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Featured researches published by Jan Maláska.


Biomedical Papers-olomouc | 2016

Epidemiology of hospital-acquired pneumonia: Results of a Central European multicenter, prospective, observational study compared with data from the European region

Tomas Herkel; Radovan Uvizl; Lenka Doubravska; Milan Adamus; Tomas Gabrhelik; Miroslava Htoutou Sedlakova; Milan Kolar; Vojtech Hanulik; Vendula Pudova; Katerina Langova; Roman Zazula; Tomas Rezac; Michal Moravec; Pavel Cermak; Pavel Ševčík; Jan Stašek; Jan Maláska; Alena Ševčíková; Markéta Hanslianová; Zdenek Turek; Vladimir Cerny; Pavla Paterova

BACKGROUND Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) is associated with high mortality. In Central Europe, there is a dearth of information on the prevalence and treatment of HAP. This project was aimed at collecting multicenter epidemiological data on patients with HAP in the Czech Republic and comparing them with supraregional data. METHODS This prospective, multicenter, observational study processed data from a database supported by a Czech Ministry of Health grant project. Included were all consecutive patients aged 18 and over who were admitted to participating intensive care units (ICUs) between 1 May 2013 and 31 December 2014 and met the inclusion criterion of having HAP. The primary endpoint was to analyze the relationships between 30-day mortality (during the stay in or after discharge from ICUs) and the microbiological etiological agent and adequacy of initial empirical antibiotic therapy in HAP patients. RESULTS The group dataset contained data on 330 enrolled patients. The final validated dataset involved 214 patients, 168 males (78.5%) and 46 females (21.5%), from whom 278 valid lower airway samples were obtained. The mean patient age was 59.9 years. The mean APACHE II score at admission was 21. Community-acquired pneumonia was identified in 13 patients and HAP in 201 patients, of whom 26 (12.1%) had early-onset and 175 (81.8%) had late-onset HAP. Twenty-two bacterial species were identified as etiologic agents but only six of them exceeded a frequency of detection of 5% (Klebsiella pneumoniae 20.4%, Pseudomonas aeruginosa 20.0%, Escherichia coli 10.8%, Enterobacter spp. 8.1%, Staphylococcus aureus 6.2% and Burkholderia cepacia complex 5.8%). Patients infected with Staphylococcus aureus had significantly higher rates of early-onset HAP than those with other etiologic agents. The overall 30-day mortality rate for HAP was 29.9%, with 19.2% mortality for early-onset HAP and 31.4% mortality for late-onset HAP. Patients with late-onset HAP receiving adequate initial empirical antibiotic therapy had statistically significantly lower 30-day mortality than those receiving inadequate initial antibiotic therapy (23.8% vs 42.9%). Patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) had significantly higher mortality than those who developed HAP with no association with mechanical ventilation (34.6% vs 12.7%). Patients having VAP treated with adequate initial antibiotic therapy had lower 30-day mortality than those receiving inadequate therapy (27.2% vs 44.8%). CONCLUSIONS The present study was the first to collect multicenter data on the epidemiology of HAP in the Central European Region, with respect to the incidence of etiologic agents causing HAP. It was concerned with relationships between 30-day patient mortality and the type of HAP, etiologic agent and adequacy of initial empirical antibiotic therapy.


Shock | 2017

Infectious Complications and Immune/inflammatory Response in Cardiogenic Shock Patients: A Prospective Observational Study

Jiri Parenica; Jiri Jarkovsky; Jan Maláska; Alexandre Mebazaa; Jana Gottwaldová; Katerina Helanova; Jiri Litzman; Milan Dastych; Josef Tomandl; Jindrich Spinar; L. Dostálová; Petr Lokaj; Marie Tomandlová; Monika Goldergova Pavkova; Pavel Ševčík; Matthieu Legrand

