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Dive into the research topics where Fabio Zveibil is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio Zveibil.


Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Survival of critically ill patients hospitalized in and out of intensive care units under paucity of intensive care unit beds

Elisheva Simchen; Charles L. Sprung; Noya Galai; Yana Zitser-Gurevich; Yaron Bar-Lavi; Gabriel M. Gurman; Moti Klein; Amiram Lev; Leon Levi; Fabio Zveibil; Micha Mandel; George Mnatzaganian

Objective:The demand for intensive care beds far exceeds their availability in many European countries. Consequently, many critically ill patients occupy hospital beds outside intensive care units, throughout the hospital. The outcome of patients who fit intensive care unit admission criteria but are hospitalized in regular wards needs to be assessed for policy implications. The object was to screen entire hospital patient populations for critically ill patients and compare their 30-day survival in and out of the intensive care unit. Design:Screening teams visited every hospital ward on four selected days in five acute care Israeli hospitals. The teams listed all patients fitting a priori developed study criteria. One-month data for each patient were abstracted from the medical records. Setting:Five acute care Israeli hospitals. Patients:All patients fitting a priori developed study criteria. Interventions:None. Measurements and Main Results:Survival in and out of the intensive care unit was compared for screened patients from the day a patient first met study criteria. Cox multivariate models were constructed to adjust survival comparisons for various confounding factors. The effect of intensive care unit vs. other departments was estimated separately for the first 3 days after deterioration and for the remaining follow-up time. Results showed that 5.5% of adult hospitalized patients were critically ill (736 of 13,415). Of these, 27% were admitted to intensive care units, 24% to specialized care units, and 49% to regular departments. Admission to an intensive care unit was associated with better survival during the first 3 days of deterioration, after we adjusted for age and severity of illness (p = .018). There was no additional survival advantage for intensive care unit patients (p = .9) during the remaining follow-up time. Conclusions:The early survival advantage in the intensive care unit suggests a window of critical opportunity for these patients. Under economic constraints and dearth of intensive care unit beds, increasing the turnover of patients in the intensive care unit, thus exposing more needy patients to the early benefit of treatment in the intensive care unit, may be advantageous.


Critical Care Medicine | 2007

Survival of critically ill patients hospitalized in and out of intensive care

Elisheva Simchen; Charles L. Sprung; Noya Galai; Yana Zitser-Gurevich; Yaron Bar-Lavi; Leon Levi; Fabio Zveibil; Micha Mandel; George Mnatzaganian; Nethanel Goldschmidt; Anat Ekka-Zohar; Inbal Weiss‐Salz

Objective:A lack of intensive care units beds in Israel results in critically ill patients being treated outside of the intensive care unit. The survival of such patients is largely unknown. The present studys objective was to screen entire hospitals for newly deteriorated patients and compare their survival in and out of the intensive care unit. Design:A priori developed intensive care unit admission criteria were used to screen, during 2 wks, the patient population for eligible incident patients. A screening team visited every hospital ward of five acute care hospitals daily. Eligible patients were identified among new admissions in the emergency department and among hospitalized patients who acutely deteriorated. Patients were followed for 30 days for mortality regardless of discharge. Setting:Five acute care hospitals. Patients:A total of 749 newly deteriorated patients. Interventions:None. Measurements and Main Results:Crude survival of patients in and out of the intensive care unit was compared by Kaplan-Meier curves, and Cox models were constructed to adjust the survival comparisons for residual case-mix differences. A total of 749 newly deteriorated patients were identified among 44,000 patients screened (1.7%). Of these, 13% were admitted to intensive care unit, 32% to special care units, and 55% to regular departments. Intensive care unit patients had better early survival (0–3 days) relative to regular departments (p = .0001) in a Cox multivariate model. Early advantage of intensive care was most pronounced among patients who acutely deteriorated while on hospital wards rather than among newly admitted patients. Conclusions:Only a small proportion of eligible patients reach the intensive care unit, and early admission is imperative for their survival advantage. As intensive care unit benefit was most pronounced among those deteriorating on hospital wards, intensive care unit triage decisions should be targeted at maximizing intensive care unit benefit by early admitting patients deteriorating on hospital wards.


Critical Care Medicine | 2008

Effect of infections on 30-day mortality among critically ill patients hospitalized in and out of the intensive care unit.

