Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis

Background and objectives. Sepsis is a common diagnosis among ICU patients. Therefore, the present study aimed at assessing the prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) in sepsis. Materials and methods. The study was done as a retrospective analysis on adult patients of age...

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Main Authors: N. Krishna Geetha, K.I.S.N Vaishnavi, Kakumani Jagadeswar, A. Gowri Shankar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Amaltea Medical Publishing House 2024-06-01
Series:Romanian Journal of Infectious Diseases
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Online Access:https://rjid.com.ro/articles/2024.2/RJID_2024_2_Art-09.pdf
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author N. Krishna Geetha
K.I.S.N Vaishnavi
Kakumani Jagadeswar
A. Gowri Shankar
author_facet N. Krishna Geetha
K.I.S.N Vaishnavi
Kakumani Jagadeswar
A. Gowri Shankar
author_sort N. Krishna Geetha
collection DOAJ
description Background and objectives. Sepsis is a common diagnosis among ICU patients. Therefore, the present study aimed at assessing the prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) in sepsis. Materials and methods. The study was done as a retrospective analysis on adult patients of age greater than 18 years who were admitted with sepsis to an urban tertiary care ICU at Saveetha Medical College and Hospital. Results. The study found that NTIS can manifest as a fall in T3 alone, T4 alone, or both T3 and T4. A combined fall in T3 and T4 strongly correlates with poor primary outcomes (28-day mortality) compared to a fall in either hormone alone. Advancing age in septic patients leads to a greater combined fall in T3 and T4 values and an increased mortality rate, especially among females. The overall mortality rate in this series was 55%, with severe infections and high APACHE II scores contributing to lower hormone levels and higher severity. Conclusion. NTIS should be considered an indicator of poor prognosis in septic patients, necessitating aggressive management. It underscores the importance of assessing TSH alongside T3 and T4 in critically ill patients, although treating NTIS was beyond the scope of this study.
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2069-6051
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publisher Amaltea Medical Publishing House
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spelling doaj-art-d970a5c5d2e34b929f90b39b0a3ec5062025-08-20T02:03:27ZengAmaltea Medical Publishing HouseRomanian Journal of Infectious Diseases1454-33892069-60512024-06-0127217518110.37897/RJID.2024.2.9Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsisN. Krishna Geetha0K.I.S.N Vaishnavi1Kakumani Jagadeswar2A. Gowri Shankar3Department of General Medicine, Saveetha Medical College, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaDepartment of General Medicine, Saveetha Medical College, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaDepartment of General Medicine, Saveetha Medical College, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaDepartment of General Medicine, Saveetha Medical College, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, IndiaBackground and objectives. Sepsis is a common diagnosis among ICU patients. Therefore, the present study aimed at assessing the prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome (NTIS) in sepsis. Materials and methods. The study was done as a retrospective analysis on adult patients of age greater than 18 years who were admitted with sepsis to an urban tertiary care ICU at Saveetha Medical College and Hospital. Results. The study found that NTIS can manifest as a fall in T3 alone, T4 alone, or both T3 and T4. A combined fall in T3 and T4 strongly correlates with poor primary outcomes (28-day mortality) compared to a fall in either hormone alone. Advancing age in septic patients leads to a greater combined fall in T3 and T4 values and an increased mortality rate, especially among females. The overall mortality rate in this series was 55%, with severe infections and high APACHE II scores contributing to lower hormone levels and higher severity. Conclusion. NTIS should be considered an indicator of poor prognosis in septic patients, necessitating aggressive management. It underscores the importance of assessing TSH alongside T3 and T4 in critically ill patients, although treating NTIS was beyond the scope of this study.https://rjid.com.ro/articles/2024.2/RJID_2024_2_Art-09.pdfnon-thyroidal illness syndromesepsisseptic shockthyroid hormonesprognosisintensive care unit
spellingShingle N. Krishna Geetha
K.I.S.N Vaishnavi
Kakumani Jagadeswar
A. Gowri Shankar
Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
Romanian Journal of Infectious Diseases
non-thyroidal illness syndrome
sepsis
septic shock
thyroid hormones
prognosis
intensive care unit
title Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
title_full Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
title_fullStr Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
title_full_unstemmed Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
title_short Prognostic significance of non-thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
title_sort prognostic significance of non thyroidal illness syndrome in sepsis
topic non-thyroidal illness syndrome
sepsis
septic shock
thyroid hormones
prognosis
intensive care unit
url https://rjid.com.ro/articles/2024.2/RJID_2024_2_Art-09.pdf
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AT kakumanijagadeswar prognosticsignificanceofnonthyroidalillnesssyndromeinsepsis
AT agowrishankar prognosticsignificanceofnonthyroidalillnesssyndromeinsepsis