Introduction: Patients with cardiogenic shock (CS) are at a high risk of developing infectious complications; however, their early detection is difficult, mainly due to a frequently occurring noninfectious inflammatory response, which accompanies an extensive myocardial infarction (MI) or a postcardiac arrest syndrome. The goal of our prospective study was to describe infectious complications in CS and the immune/inflammatory response based on a serial measurement of several blood-based inflammatory biomarkers. Methods: Eighty patients with CS were evaluated and their infections were monitored. Inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein, procalcitonin, pentraxin 3, presepsin) were measured seven times per week. The control groups consisted of 11 patients with ST segment elevation myocardial infarction without CS and without infection, and 22 patients in septic shock. Results: Infection was diagnosed in 46.3% of patients with CS; 16 patients developed an infection within 48 h. Respiratory infection was most common, occurring in 33 out of 37 patients. Infection was a significant or even the main reason of death only in 3.8% of all patients with CS, and we did not find statistically significant difference in 3-month mortality between group of patients with CS with and without infection. There was no statistically significant prolongation of the duration of mechanical ventilation associated with infection. Strong inflammatory response is often in patients with CS due to MI, but we found no significant difference in the course of the inflammatory response expressed by evaluated biomarkers in patients with CS with and without infection. We found a strong relationship between the elevated inflammatory markers (sampled at 12 h) and the 3-month mortality: the area under the curve of receiver operating characteristic ranged between 0.683 and 0.875. Conclusion: The prevalence of infection in patients with CS was 46.3%, and respiratory tract infections were the most common type. Infections did not prolong statistically significantly the duration of mechanical ventilation and did not increase the prevalence of hospital mortality in this high-risk CS population. CS due to acute myocardial infarction was accompanied by a strong and highly variable inflammatory response, but it did not reach the intensity of the inflammatory response observed in patients with septic shock. An extensive immune/inflammatory response in patients with CS is linked to a poor prognosis.


Biomedical Papers-olomouc | 2016

Patient survival, predictive factors and disease course of severe sepsis in Czech intensive care units: A multicentre, retrospective, observational study.

Radovan Uvizl; Milan Adamus; Vladimir Cerny; Ladislav Dušek; Jiří Jarkovský; Vladimír Šrámek; Martin Matejovic; Petr Štourač; Roman Kula; Jan Maláska; Pavel Ševčík

BACKGROUND Severe sepsis/septic shock is associated with high mortality. In Central Europe, there is a dearth of information on the prevalence and treatment of severe sepsis. The EPOSS (Data-based Evaluation and Prediction of Outcome in Severe Sepsis) project launched in 2011 was aimed at collecting data on patients with severe sepsis/septic shock. METHODS The EPOSS study processes data from the EPOSS project database, and is a retrospective, multicentre, observational study. This included all consecutive patients aged 18 and over who were admitted to participating ICUs from 1 January 2011 to 5 November 2013 and met the inclusion criteria of severe sepsis/septic shock. The primary endpoint was to analyse the relationship between in-hospital mortality (either in ICU or after discharge from ICU) and the type and number of fulfilled diagnostic and treatment interventions during the first 6 h after the diagnosis of severe sepsis/septic shock. RESULTS The collected dataset involved 1082 patients meeting the criteria of severe sepsis/septic shock. Following data validation, a final dataset of 897 patients was obtained. The average age of the patient group was 64.7 years; mortality at discharge from EPOSS ICUs was 35.5% and from hospital 40.7%. Of the 10 evaluated diagnostic and treatment interventions within the initial 6 hours of identifying severe sepsis/septic shock (i.e. fulfilment of SSC bundles), four or five diagnostic and treatment interventions were administered to 58.4% patients. Combined diagnostic and treatment interventions associated with the lowest in-hospital mortality were: CVP of ≥8-12 mm Hg & MAP of ≥65 mm Hg & Urine output at ≥0.5 mL/kg/h & Lactate of ≤4.0 mmol/L & Initial lactate measured & Antibiotics in the first hour. Lactate at <4 mmol/L and MAP of ≥65 mm Hg remained statistically significant even after adjustment for patient age and APACHE II score. Statistically significantly increased in-hospital mortality was found in patients admitted from general departments (45.7%) or from other ICUs (41.6%), compared to a lower in-hospital mortality of patients transferred from outpatient clinics (26.5%) or Emergency (38.0%). Severe sepsis/septic shock patients transferred from the department of internal medicine were associated with a higher in-hospital mortality (45.1%) than surgical patients (35.5%). CONCLUSIONS The most effective measures associated with the lowest in-hospital mortality in septic shock patients were CVP of ≥8-12 mm Hg, MAP of ≥65 mm Hg, urine output at ≥0.5 mL/kg/h, initial lactate level of ≤4.0 mmol/L and administration of antibiotics within the first hour.


