7 research outputs found
Higher admission BUN levels are associated with adverse in-hospital outcome.
<p>Hazard ratios (HR) were obtained by logistic regression analysis.</p
An admission BUN concentration above 28mg/dL is associated with mortality after correction for several cofounders in a multivariate analysis.
<p>Hazard ratios (HR) were obtained by Cox regression analysis, for the multivariate regression models, a backward variable elimination was performed. Elimination criterion was a p-value of more than 0.10.</p
An admission BUN concentration above 28mg/dL, the optimal cut-off calculated by Youden Index, is associated with long term mortality in a matched-control analysis of 614 patients matched on APACHE2 scores, depicted as Kaplan-Meier curve, group comparison by log-rank test, p-value <0.001.
<p>An admission BUN concentration above 28mg/dL, the optimal cut-off calculated by Youden Index, is associated with long term mortality in a matched-control analysis of 614 patients matched on APACHE2 scores, depicted as Kaplan-Meier curve, group comparison by log-rank test, p-value <0.001.</p
Higher admission BUN levels are associated with adverse long-term outcome, depicted as Kaplan-Meier curve, group comparison by log-rank test, p-value <0.001.
<p>Higher admission BUN levels are associated with adverse long-term outcome, depicted as Kaplan-Meier curve, group comparison by log-rank test, p-value <0.001.</p
An admission BUN concentration above 28mg/dL is associated with long-term mortality regardless of admission diagnosis [pneumonia (n = 533), pulmonary embolism (n = 153), acute coronary syndrome (ACS; n = 1909), sepsis (n = 544) and heart failure (AHF, n = 611)].
<p>Hazard ratios (HR) were obtained by Cox regression analysis.</p
Laboratory and clinical baseline characteristics.
<p>4176 medical patients were split in three cohorts according to their BUN concentration at admission, comparison of means by ANOVA.</p
Admission BUN concentration is associated with long-term mortality regardless of admission diagnosis [pneumonia (n = 533), pulmonary embolism (n = 153), acute coronary syndrome (ACS; n = 1909), sepsis (n = 544) and heart failure (AHF, n = 611)].
<p>Hazard ratios (HR) were obtained by Cox regression analysis.</p