학술논문

Antithrombin deficiency is associated with mortality and impaired organ function in septic pediatric patients: a retrospective study
Document Type
article
Source
PeerJ, Vol 6, p e5538 (2018)
Subject
Children
Antithrombin
Mortality
Sepsis
Organ failure
C-reactive protein
Medicine
Language
English
ISSN
2167-8359
Abstract
Background Sepsis remains a major problem in intensive care medicine. It is often accompanied by coagulopathies, leading to thrombotic occlusion of small vessels with subsequent organ damage and even fatal multi-organ failure. Prediction of the clinical course and outcome—especially in the heterogeneous group of pediatric patients—is difficult. Antithrombin, as an endogenous anticoagulant enzyme with anti-inflammatory properties, plays a central role in controling coagulation and infections. We investigated the relationship between antithrombin levels and organ failure as well as mortality in pediatric patients with sepsis. Methods Data from 164 patients under the age of 18, diagnosed with sepsis, were retrospectively reviewed. Antithrombin levels were recorded three days before to three days after peak C-reactive protein to correlate antithrombin levels with inflammatory activity. Using the concept of developmental haemostasis, patients were divided into groups