Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)

Objective — To analyze the effect of pneumonia on mortality among patients with circulatory decompensation. Material and methods — The study was based on the ORACLE-RF registry containing information obtained from 20 cities in Russia. Patients were monitored for one year. The research included men a...

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Main Authors: Alexander G. Arutyunov, Anna V. Sokolova, Grigoriy P. Arutyunov, Dmitry O. Dragunov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Limited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov) 2020-06-01
Series:Russian Open Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.romj.org/node/318
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spelling doaj-54a5e040260a4fefba488d77452c20dc2021-10-06T12:15:49ZengLimited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov)Russian Open Medical Journal2304-34152020-06-0192e020510.15275/rusomj.2020.0205Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)Alexander G. ArutyunovAnna V. SokolovaGrigoriy P. ArutyunovDmitry O. DragunovObjective — To analyze the effect of pneumonia on mortality among patients with circulatory decompensation. Material and methods — The study was based on the ORACLE-RF registry containing information obtained from 20 cities in Russia. Patients were monitored for one year. The research included men and women with symptoms of chronic heart failure during circulatory decompensation period. The patients' average age was 67±13 years. Final analysis included 2404 patients. Results — Hospital mortality was at 9%. By the 30th day of observation, overall mortality rate stood at 13%. Within the year, the overall mortality rate was 43%. Pneumonia and chronic kidney disease (CKD) had the most pronounced effect on death risk – 49.5% and 47.2%. The study showed that patients who do not have pneumonia and CKD among other associated diseases were 2.5 times more likely to survive after 360 days of observation than patients who have them among other associated diseases. The chances of favorable prognosis in patients without pneumonia are 1.7 times higher than in patients with pneumonia among other diseases. Conclusion — Pneumonia probably triggered the decompensation mechanism and significantly increased mortality in these patients.http://www.romj.org/node/318chronic kidney diseasechronic heart failurecirculatory decompensationpneumonia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander G. Arutyunov
Anna V. Sokolova
Grigoriy P. Arutyunov
Dmitry O. Dragunov
spellingShingle Alexander G. Arutyunov
Anna V. Sokolova
Grigoriy P. Arutyunov
Dmitry O. Dragunov
Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
Russian Open Medical Journal
chronic kidney disease
chronic heart failure
circulatory decompensation
pneumonia
author_facet Alexander G. Arutyunov
Anna V. Sokolova
Grigoriy P. Arutyunov
Dmitry O. Dragunov
author_sort Alexander G. Arutyunov
title Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
title_short Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
title_full Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
title_fullStr Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (ORACLE-RF)
title_sort analysis of the effect of pneumonia on mortality (oracle-rf)
publisher Limited liability company «Science and Innovations» (Saratov)
series Russian Open Medical Journal
issn 2304-3415
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Objective — To analyze the effect of pneumonia on mortality among patients with circulatory decompensation. Material and methods — The study was based on the ORACLE-RF registry containing information obtained from 20 cities in Russia. Patients were monitored for one year. The research included men and women with symptoms of chronic heart failure during circulatory decompensation period. The patients' average age was 67±13 years. Final analysis included 2404 patients. Results — Hospital mortality was at 9%. By the 30th day of observation, overall mortality rate stood at 13%. Within the year, the overall mortality rate was 43%. Pneumonia and chronic kidney disease (CKD) had the most pronounced effect on death risk – 49.5% and 47.2%. The study showed that patients who do not have pneumonia and CKD among other associated diseases were 2.5 times more likely to survive after 360 days of observation than patients who have them among other associated diseases. The chances of favorable prognosis in patients without pneumonia are 1.7 times higher than in patients with pneumonia among other diseases. Conclusion — Pneumonia probably triggered the decompensation mechanism and significantly increased mortality in these patients.
topic chronic kidney disease
chronic heart failure
circulatory decompensation
pneumonia
url http://www.romj.org/node/318
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