Admission clinicopathological data, length of stay, cost and mortality in an equine neonatal intensive care unit

Journal of the South African Veterinary Association

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Admission clinicopathological data, length of stay, cost and mortality in an equine neonatal intensive care unit
 
Creator Saulez, M.N. Gummow, B. Slovis, N.M. Byars, T.D. Frazer, M. MacGillivray, K. Bain, F.T.
 
Subject — Clinicopathology; Critical Care; Equine; Financial Expense; Intensive Care Unit; Neonate; Survival
Description Veterinary internists need to prognosticate patients quickly and accurately in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). This may depend on laboratory data collected on admission, the cost of hospitalisation, length of stay (LOS) and mortality rate experienced in the NICU. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective study of 62 equine neonates admitted to a NICU of a private equine referral hospital to determine the prognostic value of venous clinicopathological data collected on admission before therapy, the cost of hospitalisation, LOS and mortality rate. The WBC count, total CO2 (TCO2) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) were significantly higher (P 0.05) and anion gap lower in survivors compared with nonsurvivors. A logistic regression model that included WBC count, hematocrit, albumin / globulin ratio, ALP, TCO2, potassium, sodium and lactate, was able to correctly predict mortality in 84 % of cases. Only anion gap proved to be an independent predictor of neonatal mortality in this study. In the study population, the overall mortality rate was 34 % with greatest mortality rates reported in the first 48 hours and again on day 6 of hospitalisation. Amongst the various clinical diagnoses, mortality was highest in foals after forced extraction during correction of dystocia. Median cost per day was higher for nonsurvivors while total cost was higher in survivors.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2007-06-04
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — —
Format application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/jsava.v78i3.308
 
Source Journal of the South African Veterinary Association; Vol 78, No 3 (2007); 153-157 2224-9435 1019-9128
 
Language eng
 
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https://jsava.co.za/index.php/jsava/article/view/308/291
 
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Rights Copyright (c) 2007 M.N. Saulez, B. Gummow, N.M. Slovis, T.D. Byars, M. Frazer, K. MacGillivray, F.T. Bain https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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