Impact of early myocardial injury on patients with severe pneumonia
Impact of early myocardial injury on patients with severe pneumonia

Impact of early myocardial injury on patients with severe pneumonia

Intern Emerg Med. 2024 Aug 10. doi: 10.1007/s11739-024-03743-z. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Pneumonia often causes myocardial damage. This study sought to understand how early myocardial injury affects severe pneumonia patients’ prognoses. This multi-center prospective cohort study from March 2020 to October 2023 comprised severe pneumonia patients. Binary logistic regression analysis examined how myocardial damage affects cardiac complications and acute renal injury (AKI). We used Spearman correlation analysis to examine the relationship between troponin I levels and the vasoactive inotropic score (VIS) in shock patients with myocardial injury. We used the Kaplan-Meier survival curve to evaluate the impact of myocardial injury on 30-day and 1-year survival rates. Mediation investigations examined how AKI and cardiac complications mediate myocardial injury and death. This study included 363 severe pneumonia patients, of whom 204 (56.2%) developed myocardial damage, 132 (36.4%) had cardiac problems, and 146 (40.2%) had AKI. Myocardial damage independently elevated the incidence of cardiac complications (OR = 2.548, 95% CI = 1.404-4.303, P = 0.002) and AKI (OR = 1.946, 95% CI = 1.177-3.219, P = 0.009). There was a positive link between troponin I and VIS in myocardial injury and shock patients (r = 0.43, P < 0.001). COX regression found myocardial injury to be a death risk (HR = 1.472, 95% CI = 1.043-2.077, P = 0.028). Adjusted Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed significantly decreased short-term and long-term survival rates with myocardial injury (log-rank test P < 0.05). The mediation study showed that cardiac complications and AKI mediated myocardial injury and death by 19.30% and 17.18%, respectively. Early myocardial injury in severe pneumonia patients raises the likelihood of cardiac problems, AKI, and refractory shock, reducing short- and long-term survival.

PMID:39127867 | DOI:10.1007/s11739-024-03743-z