Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department

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Standard

Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department. / Poulsen, Anja; Schiødt, Frank Vinholt.

I: Danish Medical Journal, Bind 67, Nr. 12, A02190091, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Poulsen, A & Schiødt, FV 2020, 'Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department', Danish Medical Journal, bind 67, nr. 12, A02190091. <https://ugeskriftet.dk/dmj/dehydration-referral-diagnosis-medical-admittance-department>

APA

Poulsen, A., & Schiødt, F. V. (2020). Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department. Danish Medical Journal, 67(12), [A02190091]. https://ugeskriftet.dk/dmj/dehydration-referral-diagnosis-medical-admittance-department

Vancouver

Poulsen A, Schiødt FV. Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department. Danish Medical Journal. 2020;67(12). A02190091.

Author

Poulsen, Anja ; Schiødt, Frank Vinholt. / Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department. I: Danish Medical Journal. 2020 ; Bind 67, Nr. 12.

Bibtex

@article{a97da4a54efb4e10b268bdcba92a1edd,
title = "Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Patients are frequently admitted to hospital on suspicion of dehydration. The diagnosis is widely used for referral to admittance departments. We aimed to prospectively evaluate patients admitted with a diagnosis of dehydration in terms of the accuracy of this diagnosis, to evaluate clinical and biochemical data and to evaluate the outcome and provide a review of the concept of dehydration.METHODS: Patients who had dehydration as their primary referral diagnosis were prospectively included over a 70-day period. We defined dehydration based on osmolality > 295 mmol/kg. Biochemistry, imaging and outcome were examined.RESULTS: A total of 128 patients were admitted on suspicion of dehydration, accounting for 7.5% of all patients admitted. In all, 82 of the 128 (64%) were dehydrated. The diagnoses at discharge included infections mainly, but also diagnoses such as cancers and stroke were registered. Mortality during hospitalisation was 9%. Mortality at six months was 27% for the entire group; 37% in the dehydration group versus 11% in the non-dehydration group (p = 0.002). Older age was the strongest predictor of death.CONCLUSIONS: Suspicion of dehydration is a frequent admittance diagnosis. We suspect that a referral diagnosis of dehydration often reflects an unspecified concern rather than a real suspicion of dehydration. Patients with dehydration had a high in-hospital and six-month mortality, reflecting the severity of this diagnosis.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: The Danish Data Protection Agency, R. no. 05380, BFH-2017-029.",
author = "Anja Poulsen and Schi{\o}dt, {Frank Vinholt}",
note = "Articles published in the DMJ are “open access”. This means that the articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
volume = "67",
journal = "Danish Medical Journal",
issn = "2245-1919",
publisher = "Almindelige Danske Laegeforening",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dehydration as referral diagnosis to a medical admittance department

AU - Poulsen, Anja

AU - Schiødt, Frank Vinholt

N1 - Articles published in the DMJ are “open access”. This means that the articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Patients are frequently admitted to hospital on suspicion of dehydration. The diagnosis is widely used for referral to admittance departments. We aimed to prospectively evaluate patients admitted with a diagnosis of dehydration in terms of the accuracy of this diagnosis, to evaluate clinical and biochemical data and to evaluate the outcome and provide a review of the concept of dehydration.METHODS: Patients who had dehydration as their primary referral diagnosis were prospectively included over a 70-day period. We defined dehydration based on osmolality > 295 mmol/kg. Biochemistry, imaging and outcome were examined.RESULTS: A total of 128 patients were admitted on suspicion of dehydration, accounting for 7.5% of all patients admitted. In all, 82 of the 128 (64%) were dehydrated. The diagnoses at discharge included infections mainly, but also diagnoses such as cancers and stroke were registered. Mortality during hospitalisation was 9%. Mortality at six months was 27% for the entire group; 37% in the dehydration group versus 11% in the non-dehydration group (p = 0.002). Older age was the strongest predictor of death.CONCLUSIONS: Suspicion of dehydration is a frequent admittance diagnosis. We suspect that a referral diagnosis of dehydration often reflects an unspecified concern rather than a real suspicion of dehydration. Patients with dehydration had a high in-hospital and six-month mortality, reflecting the severity of this diagnosis.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: The Danish Data Protection Agency, R. no. 05380, BFH-2017-029.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Patients are frequently admitted to hospital on suspicion of dehydration. The diagnosis is widely used for referral to admittance departments. We aimed to prospectively evaluate patients admitted with a diagnosis of dehydration in terms of the accuracy of this diagnosis, to evaluate clinical and biochemical data and to evaluate the outcome and provide a review of the concept of dehydration.METHODS: Patients who had dehydration as their primary referral diagnosis were prospectively included over a 70-day period. We defined dehydration based on osmolality > 295 mmol/kg. Biochemistry, imaging and outcome were examined.RESULTS: A total of 128 patients were admitted on suspicion of dehydration, accounting for 7.5% of all patients admitted. In all, 82 of the 128 (64%) were dehydrated. The diagnoses at discharge included infections mainly, but also diagnoses such as cancers and stroke were registered. Mortality during hospitalisation was 9%. Mortality at six months was 27% for the entire group; 37% in the dehydration group versus 11% in the non-dehydration group (p = 0.002). Older age was the strongest predictor of death.CONCLUSIONS: Suspicion of dehydration is a frequent admittance diagnosis. We suspect that a referral diagnosis of dehydration often reflects an unspecified concern rather than a real suspicion of dehydration. Patients with dehydration had a high in-hospital and six-month mortality, reflecting the severity of this diagnosis.FUNDING: not relevant.TRIAL REGISTRATION: The Danish Data Protection Agency, R. no. 05380, BFH-2017-029.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33269691

VL - 67

JO - Danish Medical Journal

JF - Danish Medical Journal

SN - 2245-1919

IS - 12

M1 - A02190091

ER -

ID: 269794762