Literature DB >> 18252923

Patient-focused sedation and analgesia in the ICU.

Curtis N Sessler1, Kimberly Varney.   

Abstract

Patient-focused sedation and analgesia in the ICU encompasses a strategy of comprehensive structured management that matches initial evaluation, monitoring, medication selection, and the use of protocols with patient characteristics and needs. This is best accomplished through interdisciplinary management by physicians, nurses, and pharmacists. An early consideration is that of the potential predisposing and precipitating factors, as well as prior sedative or analgesic use, factors that may influence pharmacologic and supportive therapy. Frequent monitoring with validated tools improves communication among clinicians and plays an important role in detecting and treating pain and agitation while avoiding excessive or prolonged sedation. Patient-focused management encompasses selecting medications best suited to patient characteristics, including the presence of organ dysfunction that may influence drug metabolism or excessive risk for side effects. The use of protocols to optimize drug therapy has emerged as a key component of management, resulting in reductions in the duration of sedation, mechanical ventilation, and ICU length of stay demonstrated with strategies to titrate medications to specific targets, daily interruption of sedation, intermittent rather than continuous therapy, and analgesia-based therapy. While much attention is paid to the initiation and maintenance of therapy, greater emphasis must be placed on careful de-escalation of therapy in order to avoid analgesic or sedative withdrawal. Finally, more work is needed to explore the relationship of critical illness and sedation management with long-term psychological outcomes.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18252923     DOI: 10.1378/chest.07-2026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chest        ISSN: 0012-3692            Impact factor:   9.410


  23 in total

1.  Has the Drug of Choice for Treating Critical Illness Delirium Been Established?

Authors: 
Journal:  Can J Hosp Pharm       Date:  2015 Sep-Oct

2.  Volatile isoflurane sedation in cerebrovascular intensive care patients using AnaConDa(®): effects on cerebral oxygenation, circulation, and pressure.

Authors:  Julian Bösel; Jan C Purrucker; Frank Nowak; Julian Renzland; Petra Schiller; Eva Benveniste Pérez; Sven Poli; Benjamin Brunn; Werner Hacke; Thorsten Steiner
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2012-10-25       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 3.  [Sedation and analgesia in intensive care: physiology and application].

Authors:  David M Baron; Philipp G H Metnitz; Burkhard Gustorff
Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 1.704

4.  The utility of bispectral index monitoring for sedated patients treated with low-dose remifentanil.

Authors:  Takao Kato; Toshiya Koitabashi; Takashi Ouchi; Ryohei Serita
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2012-07-25       Impact factor: 2.502

5.  Off-Label Use of Dexmedetomidine for the Treatment of Delirium in the Intensive Care Unit.

Authors:  Huan Mark Nguyen; Doreen Pon
Journal:  P T       Date:  2016-10

6.  Short-term evaluation of sedation with sevoflurane administered by the anesthetic conserving device in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Maurizio Migliari; Giacomo Bellani; Roberto Rona; Stefano Isgrò; Beatrice Vergnano; Tommaso Mauri; Nicolò Patroniti; Antonio Pesenti; Giuseppe Foti
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2009-02-03       Impact factor: 17.440

7.  Effect of an analgo-sedation protocol for neurointensive patients: a two-phase interventional non-randomized pilot study.

Authors:  Ingrid Egerod; Malene Brorsen Jensen; Suzanne Forsyth Herling; Karen-Lise Welling
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2010-04-19       Impact factor: 9.097

Review 8.  Intensive Care Unit-acquired infection as a side effect of sedation.

Authors:  Saad Nseir; Demosthenes Makris; Daniel Mathieu; Alain Durocher; Charles-Hugo Marquette
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2010-03-15       Impact factor: 9.097

9.  Responses to noxious stimuli in sedated mechanically ventilated adults.

Authors:  Mary Jo Grap; Cindy L Munro; Paul A Wetzel; Jessica M Ketchum; V Anne Hamilton; Curtis N Sessler
Journal:  Heart Lung       Date:  2013-10-25       Impact factor: 2.210

10.  The contribution of opiate analgesics to the development of infectious complications in trauma patients.

Authors:  Richard F Oppeltz; Travis L Holloway; Cody J Covington; Martin G Schwacha
Journal:  Int J Burns Trauma       Date:  2015-08-01
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