| Literature DB >> 26609286 |
Ralf Baron1, Andreas Binder1, Rolf Biniek1, Stephan Braune2, Hartmut Buerkle3, Peter Dall4, Sueha Demirakca5, Rahel Eckardt6, Verena Eggers3, Ingolf Eichler7, Ingo Fietze8, Stephan Freys9, Andreas Fründ10, Lars Garten5, Bernhard Gohrbandt7, Irene Harth5, Wolfgang Hartl9, Hans-Jürgen Heppner6, Johannes Horter3, Ralf Huth5, Uwe Janssens2, Christine Jungk11, Kristin Maria Kaeuper12, Paul Kessler3, Stefan Kleinschmidt3, Matthias Kochanek13, Matthias Kumpf5, Andreas Meiser3, Anika Mueller3, Maritta Orth8, Christian Putensen3, Bernd Roth5, Michael Schaefer14, Rainhild Schaefers12, Peter Schellongowski13, Monika Schindler5, Reinhard Schmitt15, Jens Scholz3, Stefan Schroeder16, Gerhard Schwarzmann15, Claudia Spies3, Robert Stingele1, Peter Tonner3, Uwe Trieschmann3, Michael Tryba3, Frank Wappler3, Christian Waydhas17, Bjoern Weiss3, Guido Weisshaar5.
Abstract
In 2010, under the guidance of the DGAI (German Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine) and DIVI (German Interdisciplinary Association for Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine), twelve German medical societies published the "Evidence- and Consensus-based Guidelines on the Management of Analgesia, Sedation and Delirium in Intensive Care". Since then, several new studies and publications have considerably increased the body of evidence, including the new recommendations from the American College of Critical Care Medicine (ACCM) in conjunction with Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) and American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) from 2013. For this update, a major restructuring and extension of the guidelines were needed in order to cover new aspects of treatment, such as sleep and anxiety management. The literature was systematically searched and evaluated using the criteria of the Oxford Center of Evidence Based Medicine. The body of evidence used to formulate these recommendations was reviewed and approved by representatives of 17 national societies. Three grades of recommendation were used as follows: Grade "A" (strong recommendation), Grade "B" (recommendation) and Grade "0" (open recommendation). The result is a comprehensive, interdisciplinary, evidence and consensus-based set of level 3 guidelines. This publication was designed for all ICU professionals, and takes into account all critically ill patient populations. It represents a guide to symptom-oriented prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of delirium, anxiety, stress, and protocol-based analgesia, sedation, and sleep-management in intensive care medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Germany; analgesia; anxiety; critical care; delirium; evidence; guideline; intensive care; monitoring; sedation; sleep; stress; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26609286 PMCID: PMC4645746 DOI: 10.3205/000223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ger Med Sci ISSN: 1612-3174
Table 1Risk factors for ICU-delirium
Table 2Prevention and risk reduction
Table 3Long-term consequences
Figure 1Algorithm for monitoring of sedation, delirium, and pain in adult patients
RASS: Richmond Agitation, Sedation Scale; CAM-ICU: Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit; ICDSC: Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist; BPS: Behavioral Pain Scale; BPS-NI: Behavioral Pain Scale, not intubated; CPOT: Critical Care Pain Observation Tool; FPS-R: Faces Pain Scale, revised
Table 4Monitoring – general aspects
Table 5Monitoring of analgesia
Table 6Monitoring of sedation
Table 7Monitoring of delirium
Table 8Monitoring of anxiety
Table 9Monitoring of sleep
Figure 2Symptom-based therapy and reduction of delirium, anxiety, stress, and protocol-based analgesia, sedation, and sleep-management in intensive care medicine
Algorithm that focuses on a possible holistic management for adult critically ill patients. RASS: Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale. Other scores (delirium, analgesia: observational/self-assessment), please, s.f. addendum at http://www.awmf.org/leitlinien/detail/ll/001-012.html.
Table 10Treatment concepts – non-pharmacological concepts
Table 11Analgesia and regional analgesia
Table 12Sedation
Table 13Moderate/deep sedation
Table 14Symptom oriented sedative therapy (target RASS 0/–1)
Table 15Therapy of delirium
Table 16Weaning from mechanical ventilation
Table 17Treatment with neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBA)
Table 18Intra- and inter-hospital transports
Table 19Pregnant and breastfeeding patients in the ICU
Table 20End-of-life care
Table 21Patients with severe burn injuries
Table 22Burn-injured children
Table 23Multiple trauma patients
Table 24Patients with intracranial hypertension
Table 25Cardiac surgery
Table 26Patients on extracorporeal life support systems (ECLS)
Table 27Monitoring of analgesia in children
Table 28Monitoring of sedation in children
Table 29Monitoring of delirium in children
Table 30Analgesia in children
Table 31Non-pharmacological procedures in children
Table 32Sedation in children
Table 33Therapy of delirium in children
Table 34Monitoring in the elderly
Table 35Treatment strategies in the elderly
Table 36Economy, quality assurance, and implementation of the guideline