient intake, and delirium affected 27.5%, 29.5%, 31.5%, and 13.3% of participants, respectively; only 42.2% (130/308) were free from these risks. Risk overlap was prevalent, as 26.3% (n = 81) had 2 or more risk factors. The most obvious overlap was in delirium (80% of delirious participants had other risks), suggesting that delirium cannot be managed in isolation. Individually, whereas slowness was associated only with longer LOS, frailty, insufficient intake, and delirium all led to longer LOS and higher mortality. When equally weighting each risk factor to analyze their cumulative effects, LOS increased by 4.4 days (95% confidence interval, 3.0-5.7) and 3-month mortality increased by 2.6-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.4-4.6), with each risk factor added, independent of participants' educational level, body mass index, and risk for cardiac surgery (EuroSCORE II ≥6).

Conclusions: Because a clinical overlap of slowness, frailty, insufficient postoperative intake, and delirium was evident in patients who underwent cardiac surgery, and risk of death and longer hospital stay increased with each factor added, care should be revised to consider these overlapping factors to maximize patient outcomes.
Subjects
caloric intake
cardiac surgery
delirium
frailty
slow gait speed
Publisher
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Type
journal article

臺大位居世界頂尖大學之列,為永久珍藏及向國際展現本校豐碩的研究成果及學術能量,圖書館整合機構典藏(NTUR)與學術庫(AH)不同功能平台,成為臺大學術典藏NTU scholars。期能整合研究能量、促進交流合作、保存學術產出、推廣研究成果。

To permanently archive and promote researcher profiles and scholarly works, Library integrates the services of “NTU Repository” with “Academic Hub” to form NTU Scholars.

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