APACHE II Background

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Revision as of 15:17, 2020 December 23 by Ttenbergen (talk | contribs) (→‎Collection Guidelines: removed duplicate and conflicting info that should instead be taken from the linked pages.)
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APACHE stands for Acute Physiological and Chronic Health Evaluation APACHE II on the Wikipedia.

This page is part of Category:APACHE II, where you can find the links to many APACHE topics.

Who was it developed by

A conceptual model for the APACHE prognostic scoring system was formulated in 1979 and introduced in 1981 by by Dr. William A. Knaus et.al. George Washington University Medical Center. APACHE was validate in many centers since then and shown to be a strong and stable predictor of hospital survival.

  • APACHE II was developed in 1985.
  • APACHE III was developed in 1991.

Purpose

Designed to be a objective and quantitative measure of the severity of illness of acutely ill patient in ICU. The severity of disease classification system also assists in the ability to prognosticate outcome or evaluate the impact of subsequent care in ICU. APACHE scores can help identify those patient that would or would not benefit from ICU admission and treatment.

What are the components

  • APS— The Acute Physiology Score captures acute severity of illness. (max score = 60). 12 physiological variables from one or more of the body’s seven major vital physiologic systems:
    • neurological (Glasgow Coma Scale)
    • cardiovascular
    • respiratory
    • gastrointestinal
    • renal
    • metabolic
    • hematologic
  • Age group (max score = 6)
  • History of a underlying Chronic Health condition reflecting diminished physiologic reserve (max score = 5).

Max Total Apache Score = 71

see Category:APACHE II Physiological Variables

Weighting of scores

Collection Guidelines

see Apache II General Collection Guidelines

see APACHE physiological variable collection

How were these Variables Selected

Knaus and his team, which included a panel of 7 experienced ICU physicians from major centers and specialies, reviewed literature for measurements that had demonstrated promise in estimating severity of illness and that were generally tested and recorded in most ICU’s. The weighted score that the panel assigned to particular physiologic values was based on the fact that the more deviated from normal the value was, the more concern and by inference, the more severly ill a patient is.

References

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