Literature DB >> 21164413

Creating the animated intensive care unit.

Jesse B Hall1.   

Abstract

Critical care medicine has matured greatly as a field in the past decade. Much has been learned concerning the institution of life support therapies to sustain patients with diverse and multiple organ failures, thus providing patients with a window of opportunity to recover from potentially life-ending insults. The management of critically ill patients has increasingly involved creation of a highly controlled environment by care providers, with patients immobilized, tethered to devices, and receiving multiple drugs to facilitate the entire process. Although it has been assumed that such control of the patient has been necessary to implement essential therapies and to tailor life support systems such as mechanical ventilation, this assumption may be unfounded or at least overplayed, as knowledge of the adverse effects of this approach have been identified and quantified. Extant information, based on observational studies and a few interventional trials, would suggest a radically different approach to care is warranted, even given the difficulties in reversing the current culture of critical care management. Specifically, methods to avoid entirely, or minimize, neuromuscular blockade and sedation are supported by recent literature. These methods include the use of noninvasive ventilation in appropriately selected patients, the development of mechanical ventilators more synchronous with patient efforts and needs, and the use of sedation strategies to avoid drug accumulations with protracted effects. These methods, in turn, afford opportunities to avoid extreme immobilization and institute physiotherapy earlier than previously had been thought possible. In addition to the neuropsychiatric and neuromuscular benefits that could derive from minimizing opiate administration in critically ill patients, gut hypomotility could be avoided. This, in turn, could facilitate earlier and more complete enteral nutrition. Even when opioids have to be administered in generous amounts for control of pain that may accompany critical illness, it is now possible to block the peripheral actions of these medications with the μ-receptor antagonist methylnaltrexone. Other new drugs being introduced into the critical care unit such as dexmedetomidine may also provide a greater ability to achieve analgesia and anxiolysis without some of the adverse concomitant effects seen with more traditional drug regimens. The ultimate goal of this multipronged program to facilitate the maintenance of patients who are more interactive with their care providers, and the life support provided in the intensive care unit would be to speed the pace of recovery and to diminish the need for the protracted rehabilitation that often follows survival from critical illness.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21164413     DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e3181f203aa

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  7 in total

1.  Volatile agents for ICU sedation?

Authors:  David Bracco; Francesco Donatelli
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2011-03-29       Impact factor: 17.440

2.  Use of methylnaltrexone for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation in critical care patients.

Authors:  Sergio B Sawh; Ibrahim P Selvaraj; Akila Danga; Alison L Cotton; Jonathan Moss; Parind B Patel
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 7.616

3.  Functional outcomes in pediatric severe sepsis: further analysis of the researching severe sepsis and organ dysfunction in children: a global perspective trial.

Authors:  Reid W D Farris; Noel S Weiss; Jerry J Zimmerman
Journal:  Pediatr Crit Care Med       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 3.624

4.  Psychometric comparison of three behavioural scales for the assessment of pain in critically ill patients unable to self-report.

Authors:  Gerald Chanques; Anne Pohlman; John P Kress; Nicolas Molinari; Audrey de Jong; Samir Jaber; Jesse B Hall
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2014-07-25       Impact factor: 9.097

5.  Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project).

Authors:  Audrey de Jong; Nicolas Molinari; Sylvie de Lattre; Claudine Gniadek; Julie Carr; Mathieu Conseil; Marie-Pierre Susbielles; Boris Jung; Samir Jaber; Gérald Chanques
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 9.097

6.  Automated vs. conventional ventilation in the ICU: a randomized controlled crossover trial comparing blood oxygen saturation during daily nursing procedures (I-NURSING).

Authors:  Jonathan Chelly; Sandie Mazerand; Sebastien Jochmans; Claire-Marie Weyer; Franck Pourcine; Olivier Ellrodt; Nathalie Thieulot-Rolin; Jean Serbource-Goguel; Oumar Sy; Ly Van Phach Vong; Mehran Monchi
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2020-07-22       Impact factor: 9.097

7.  Relationship between availability of physiotherapy services and ICU costs.

Authors:  Bruna Peruzzo Rotta; Janete Maria da Silva; Carolina Fu; Juliana Barbosa Goulardins; Ruy de Camargo Pires-Neto; Clarice Tanaka
Journal:  J Bras Pneumol       Date:  2018 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.624

  7 in total

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