Biomedical Papers-olomouc | 2016

Ischemic stroke in paediatrics - narrative review of the literature and two cases

Jozef Klučka; Petr Štourač; Roman Štoudek; Michaela Toukalkova; Hana Harazim; Martina Kosinová; Alena Štouračová; Andrej Mrlian; Petr Suk; Jan Maláska

Stroke is a rare condition in childhood with an estimated incidence of between 1.3-13/100.000 patients. Clinical manifestation and risk factors for paediatric stroke are different from those of adults. The uncommon incidence, age-associated difference and plethora of clinical symptoms make the diagnosis of such strokes extremely difficult and often delayed. The history and clinical examination should point to diseases or predisposing factors. Neuroimaging (DWI MR) is the golden standard for diagnosis of paediatric stroke and other investigations can be considered according to the clinical condition. Despite advances in paediatric stroke research and clinical care, questions remain unanswered regarding acute treatment, secondary prevention and rehabilitation. The treatment recommendations are mainly extrapolated from studies on adult populations. In the review authors summarized the clinical characteristics and diagnostic steps for stroke in children/adolescents based on the most recent international guidelines and practical directions for recognising and managing the child/adolescent with stroke in paediatric emergency. In the two case reports, we describe the clinical course in both stroke patients.


Neoplasma | 2004

Telomerase as a diagnostic and predictive marker in colorectal carcinoma.

Jan Maláska; Zuzana Kunická; Borský M; Marie Skleničková; Novotná M; Lenka Fajkusová; Zaloudík J; Jiří Fajkus


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2002

Tiptoeing to chromosome tips: facts, promises and perils of today's human telomere biology

Jiří Fajkus; Marta Šimíčková; Jan Maláska


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2000

Telomerase Activity and Expression and Telomere Analysis in Situ in the Course of Treatment of Childhood Leukemias

Jan Maláska; Marie Skleničková; Kateřina Krejčí; Lenka Fajkusová; Milan Bajer; Hana Hrstková; Jiří Fajkus


Experimental & Clinical Cardiology | 2012

Soluble ST2 levels in patients with cardiogenic and septic shock are not predictors of mortality

Jiri Parenica; Jan Maláska; Jiri Jarkovsky; Jolana Lipková; Milan Dastych; Katerina Helanova; Jiri Litzman; Josef Tomandl; Simona Littnerová; Jana Ševčíková; Roman Gál; Pavel Ševčík; Jindrich Spinar; Monika Pávková Goldbergová


Vnitr̆ní lékar̆ství | 2010

[Myocardial dysfunction in sepsis--definition and pathogenetic mechanisms].

Muriová K; Jan Maláska; Otevrel F; Slezák M; Kratochvíl M; Sevík P


Mefanet Journal | 2013

AKUTNE.CZ ALGORITHMS AND SEPSIS-Q SCENARIOS AS INTERACTIVE TOOLS FOR PROBLEM BASED LEARNING SESSIONS IN MEDICAL EDUCATION

Petr Štourač; Hana Harazim; Daniel Schwarz; Ivo Křikava; Martin Komenda; Roman Štoudek; Olga Smékalová; Martina Kosinová; Richard Hůlek; Jan Maláska; Radim Šustr; Ivo Šnábl; Ladislav Dušek; Roman Gál

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