George Mnatzaganian; Charles L. Sprung; Yana Zitser-Gurevich; Noya Galai; Nethanel Goldschmidt; Leon Levi; Yaron Bar-Lavi; Fabio Zveibil; Inbal Weiss Salz; Anat Ekka-Zohar; Elisheva Simchen

Background:This analysis is part of a multicenter study conducted in Israel to evaluate survival of critically ill patients treated in and out of intensive care units (ICUs). Objective:To assess the role of infection on 30-day survival among critically ill patients hospitalized in ICUs and regular wards. Design:All adult inpatients were screened on four rounds for patients meeting ICU admission criteria. Retrospective chart review was used to detect presence and type of infection. Mortality was ascertained from day of meeting study criteria to 30 days thereafter. Analysis:The effect of infection on mortality among patients, treated in and out of the ICU, was compared using Kaplan Meier survival curves. Multivariate Cox models were constructed to adjust interdepartmental comparisons for case-mix differences. Results:Of 641 critically ill patients identified, 36.8% already had an infection on day 0. An additional 40.2% subsequently developed a new infection during the follow-up period, ranging from 64.6% in the ICU to 31.5% in regular wards (p < .001). Resistant infections were more prevalent in ICUs. Infection was independently associated with an increase in mortality, regardless of whether the patient was admitted to the ICU. There was no difference in the adjusted risk of mortality associated with an infection diagnosed on day 0 vs. an infection diagnosed later. Risk of dying was similar in resistant and nonresistant infections. Adjusting for infections, survival of ICU patients was better relative to patients in regular wards (adjusted hazard ratio = 0.7). Among the different types of infection, risk of mortality from pneumonia was significantly lower in ICUs relative to regular wards. There was a protective effect in ICUs among noninfected patients. Conclusion:The risk of acquiring a new infection is greater in the ICU. However, risk of mortality among ICU patients was lower for the most serious infections and for those without any infection.


Survey of Anesthesiology | 1986

Central Vein Catheterization. Failure and Complication Rates by Three Percutaneous Approaches

Jacob I. Sznajder; Fabio Zveibil; Haim Bitterman; Paltiel Weiner; Simon Bursztein

We prospectively studied the results of 714 attempts at central venous catheterization during an eight-month period in our intensive care department. We compared the rates of failure of catheterization and early complications among three percutaneous approaches: subclavian, anterior jugular, and posterior jugular veins. The procedures were performed by experienced staff or resident physicians and inexperienced interns and residents under teaching supervision. Overall rates of failure and complication were similar for each percutaneous approach within each group of physicians. Overall failure rate was 10.1% for the experienced group and 19.4% for the inexperienced. The complication was 5.4% for experienced and 11% for inexperienced. Among inexperienced physicians, the success rate was 86.7% and the complication rate 7.6% in unconscious patients, whereas in conscious patients these rates were 70.5% and 13.8%, respectively. The inexperienced physicians caused fewer complications in mechanically ventilated than in spontaneously breathing patients. We suggest that inexperienced physicians should first attempt central vein catheterizations in unconscious and mechanically ventilated patients.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1986

Central Vein Catheterization: Failure and Complication Rates by Three Percutaneous Approaches

J. Iasha Sznajder; Fabio Zveibil; Haim Bitterman; Paltiel Weiner; Simon Bursztein


The Journal of Urology | 1986

Central Vein Catheterization Failure and Complication Rates by Three Percutaneous Approaches

Jacob I. Sznajder; Fabio Zveibil; Haim Bitterman; Paltiel Weiner; Simon Bursztein


Critical Care Medicine | 1984

Unusual complications of subclavian vein catheterization.

Paltiel Weiner; Iasha Sznajder; Leon Plavnick; Fabio Zveibil; Simon Bursztein


Archive | 2017

Failure and Complication Rates by Three Percutaneous Approaches

J. Iasha Sznajder; Fabio Zveibil; Haim Bitterman; Paltiel Weiner; Simon Bursztein


/data/revues/01956701/v59i4/S0195670104003676/ | 2011

Increased risk of bloodstream and urinary infections in intensive care unit (ICU) patients compared with patients fitting ICU admission criteria treated in regular wards

George Mnatzaganian; Noya Galai; Charles L. Sprung; Yana Zitser-Gurevich; Micha Mandel; D. Ben-Hur; Gabriel M. Gurman; Moti Klein; Amiram Lev; Leon Levi; Yaron Bar-Lavi; Fabio Zveibil; Elisheva Simchen


Critical Care Medicine | 1981

COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PORTABLE MINI-RESPIRATORS

Yehuda Lerman; Fabio Zveibil; Haim Enav; Simon Bursztein

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Simon Bursztein

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Paltiel Weiner

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Charles L. Sprung

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Elisheva Simchen

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Leon Levi

Rambam Health Care Campus

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Yaron Bar-Lavi

Rambam Health Care Campus

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