The SAPS II (Simplified Acute Physiology Score II) is a severity-of-illness scoring system designed for adult patients (aged ≥18 years) in intensive care units (ICUs). Developed in 1993 from a large multicenter study involving 13,152 patients across 137 ICUs in 12 countries, SAPS II predicts hospital mortality risk based on physiological, demographic, and clinical data collected within the first 24 hours of ICU admission. It is widely used for risk stratification, quality benchmarking, and research in adult critical care settings.
The PRISM (Pediatric Risk of Mortality) score is a validated severity-of-illness scoring system designed for pediatric patients (newborn to 18 years) in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). Developed in 1988 and refined in subsequent iterations (PRISM III and PRISM IV), it quantifies disease severity and predicts hospital mortality risk based on physiological and laboratory data collected within the first 24 hours of PICU admission. PRISM is widely used to assess critically ill children, excluding premature neonates in neonatal ICUs (NICUs), where scores like CRIB II or SNAP-II are preferred.
Learn about Arteriovenous Fistula (AVF), including its causes, hemodynamics, and treatment. This guide covers congenital and dialysis-related fistulas and management.
A detailed medical guide to the five layers of the human epidermis: basale, spinosum, granulosum, lucidum, and corneum. Learn about skin histology and function.
Explore the pathology and clinical management of the carotid body tumor (paraganglioma). This article covers histological Zellballen patterns, Shamblin classification, and genetic links.
Explore the microscopic world of the arterial wall and the development of calcified atherosclerotic plaques. This guide explains the histology and pathology of vascular mineralization.